Claws and Effect: A Mrs. Murphy Mystery
Claws and Effect: A Mrs. Murphy Mystery book cover

Claws and Effect: A Mrs. Murphy Mystery

Mass Market Paperback – January 29, 2002

Price
$8.99
Publisher
Bantam
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0553580907
Dimensions
4.14 x 0.7 x 6.75 inches
Weight
5.6 ounces

Description

“As feline collaborators go, you couldn’t ask for better than Sneaky Pie Brown.”— The New York Times Book Review “Mrs. Murphy is [a] cat who detects her way into our hearts.”— San Francisco Chronicle Book Review From the Inside Flap CLAWS AND EFFECTWinter puts tiny Crozet, Virginia, in a deep freeze and everyone seems to be suffering from the winter blahs, including postmistress Mary Minor ?Harry? Haristeen. So all are ripe for the juicy gossip coming out of Crozet Hospital?until the main source of that gossip turns up dead. It?s not like Harry to resist a mystery, and she soon finds the hospital a hotbed of ego, jealousy, and illicit love.But it?s tiger cat Mrs. Murphy, roaming the netherworld of Crozet Hospital, who sniffs out a secret that dates back to the Underground Railroad. Then Harry is attacked and a doctor is executed in cold blood. Soon only a quick-witted cat and her animal pals feline Pewter and corgi Tee Tucker stand between Harry and a coldly calculating killer with a prescription for murder. CLAWS AND EFFECT Winter puts tiny Crozet, Virginia, in a deep freeze and everyone seems to be suffering from the winter blahs, including postmistress Mary Minor "Harry" Haristeen. So all are ripe for the juicy gossip coming out of Crozet Hospital-until the main source of that gossip turns up dead. It's not like Harry to resist a mystery, and she soon finds the hospital a hotbed of ego, jealousy, and illicit love. But it's tiger cat Mrs. Murphy, roaming the netherworld of Crozet Hospital, who sniffs out a secret that dates back to the Underground Railroad. Then Harry is attacked and a doctor is executed in cold blood. Soon only a quick-witted cat and her animal pals feline Pewter and corgi Tee Tucker stand between Harry and a coldly calculating killer with a prescription for murder. Rita Mae Brown is the bestselling author of the Sneaky Pie Brown series; the Sister Jane series; A Nose for Justice and Murder Unleashed; Rubyfruit Jungle; In Her Day; and Six of One, as well as several other novels. An Emmy-nominated screenwriter and a poet, Brown lives in Afton, Virginia. Sneaky Pie Brown, a tiger cat born somewhere in Albemarle County, Virginia, was discovered by Rita Mae Brown at her local SPCA. They have collaborated on numerous Mrs. Murphy mysteries—in addition to Sneaky Pie’s Cookbook for Mystery Lovers and Sneaky Pie for President . Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One "People tell me things. Of course, I have a kind face and I'm a good listener, but the real reason they tell me things is they think I can't repeat their secrets. They couldn't be more wrong.""People tell me secrets." The corgi looked up at Mrs. Murphy, the tiger cat, reposing on the windowsill at the post office."You're delusional. Dogs blab." She nonchalantly flipped the end of her tail."You just said people think you can't repeat their secrets but they're wrong. So you blab, too.""No, I don't. I can tell if I want to, that's all I'm saying."Tucker sat up, shook her head, and walked closer to the windowsill. "Well, got any secrets?""No, it's been a dull stretch." She sighed. "Even Pewter hasn't dug up any dirt.""I resent that." A little voice piped up from the bottom of a canvas mail cart."Wait until Miranda finds out what you've done to her garden. She hasn't a tulip bulb left, Pewter, and all because you thought there was a mole in there last week.""Her tulips were diseased. I've saved her a great deal of trouble." She paused a moment. "And I was careful enough to pull mulch over the hole. She won't find out for another month or two. Who knows when spring will come?""I don't know about spring but here comes Mim the Magnificent." Tucker, on her hind legs, peered out the front window.Mim Sanburne, the town's leading and richest citizen, closed the door of her Bentley Turbo, stepping gingerly onto the cleared walkway to the post office because ice covered much of central Virginia.Odd that Mim would own a Bentley for she was a true Virginian, born and bred, plus her family had been in the state since the early 1600s. Driving anything as flashy as a Bentley was beyond the pale. The only thing worse would be to drive a Rolls-Royce. And Mim didn't flaunt her wealth. Miranda, who had known Mim all of her life, figured this was a quiet rebellion on her friend's part. As they both cruised into their sixties, not that they were advertising, this was Mim's salvo to youth: Get Out Of My Way.People did.Mary Minor "Harry" Haristeen smiled when Mim pushed open the door. "Good morning.""Good morning, Harry. Did you have trouble driving in today?""Once I rolled down the driveway I was fine. The roads are clear.""You didn't ask me if I had trouble." Miranda walked up to the counter dividing the post office staff from the public. As she lived immediately behind the post office, with just an alleyway in between, she slipped and slid as she made her way to work on foot."You haven't broken anything so I know you're fine." Mim leaned on the counter."Gray. Gray. Cold. Hateful.""Four degrees Fahrenheit last night." Miranda, passionate gardener that she was, kept close watch on the weather. "It must have been colder at Dalmally." She mentioned the name of Mim's estate just outside of town. As some of Mim's ancestors fled to America from Scotland they named their farm Dalmally, a remembrance of heather and home."Below zero." Mim strolled over to her postbox, took out her key, the brass lock clicking as she turned the key.Curious, Mrs. Murphy dropped off the windowsill, jumped onto the wooden counter, then nimbly stepped off the counter onto the ledge that ran behind the postboxes, dividing the upper boxes from the larger, lower boxes. She enjoyed peering in the boxes. If a day dragged on she might reach in, shuffle some mail, or even bite the corners.Today she noticed that Susan Tucker's mailbox had Cracker Jacks stuck on the bottom of it.Mim's gloved hand, a luscious, soft turquoise suede, reached into her box. Murphy couldn't help herself; she peered down, then took both paws and grabbed Mim's hand, no claws."Mrs. Murphy. Let me have my mail." Mim bent down to see two beautiful green eyes staring back at her."Give me your glove. I love the smell of the suede.""Harry, your cat won't let me go."Harry walked over, slipped her fingers into the mailbox, and disengaged Murphy's paws. "Murphy, not everyone in Crozet thinks you're adorable.""Thank you!" Pewter's voice rose up from the canvas mail cart.Harry gently placed her tiger on the counter again. A pretty woman, young and fit, she stroked the cat.Miranda checked the bookshelves for cartons. "Mim, got a package here for you. Looks like your coffee."Mim belonged to a coffee club, receiving special beans from various world-famous cafes once a month. "Good." She stood at the counter sorting her mail. She removed one exquisite glove and slit open envelopes with her thumbnail, a habit Harry envied, since her own nails were worn down from farm work. The older, elegant woman opened a white envelope, read a few sentences, then tossed the letter and envelope in the trash. "Another chain letter. I just hate them and I wish there'd be a law against them. They're all pyramid schemes. This one wants you to send five dollars to Crozet Hospital's Indigent Patients Fund and then send out twenty copies of the letter. I just want to know who put my name on the list."Harry flipped up the divider, walked over to the wastebasket, and fished out the offending letter."Sister Sophonisba will bring you good fortune." She scanned the rest of it. "There is no list of names. All it says is to pass this on to twenty other people. 'If you wish.'" Harry's voice filled the room. "Send five dollars to Crozet Hospital's Indigent Patients Fund or your microwave will die.""It doesn't really say that, does it?" Miranda thought Harry was teasing her but then again . . ."Nah." Harry flashed her crooked grin."Very funny." Mim reached for her letter again, which Harry handed to her. "Usually there's a list of names and the top one gets money. You know, your name works its way to the top of the list." She reread the letter, then guffawed, "Here's the part that always kills me about these things." She read aloud. "Mark Lintel sent five dollars and the Good Lord rewarded him with a promotion at work. Jerry Tinsley threw this letter in the trash and had a car wreck three days later." Mim peered over the letter. "I seem to recall Jerry's wreck. And I seem to recall he was liberally pickled in vodka. If he dies he'll come back as a rancid potato."Harry laughed. "I guess he has to get rid of that old Camry somehow so he decided to wreck it.""Harry," Miranda reprimanded her."Well, I liked your death threat to microwaves." Mim handed the letter over the worn counter to Harry, who tossed it back into the wastebasket, applauding herself for the "basket.""Two points." Harry smiled."Seems to be local. The references are local. None of this 'Harold P. Beecher of Davenport, Iowa, won the lottery,'" Mim said. "Well, girls, you know things are slow around here if we've wasted this much time on a chain letter.""The February blahs." Harry stuck her tongue out."Ever notice that humans' tongues aren't as pink as ours?" Tucker, the corgi, cocked her head, sticking her own tongue out."They are what they are," came the sepulchral voice from the mail bin."Oh, that's profound, Pewts." Mrs. Murphy giggled."The sage of Crozet has spoken," Pewter again rumbled, making her kitty voice deeper."Well, I don't know a thing. What about you two?""Mim, we thought you knew everything. You're the--" Harry stopped for a second because "the Queen of Crozet" dangled on the tip of her tongue, which was what they called Mim behind her back. "--uh, leader of the pack.""At least you didn't say Laundromat." Mim referred to a popular song from the sixties, before Harry's time."How's Jim?" Miranda inquired after Mim's husband."Busy.""Marilyn?" Miranda now asked about Mim's daughter, Harry's age, late thirties."The same, which is to say she has no purpose in this life, no beau, and she exists simply to contradict me. As for my son, since you're moving through the family, he and his wife are still in New York. No grandchildren in sight. What's the matter with your generation, Harry? We were settled down by the time we were thirty."Harry shrugged. "We have more choices.""Now what's that supposed to mean?" Mim put her hands on her slender hips. "All it means is you're more self-indulgent. I don't mind women getting an education. I received a splendid education but I knew my duty lay in marrying and producing children and raising them to be good people."Miranda deftly deflected the conversation. "Don't look now, but Dr. Bruce Buxton is flat on his back coasting down Main Street.""Ha!" Mim ran to the window, as did Mrs. Murphy and Tucker. "I hope he's black and blue from head to toe!"Bruce spun around, finally grabbing onto a No Parking sign. Breathing heavily, he pulled himself up, but his feet insisted in traveling in opposite directions. Finally steadied, he half slid, half skated in the direction of the post office."Here he comes." Mim laughed. "Pompous as ever although he is handsome. I'll give him that."Dr. Bruce Buxton stamped his feet on the post office steps, then pushed the door open.Before he could speak, Mim dryly remarked, "I give you a 9.4," as she breezed past him, waving good-bye to Harry and Miranda."Supercilious snot!" he said only after the door closed because it wouldn't do to cross Mim publicly. Even Bruce Buxton, a star knee specialist at Crozet Hospital, knew better than to offend "The Diva," as he called her."Well, Dr. Buxton, I gave you points for distance. Mim gave you points for artistic expression." Harry laughed out loud.Bruce, in his late thirties and single, couldn't resist a pretty woman so he laughed at himself as well. "I did cover ground. If it gets worse, I'm wearing my golf spikes.""Good idea." Harry smiled as he opened his mailbox."Bills. More bills." He opened a white envelope, then chucked it. "Junk.""Wouldn't be a letter from Sister Sophonisba, would it?" Harry asked."Sister Somebody. Chain letter.""Mim got one, too. I didn't." Harry laughed at herself. "I miss all the good stuff. Say, how is Isabelle Otey?"Harry was interested in the gifted forward for the University of Virginia's basketball team. She had shredded her anterior cruciate ligament during a tough game against Old Dominion. UVA won the game but lost Isabelle for the season."Fine. Arthroscopic surgery is done on an outpatient basis now. Six weeks she'll be as good as new, providing she follows instructions for six weeks. The human knee is a fascinating structure . . ." As he warmed to his subject--he was one of the leading knee surgeons in the country--Harry listened attentively. Miranda did, too."My knees are better." Mrs. Murphy turned her back on Bruce, whom she considered a conceited ass. "Everything about me is better. If people walked on four feet instead of two most of their problems would vanish.""Won't improve their minds any," came the voice from the mail cart, which now echoed slightly."There's no help for that." Tucker sighed, for she loved Harry; but even that love couldn't obviate the slowness of human cogitation."Pewter, why don't you get your ass out of the mail cart? You've been in there since eight this morning and it's eleven-thirty. We could go outside and track mice.""You don't want to go out in the cold any more than I do. You just want to make me look bad." There was a grain of truth in Pewter's accusation.Bruce left, treading the ice with slow respect.In ten minutes Hank Brevard, plant manager of Crozet Hospital, and Tussie Logan, head nurse in Pediatrics, arrived together in Tussie's little silver Tracker."Good morning." Tussie smiled. "It's almost noon. How are things in the P.O.?""The P.U.," Hank complained.He was always complaining about something."I beg your pardon." Mrs. Miranda Hogendobber huffed up."Cat litter." He sniffed."Hank, there's no litter box. They go outside.""Yeah, maybe it's you," Tussie teased him.He grunted, ignoring them, opening his mailbox. "Bills, bills. Junk."Despite his crabbing over his mail, he did open the envelopes, carefully stacking them on the table. He was a meticulous man as well as a faultfinder.Tussie, by contrast, shuffled her envelopes like cards, firing appeals, advertisements, and form letters into the wastebasket.Miranda flipped up the dividing counter, walked out, picked up the wastebasket, and started to head back to the mailbag room, as she dubbed the working portion of the post office building."Wait." Tussie swiftly dumped two more letters into the trash. "If you don't open form letters you add three years onto your productive life.""Is that a fact?" Miranda smiled."Solemn," Tussie teased her.Miranda carried the metal wastebasket around the table to Hank. "Any more?""Uh, no." He thumbed through his neatly stacked pile."Can't you ever do anything on impulse?" Tussie pulled her mittens from her coat pocket."Haste makes waste. If you saw the damaged equipment that I see, all because some jerk can't take the time. Yesterday a gurney was brought down with two wheels jammed. Now that only happens if an orderly doesn't take the time to tap the little foot brake. He pushed, got no response, then pushed with all his might." Hank kept on, filled with the importance of his task. "And there I was in the middle of testing a circuit breaker that kept tripping in the canteen. Too many appliances on that circuit." He took a breath, ready to recount more problems.Tussie interrupted him. "The hospital does need a few things."He jumped in again. "Complete and total electrical overhaul. New furnace for the old section but hey, who listens to me? I just run the place. Let a doctor squeal for something and oh, the earth stops in its orbit.""That's not true. Bruce Buxton has been yelling for a brand new MRI unit and--""What's that?" Harry inquired."Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Another way to look into the body without invading it," Tussie explained. "Technology is exploding in our field. The new MRI machines cut down the time by half. Well, don't let me go off on technology." She stopped for a moment. "We will all live to see a cure for cancer, for childhood diabetes, for so many of the ills that plague us.""Don't know how you can work with sick children. I can't look them in the eye." Hank frowned."They need me.""Hear, hear," Miranda said as Harry nodded in agreement."Guess we need a lot of things," Hank remarked. "Still, I think the folks in the scrubs will get what they want before I get what I want." He took a breath. "I hate doctors." Hank placed the envelopes in the large inside pocket of his heavy coveralls. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • CLAWS AND EFFECTWinter puts tiny Crozet, Virginia, in a deep freeze and everyone seems to be suffering from the winter blahs, including postmistress Mary Minor “Harry” Haristeen. So all are ripe for the juicy gossip coming out of Crozet Hospital–until the main source of that gossip turns up dead. It’s not like Harry to resist a mystery, and she soon finds the hospital a hotbed of ego, jealousy, and illicit love.But it’s tiger cat Mrs. Murphy, roaming the netherworld of Crozet Hospital, who sniffs out a secret that dates back to the Underground Railroad. Then Harry is attacked and a doctor is executed in cold blood. Soon only a quick-witted cat and her animal pals feline Pewter and corgi Tee Tucker stand between Harry and a coldly calculating killer with a prescription for murder.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(173)
★★★★
25%
(72)
★★★
15%
(43)
★★
7%
(20)
-7%
(-19)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Less Frothy but Still Enjoyable

Like all of Rita Mae Brown's "Mrs. Murphy" series, CLAWS AND EFFECT reintroduces us to the residents of tiny Crozet, Virginia, a community of small-town archetypes in which the animal friends of various residents occasionally help their humans solve a murder in their midst. And this time the murder is a particularly bloody one: a member of the hospital staff is found with his throat cut ear to ear in the hospital boiler room. As usual, the mystrey entices Postmistress Mary "Harry" Harristeen--and when her own safety is threatened, her two cats (Mrs. Murphy and Pewter) and dog (Tee-Tucker) come to the rescue by investigating the crime for themselves.
The Mrs. Murphy series is light reading, of course, and taking it too seriously undermines the fun. As usual, the great attraction here is not the plot--for Brown has never really bothered to work out the tightly puzzle prized by hard-core mystery fans--but the way in which the thing is written: frothy, funny, and amusing. Unfortunately, CLAWS AND EFFECT has little of the froth we usually expect, and it may be that Brown has begun to tire of her creation, but it still makes for an entertaining way to pass an evening. Fans will enjoy it.
7 people found this helpful
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Very disappointing

I've read and loved the Sneaky Pie mysteries for years, but had fallen 2 books behind when I picked up Pawing Through the Past and Claws and Effect. Now, I realize I'm in a specialized area and am nitpicking this book because of my personal experiences, but this book really bugged me. Through 7 books we've been exposed to "tiny" Crozet, Virginia (in one book, its population was given as 1700 people). But here we are supposed to believe it has a world-class teaching hospital which has a pediatric intensive care unit (Tussie Logan at one point refers to a child from Guatemala she's taking care of), specialists like orthopedic surgeons (Buxton, "one of the leading knee specialists in the country"!)and worst, A TRANSPLANT CENTER!!! I work in a hospital in a city of 500,000 people, and none of our 5 hospitals has a transplant center (there's only one in the state, in the capital city). I came from a city of 20,000 which has a 25-bed hospital, with a usual census of 5-10 patients! Harry speculates that 3 people with healthy organs die per week at Crozet Hospital (remember, a town of 1700 people). It just goes on and on!
I am disappointed that Ms. Brown has such a low opinion of her readers (or that she doesn't feel it's necessary to at least make these mysteries minimally realistic because they're making her millions).
If you need to read this one to complete the series, do it. If you're starting here, it's obvious to me Ms. Brown is just grinding these stories out because she has a successful franchise. Go back and read the first books, they're fun and, while not totally believable, at least not ludicrous. We'll see how Catch as Cat Can goes... I may have to give them up.
4 people found this helpful
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I really like the animals' perspectives

When a friend suggested that I read one of RM Brown's book, I was hooked. I had no idea that there were so many in the series. I ordered all the other books that I could find in order to read them in order. I really like the animals' perspectives.
2 people found this helpful
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I always enjoy a visit to Crozet.

I agree that these books should not be taken too seriously, but that doesn't mean that they're not fun. Reading a Rita Mae Brown book is like visiting some old, dear friends. And that is what the citizens of Crozet have become to me. These books are witty and wise becasue we see human nature so well in her characters. In this book there are nefarious doings at the Crozet Hospital. For some reason people affiliated with the hospital keep turning up dead. It takes some astute detecting by Mrs. Murphy and her two companions to figure out what is going on in the basement of the hospital. If you like a good cozy series, don't pass up Mrs. Murphy!
2 people found this helpful
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claws and effect

I really enjoy the Mrs Murphy series because of the animal's dialogue. The plot is rather easy to follow, but I believe that is the author's intention. I have read 8 books in this series and I'm starting to feel like I personally know these people.
1 people found this helpful
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Up to par and surprising

In every Mrs. Murphy mystery, someone gets killed. Who that will be is part of the mystery. In this volume, the victim is the real surprise. And as the story progresses, the readers of this series get closer to the residents of Crozet, Virginia, learning more about each. In this particular story Big Mim stands out and we find her even more human than before. The resolution is satisfying and Harry (Mary Minor Harristeen) is her usual curious and clever self, with the help of her three pets, of course

The question of whether Harry and her ex, Fair, will get back together is still up in the air, but they are getting along better as the series progresses.

Once more, a visit to Crozet leaves the reader with a mystery solved and the chracters more fully realized.
1 people found this helpful
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as advertised

good
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Great cozy read

I enjoyed this book greatly. So much so, that I am going to buy all in the series. Love the animals!
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I have not read one book of her's that was not a great read!!

I enjoy her books and find they are a good mystery!
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There is nothing to like the least

There is nothing to like the least. The book is as sassy, gay, and entertaining as its predecessors. To be read on a cold evening, safely tucked in bed. One feels enough the winter climate, aptly described in this new adventure.