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Literary cats: How many of these famously bookish felines do you know?

( of 4 correct)

Dewey was dumped in the book return box of an Iowa library on a freezing winter's night. However, once rescued and installed as official "library cat," he quickly became a celebrity – a role which he embraced with all his photogenic being.

Dewey was dumped in the book return box of an Iowa library on a freezing winter's night. However, once rescued and installed as official "library cat," he quickly became a celebrity – a role which he embraced with all his photogenic being.

Dewey was dumped in the book return box of an Iowa library on a freezing winter's night. However, once rescued and installed as official "library cat," he quickly became a celebrity – a role which he embraced with all his photogenic being.

Dewey was dumped in the book return box of an Iowa library on a freezing winter's night. However, once rescued and installed as official "library cat," he quickly became a celebrity – a role which he embraced with all his photogenic being.

1. Which good-looking feline inspired this paragraph of praise?

Pewter, the cat sleuth of "A Purrfect Murder" by Rita Mae Brown

 

Dewey, the literary icon of "Dewey: The Small-Town Library Cat Who Touched the World," by Vicki Myron

 

The cat-philosopher of "Jasper" by Michelle Groce

 

Norton, the urbane feline of "The Cat Who Went to Paris" by Peter Gethers

 

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