Catseye

Paperback, 176 pages

English language

Published Jan. 24, 1967 by Ace Books.

OCLC Number:
85845803

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(2 reviews)

Deported from his own planet in a galactic war, Tony Horan was permitted to hire out as a daily laborer on Korwar, where he had been relocated. Temporary work in a strange interplanetary pet shop led Troy to the realization that with certain animals, he could hold wordless communication. Why were these animals being brought to Korwar? Who was the controlling agent they feared and hated? The night on which the pet-shop owner was killed, a few of the pieces in the puzzle fell into place. Just enough to involve Tony personally, and force his escape to a dead underground city and a bid for freedom that challenged time itself and the plans of mighty planetary rulers.

9 editions

reviewed Catseye by Andre Norton (Dipple #1)

A fine midcentury YA SF novel, but missing something.

No rating

I thought I was going to spend Our Decameron Year (and counting) catching up on a bunch of classics I haven’t read (Middlemarch is the big one), but instead I found myself… reading a bunch of midcentury popular fiction, your Jack Vances and Patricia Highsmits and Donald Westlakes. Andre Norton—a long-time employee of the Cleveland Public Library until she began working for Martin Greenberg’s Gnome Press and then became a full-time writer—is, I suppose, both a writer of midcentury popular fiction and a classic (of sorts) that I haven’t read. Despite Norton being one of the formative writers of the nascent young adult SF market (the Science Fiction Writers of America’s prize for young adult novel of the year is the Andrew Norton Award), I’m not sure I’ve ever read anything by her. I picked up Catseye at my local used bookstore for my daughter, since it’s about telepathically …

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