Kitty Takes a Holiday (Kitty Norville) After getting caught turning wolf on national television, Kitty retreats to a mountain cabin to recover and write her memoirs. But this is Kitty, so trouble is never far behind, and instead of Walden Pond, she gets Evil Dead. When werewolf
| TITLE | : | Kitty Takes a Holiday (Kitty Norville) |
| AUTHOR | : | |
| RATING | : | 4.58 (279 Votes) |
| ASIN | : | 0446618748 |
| FORMAT TYPE | : | Mass Market Paperback |
| NUMBER of PAGES | : | 336 Pages |
| PUBLISH DATE | : | 2007-04-01 |
| GENRE | : |

After getting caught turning wolf on national television, Kitty retreats to a mountain cabin to recover and write her memoirs. But this is Kitty, so trouble is never far behind, and instead of Walden Pond, she gets Evil Dead. When werewolf hunter Cormac shows up with an injured Ben O'Farrell, Kitty's lawyer, slung over his shoulder, and a wolf-like creature with glowing red eyes starts sniffing around the cabin, Kitty wonders if any of them will get out of these woods alive
EDITORIAL :
From Publishers Weekly Having established a successful radio show, revealed herself to the nation as a werewolf and testified in Senate hearings on the supernatural, Vaughn's plucky series heroine, Kitty Norville, is ready to lay low in a remote Colorado cabin and work on her memoirs. Her plans get derailed when werewolf hunter Cormac Bennett shows up at Kitty's hideaway with her lawyer, Ben O'Farrell, who has been bitten—and infected—by a werewolf. Soon after Kitty takes them in, hoping to help Ben adjust to his new predicament, she discovers gruesome animal sacrifices at her door. It becomes apparent that a malevolent force is staking out the cabin, targeting one of them, and Cormac's hunt for it takes them all in some unexpected directions. Kitty's matter-of-fact voice continues to mine the horror and romantic material for laughs—especially in her prank calls to a ri
REVIEW :
I believe that if I'd read this book and taken it to heart before that date, Mr. So far this book has helped me fix two problems on my scooter that would of been expensive to take into a repair shop. A late 20th century biasthe houses from the end of the century are naturally less convincing and will be very different for any architectural historian writing the same book 100 years from now. Must say that this book is the least I liked of the series. The sex scenes (particularly in books one and two) are off the charts - Naz would give Kayne from Claimed & Owned a run for his money and that's saying something. I couldn't put it down. Yet, the book left me wanting more. On the other hand, an unexpected gift I found in Remembering Mr. I could go on and on about this book as it has kept me motivated like no other book I ever read.
If I had to say something negitive about the book, it wo


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