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Summary
Summary
Could Bert really be a zombie cat? Two friends put their brains together to find out in a wry new mystery series.
While helping her best friend, Danny, film his latest horror flick, Mellie discovers a scraggly cat behind a dumpster outside the YummCo Foods factory. Mellie names the stray Bert and hides him in her room, knowing her parents won't let her keep him. But soon Bert has decapitated all her stuffed animals, and before long he is leaving the headless corpses of birds and mice as gifts for her. Danny is convinced the cat is a zombie, living on the brains of his victims. But is that what is really going on? Award-winning author Kara LaReau lets loose a fresh and sharply funny new mystery series, with an irresistible touch of the macabre. Fans of creepy stories and animal lovers alike will devour this fast-moving first episode in one gulp.
Author Notes
Kara LaReau is the author of many books for young readers, including the Theodor Seuss Geisel Honor Book The Infamous Ratsos, The Infamous Ratsos Are Not Afraid, and The Infamous Ratsos: Project Fluffy. She is also the author of the Bland Sisters series of chapter books. She lives in Providence, Rhode Island.
Ryan Andrews is the illustrator of The Dollar Kids by Jennifer Richard Jacobson. He is also a comics artist, and two of his web comics have been nominated for Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards. He lives in Fukuoka, Japan.
Reviews (3)
Publisher's Weekly Review
In this spooky series launch, friends Mellie and Danny find a scraggly cat after Danny, an aspiring filmmaker scouting for a horror movie location, drags Mellie to the YummCo Foods factory's eerie grounds. Smitten with the skinny cat, which has escaped from a cage in the mysterious factory's lab, Mellie takes him home. There, he bites off her stuffed animals' heads and proudly flaunts his hunting prowess outdoors, leaving his prey's decapitated bodies for her to find. Intermittently taking over for Mellie as narrator, the feline--named ZomBert for his brain-eating, "zombie-cat" behaviors--has some of the novel's snappier lines; he's offended when Mellie buries his gift of a headless frog "without even tasting it!" LaReau (the Infamous Ratsos series) credibly weaves real-life strands into the plot--Mellie resents her lifestyle blogger parents' preoccupation with their work, is anxious about presenting her school report, and tries to deflect a bully's taunts--yet leaves enough threads hanging mid-air, largely surrounding cryptic goings-on at YummCo, that the story feels unfinished on its own. Energetic pictures by Andrews (The Dollar Kids) add to the story's mood. Ages 8--12. (July)
Horn Book Review
Nine-year-old friends Mellie and Danny rescue a bedraggled cat they find hiding in a trash barrel. They don't realize that he has just made his escape from a nefarious animal-testing laboratory run by the Trump-like CEO of YummCo., the largest employer in town. Mellie names the cat Bert, but Danny calls him ZomBert because of his habit of eating only the heads of his prey. Meanwhile, the lab is pulling out all the stops to find the missing cat. Why is he so important? Is Bert really a zombie? Can Mellie and Danny protect him? Readers will have to wait for the next series entry to find out; this one ends in a cliffhanger. Frequent digital sketches add suspense to a story with dead-on appeal for Halloween reading. Martha V. Parravano September/October 2020 p.49(c) Copyright 2020. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
There's something strange about Mellie's foundling cat…is Bert a zombie?! Nine-year-old Mellie has no interest in being a part of her parents' food-and-family blog. Her mother and father (a former freelance writer and former chef, respectively) are so busy with the blog and her twin younger brothers that she's pretty free-range. She spends a lot of her time helping her best friend, Danny, make horror movies. When the two of them discover a disheveled cat in a dumpster, Mellie feels drawn to the sickly feline; she sneaks him home, names him Bert, and doesn't tell her parents. Meanwhile the Big Boss of a local lab is not pleased that two of his workers have allowed test subject Y-91 to escape, and he orders them to find it. Bert isn't interested in cat food or even salmon, but he brings Mellie headless animal corpses…could he be a zombie eating only the animals' brains?! When Bert's accused of hurting the school bully's pet rats (and thus brought to the attention of Mellie's parents), she may not be able to keep him. This slim series opener feels like the start of a novel more than a whole book, as so much is left unresolved at the close. The parallel stories of Mellie's discovery of Bert, the search for Y-91, and Bert, as he pursues a mission of his own, will keep young fans of the slightly spooky turning pages…and eager for the next installment. In Andrews' illustrations, Mellie and her mom have dark skin while her dad and the twins have light skin. Enjoyably mysterious. (Science fiction. 7-10) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.