Meow
Descripción editorial
Assassin. Private Investigator. Cat shifter.
Kat has spent her life taking lives. As a deadly feline shifter assassin, she's fast, silent, and lethal – and she prefers it that way. But when a job forces her to investigate a murder instead of commit one, she stumbles into a mystery involving severed body parts, suspicious clients, and a rival assassin who just might be better than her.
Add in a talking cat network, a new team of misfit allies, and an unexpected connection with several dangerously intriguing men, and Kat's simple life of murder and solitude is about to get a whole lot more complicated.
Book one in the Catnip Assassins series, a completed slow-burn paranormal reverse harem full of shifter romance, urban fantasy action, female assassins, found family, and a snarky cat shifter who doesn't play by the rules.
If you love sarcastic heroines, secret societies, emotional slow-burns, and shapeshifter drama, start this addictive series today.
"A promising, expansive new universe. This delightful paranormal mystery is perfect for fans of Nalini Singh." - Publishers Weekly
"Purrfect start to a new series. MacKinnon sunk her claws into my mind right away with her unique world and loveable assassin, and she wouldn't release me until the last word." - USA Today Bestselling Author Catherine Banks
Reading order:
•Meow
•Scratch
•Purrr
•Hisss
•Lick
•Claw
•Roar
•Thud (holiday special)
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The kitschy fun of the first urban fantasy in the Catnip Assassins series from MacKinnon (Stolen by Them) more than makes up for any flaws in the plotting. In an alternate present-day British city teeming with shape-shifters, but without cars, computers, or guns, the sinister Pack works to put all shape-shifters under its control, whether or not they join willingly. When a mysterious stranger offers to remove the collar that keeps fierce jaguar-shifter Kat enslaved to the Pack, she eagerly accepts despite ambiguous strings attached. Kat uses her newfound freedom to launch Meow, a business specializing in contract killing. When a man hires Meow to find his brother's killer, Kat initially protests that the case is outside of her wheelhouse, but a blank check and permission to kill the murderer when she finds him persuade her to take the job. As more bodies turn up, Kat and her spy network comprising the city's stray cats discover that the murderer is targeting shifters. The procedural plot is somewhat muddled, but provides a welcome excuse to visit a promising, expansive new universe. This delightful paranormal mystery is perfect for fans of Nalini Singh. (Self-published)