Bill Hall, friend and butler to cats, admits to mixed feelings about such strange little creatures. He compares serving a cat to having a human 2-year-old in your life-something lovable that commands your affection but trashes your house. A cat, like a child, will mangle your begonias and then crawl into your lap to share the warmth of its feelings - but only if it really wants to. Hall, a syndicated humor columnist, admits his popular cat stories are really about humans and the rational reasons we bring cats into our lives - for entertainment and for fuzzy filler in empty nests. Hanging out with cats also gives hope for humankind. After all, if we can bond so tightly with creatures from another species, then we could easily learn to harmonize with fellow human beings.
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About the Author:
Bill Hall is a syndicated Northwest humor columnist. Three collections of Hall's columns have been published as books -"Killer Chicken," "Son of Killer Chicken," and "The Sandwich Man." Washington State University Press published "Frank Church, D.C. and Me," Hall's humorous account of his time living in the wicked city of Washington while trying to escape from a presidential campaign. Bill Hall is married to Dr. Sharon Taylor, a linguist. Taylor is also a sculptor who works both in bronze and in reshaping the uncivilized tendencies of two cats and one writer. Hall and Taylor have six children, 12 grandchildren and more cats over the years than you can shake a mouse at.
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- PublisherTaylor Hall Publishing
- Publication date2009
- ISBN 10 0615256724
- ISBN 13 9780615256726
- BindingPaperback
- Number of pages218