Member Reviews

DNF about half way through.

I'm not sure which audience this is for. It simultaneously felt aimed at 8 year olds with the way Tess spoke. The slang felt very juvenile and a little like the author had not spoken to a teenager since they themselves were one. I was expecting a book that would help other middle graders cope with their own grief, it was almost too adult in the way it spoke about grief and trauma.

I was wildly uncomfortable with a line in the opening chapter about Tess's breast size and how she was a C cup but had told her friend they were double D's and now she was being teased. I assumed this would tie into the fact that her mum dies of cancer but it appears to never be mention again and just left me feeling uncomfortable that a middle aged male author found it necessary to include.

Some of the language around mental health is highly problematic and seems to prompt otherness and portray it as scary.

Thank you @Netgalley for this eARC.

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As Tess grapples with the loss of her mother 10 weeks prior to “boob cancer”, she also has to deal with her zombie dad, and Alice her cat that appears to want to kill herself. Tess is known to have anger issues, but all these tragedies are just too much for one 12 year old girl. In the midst of her sorrow, her Zombie Dad, is a shell of who he was and Tess wants to run away. Alice has also ran away and searching for her, she ends up at an abandoned house said to be haunted. The family has left everything in its place. She finds Alice in a small corner which she cannot reach. Along the way, she also finds new friends, Eddie, Lunar and Dami and a classmate Cotter that takes them on a ghostly journey.
The characters were wonderful and they all are running from family trauma. Eddie, an ace baseball player, now with a disability due to head trauma is misunderstood, but he is the sweetest of all her new friends. Cotter loves dressing up into characters and is a detriment to the trouble the kids will find themselves in. Lunar and Dami are the goth kids who believe in ghosts and talking to the dead. With everyone’s help, Tess finds her way to a better understanding of her dad.
I will definitely use this book with my kids for speech therapy. There are many phrases and colorful idioms (buyt nuggets, spiders in her heart) that are perfect for language therapy.
A wonderful book dealing with the death of a loved one, divorce, disabilities and anger.

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Alice the Cat by Tim Cummings is a beautifully crafted tale that strikes a delicate balance between the magical and the real. As a reader, I found myself deeply immersed in Tess's world, where the ordinary blends seamlessly with the extraordinary. On the brink of her thirteenth birthday, Tess is grappling with profound loss and upheaval. Her mother has passed away, her father is emotionally distant, and her beloved cat, Alice, is dangerously seeking out traffic. In her desperate state, Tess contemplates running away, only to find herself in the middle of an unexpected adventure.

The story takes a captivating turn when Tess encounters a group of manga-loving goth kids performing séances in a local haunted house. Through this strange and intriguing new world, Tess learns that the house’s ghostly inhabitant yearns for a cat to care for in the afterlife—and Alice is the ghost’s chosen feline. What follows is an adventurous and emotional quest where Tess, with the help of an unexpected friend and a charmingly awkward kid who has a huge crush on her, battles to save Alice and mend her fractured family.

What I loved most about Alice the Cat is how it intertwines themes of grief, healing, and self-discovery with a touch of magical realism. Tess's journey is as much about confronting her own sorrow and helping her father as it is about saving Alice from the ghost's clutches. The emotional weight of Tess’s story is palpable, and the author’s ability to infuse humor and hope amidst the sadness makes the narrative all the more engaging.

The characters are well-developed, each with their own unique quirks and challenges. Tess’s evolution from a grieving, isolated girl to someone who actively seeks to make things right is both heartwarming and inspiring. The secondary characters, including the goth kids and the endearing kid with a crush, add depth and charm to the story, making it feel rich and multi-dimensional.

The pace of the novel is medium, allowing for a thoughtful exploration of the characters and their emotional arcs without feeling rushed. The blend of adventure and emotional depth keeps the reader invested, and the story’s resolution is both satisfying and hopeful.

In essence, Alice the Cat is a heartwarming and adventurous read that beautifully captures the essence of healing through connection and courage. Tim Cummings has created a touching narrative that resonates with themes of loss and recovery, and it left me both uplifted and reflective. If you’re drawn to stories that combine magical elements with deep emotional journeys, this book is a must-read.

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It's been ten weeks since it happened. Tess is angry, her dad is a zombie and her cat Alice has been behaving very strangely lately.

After choosing to walk home to avoid the taunts on the school bus, Tess discovers her street in chaos. Her tree (she named Stanley) is lying across her lawn and street, not standing up straight like he should be. Her elderly neighbour's car is crumpled around Stanley, and she is sitting on the curb. How did this all happen? Alice the cat.

At hearing that Alice dashed across in front of the car on purpose, Tess begins her search. After losing her mum to breast cancer, Alice is very special and Tess sees her mum's cat as a kind of sister. Sure enough, Alice is again at a deserted house not far from Tess' home, which is said to be haunted.

It's also said to be the hang-out of a group of weird goths, drug users and other undesirables. But there is much more to this house that was left in a hurry, months before by its owners.

Tess is joined by her long-term admirer Cotter Wingham, in the search for Alice. He will do anything for Tess, but she usually ignores him as much as possible.

Back home again, she's worried about Alice and angry at her father for his lack of care for them both. Tess already knows she has a short fuse, but her dad's constant zombie-like state finally causes her to snap.

An unlikely alliance is made in her flight from home and she finally learns the reason for Alice's attachment to the deserted house. Long before their town even existed, another house burnt to the ground, and the culprit is back. It wants Alice for its own and Tess must make a difficult choice.

After ten weeks of grief, uncertainty and silence in her home, her life is tipped upside down again. But maybe this time there is something good at the end?


Being a cat lover, the title and cover intrigued me. Add a ghost, a mystery and a likeable main character, and I was hooked early. This mix of genres makes an interesting read. There are also multi-layered tones in this novel - serious, funny, and sad, and the larger-than-life characters of Cotter (who has a major crush on Tess) and Eddie (a misunderstood young man with a brain injury) add even more.

The connection between characters (both alive and dead) of mistreatment or neglect by their families is sobering, but something they can all understand abut each other whilst coming from completely different circumstances.

Alice is the reason for the carnage on the first page of this novel but is also the catalyst for healing sorely needed by many.

Something different, and an enjoyable, multi-award winning read.

Thanks to Regal House Publishing & Net Galley for the ARC of this novel.

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The very beginning of the book is a 12-year-old girl thinking her C cups are big enough for her age, and expecting her breasts to grow much larger. We don't go back to that or find out why we started by focusing on a preteen's chest, because then we get to the story, which is about dying from cancer, suicide, depression and PTSD. A pet dies.
I've always thought books are a great, safe place for kids to learn to deal with important issues, but this felt like a lot. Tess was likeable but seemed immature. She tries to deal with everything on her own; with her mother dead and her dad a zombie, she feels alone.
I guess I didn't identify with the people and I can't figure out what age group this is for.
Thanks to NetGalley for letting me read this

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I don’t think I’ve ever read a book that encapsulates being a child like this one does. The thoughts, behaviors, and emotions are all incredibly in-tune with adolescence, especially as it pertains to grief and loss. The author uses incredibly accessible prose, with fantastic, vivid imagery.

This is every bit a child’s adventure - running away to the house down the street, doing rebellious things, doesn’t exactly scream crazy and high-risk to an adult, but it does to a child. Tess’s view of her father and life after her mother’s death make the book especially compelling. It’s worth a read for anyone that can relate to those feelings of loss so early in life. It’s heartwarming and heartbreaking at the same time.

I liked the simplicity of it, but it was harder for me to get into. I think some aspects of the book are a little repetitive and drawn out. For example, most of the character development happens in the last 50 pages, making Tess’s conversations fairly one-note throughout. I wasn’t a huge fan of the diction (e.g., Tess’s vocabulary), and I found myself craving other perspectives outside of her’s because of that.

I suppose that some of the things that I didn’t like about the book are related to me not being the target audience. I’m positive that it would be effective as a well-rounded middle grade read for the target audience.

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After the traumatic loss of her mother, Tess now faces life with a father who has become an emotionally unresponsive zombie living in his pajamas, and a cat who seems determined to kill herself.

Unable to cope, she decides to run away, and finds herself in a haunted house, where a ghost appears to have designs on her cat. Determined to save Alice from herself, as well as external factors, Tess is desperate.

She finds help from the most unexpected sources including a new friend, a wannabe boyfriend and two surprisingly kind Goths. Will this combination be enough to save Alice?

This is an empathetic portrayal of a teen under siege, at times a little dark, and contains themes of grief, illness, friendship, found family, and recovery from loss. It gets 3.5 stars.

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I did not remember requesting this book but I must have done it, and it appeared on my netgalley shelf recently. Unfortunately, I did not connect with it and thought some characters were truly irritating and hurtful. I did appreciate the cat and the ouija board moments, but the rest? Not so much.

Thank you to Netgalley for an ARC in exchange for a honest review.

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I LOVED this! Our teens have really enjoyed it as well as I have recommended it multiple times after reading it here.

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Thanks to NetGalley for sending me an eARC of Alice the Cat in exchange for an honest review. Opinions expressed in this review are my own.

Tess is a young teenager who is sadly learning how to navigate grief after losing her mother. Her father is in his own state of grief and unable to tend to Tess, and her beloved cat Alice is causing trouble. Tess attempts to seek solace by running away with her cat, leading her to find friendship in someone she'd never expect.

This was heartbreakingly lovely. The author manages to include the feelings you experience through the stages of grief (depression, anger), all while including moments of humor and hopefulness. I would highly recommend this book for preteen kids, and really, all ages - I thoroughly enjoyed this.

TW: Death of a parent, sick pet/pet loss, depression, mention of suicide, cancer

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Be warned – this book is absolutely heartbreaking! I cried and cried!

Everything that can go wrong seems to have gone wrong for the poor main character, Tess, and her beloved cat being lured by a ghost feels like the last straw, tipping her into going on the run in a desperate attempt to keep hold of the one loved one she has left. And while attempting to run and hide from unpleasant realities, Tess meets some unusual new friends: brain-injured Eddie; sweet stalker Cotter; Goth couple Dami and Lunar; and the aforementioned ghostly cat-poacher.

So, this is a coming of age story about dealing with loss and the ensuing trauma, anger and bewilderment it leaves behind. All of the characters are wonderfully drawn and instantly compelling and the writing plunges you deep into Tess’s grief and keeps you immersed there with her, holding your breath that you will both surface by the end of the story.

The supernatural elements are neatly woven in with the realism of the emotion and characters and are, in turns, scary, clever and comforting. And while nothing is ‘all fixed’ by the end of the book (again, realism) there is hope that Tess is on a brighter, healing path.

I couldn’t stop turning the pages and was rooting for Tess, Alice and co. all the way, and although I did cry a lot, they were cathartic tears that left me with a warm, comforted glow when I finally put the book down.

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Alice the Cat is an exceptional and emotionally charged story that masterfully explores the intricate landscape of grief. I stumbled upon this book during a period of my life marked by the loss of my father and the responsibility of caring for a mother grappling with dementia. Despite the passage of time since my father's passing in 2020, the weight of grief lingers. However, "Alice the Cat" is far from a relentless journey of sorrow. It deftly weaves elements of mystery, humor, and an abundance of love into its storytelling tapestry.

As we follow Tess on her journey, the narrative is punctuated with surprising twists, including her encounters with a ghost who shares her penchant for anger. This journey is one that tugs at the heartstrings and continually piques curiosity. Ultimately, it guides Tess toward a place of inner peace and acceptance. The story is profoundly moving and concludes on an uplifting note, with Tess emerging with newfound self-awareness and resilience to move forward in life.

Throughout the book, the author employs unique and vivid imagery to depict the emotions and processes of grief. Metaphors such as the spider across Tess's heart, the wart toad in her belly, and the imagery of steam and erupting lava enrich the narrative. "Alice the Cat" is not solely a narrative of grief; it's a beautifully woven tapestry of personal growth, featuring a captivating cast of characters. From Lunar and Dami to Cotter, Eddie, Alice, and Francine, the secondary characters are as engaging as Tess herself. I wholeheartedly and enthusiastically endorse "Alice the Cat." It's a literary masterpiece that delves into the profound depths of grief, the complexities of growing up, and the enduring strength of love, all wrapped in an engaging and exquisitely crafted narrative.

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This was an interesting take on dealing with loss, grief, the aftermath of a loss and changes from puberty. Tess' mom recently passed away from breast cancer, her father is still mired in grief, and Alice, her cat, is suicidal. Tess decides to run away to save Alice and see if her dad will escape his zombie-like state. It's a moving story and details how much Tess is truly working through to get past her grief and to be able to work through her grief with her dad.

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Princess Fuzzypants here: Tess is having a very bad day. She is vexed by things a thirteen year old girl must go through, her mother has died recently and her father’s way of coping is to turn into a sad zombie and now Alice, the cat she shared with her mother, is doing some very strange and alarming things. Tess constantly feels like she is going explode with rage and decides the only way to survive is run away with Alice. But Alice is very ill and things do not go as Tess had planned.

In fact, there are many surprises in store for her including an encounter with a ghost who has almost as many anger issues as Tess. It is a sometimes heartbreaking and always interesting journey that Tess takes that will bring her peace and acceptance. The story is quite moving and ends on an optimistic note. With new self awareness, Tess is more empowered to move forward with her life.

Four purrs and two paws up.

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This is a good middle grade book that tackles topics like death, disability, and processing one's complex emotions. The way these topics are discussed is in a very interesting and wonderful story. All in all it is a quick read but overall was just an okay book.

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Alice the cat is suicidal. Tess (Alice's human) needs to figure out why and how to help her.

This is a heartwarming story with a lot of themes. Found family, grief, disability, and neglect.

I thought it was ok. Not great. I liked Tess and her friends, they were humorous at times.

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Whilst recovering from the death of her mother Tess has to deal with a suicidal cat!

There is much to unpack in Tim Cumming’s quirky Alice the Cat, some which is positive but other aspects I struggled with. Amazon UK lists the book for ages 9-12, Amazon USA contradicts this with ‘twelve years and up’, with even more differing age quotes elsewhere online. The language used is often very juvenile and is lower Middle Grade, however, because the book is so heavily centred around death, more sensitive younger children might struggle with it and that pushes the reader age up slightly. Ultimately it is tricky to pinpoint this book’s genuine audience.

Alice the Cat begins several months after the death of almost-thirteen-year-old Tess’s mother and although the writing style is kept light there is no getting away from the fact the themes surrounding cancer is bleak stuff. Tess also struggles getting along with her father, whom he calls a ‘zombie’ and is obviously grieving in his own way, with the pair failing to connect. Overcoming grief is one of the overarching themes of the novel and although the father and daughter get there in the end, it is a tough journey with plenty of bumps in the road.

Considering the book is called Alice the Cat, Tess’s pet is barely present but represents a strong connection with her dead mother, who adored the creature. Early in the novel the cat runs in front of a neighbour’s car and almost causes a serious accident, thinking it was deliberate, Tess believes her cat is suicidal and will go to any lengths to save the animal, no matter what other chaos she causes (a lot!) along the way. Suicide is not a subject which pops up in Middle Grade fiction too often and needs to be handled incredibly sensitively (even with animals) and I was unconvinced the tone hit the mark.

Tess stumbles upon a group of teenagers hiding out in the local haunted house performing séances and discovers that the house’s 150-year-old ghost desperately wants a cat to care for in the afterlife, and it has its sights apparently set on Alice. Tess believes that the ghost is in some way encouraging the cat to end her life prematurely and with the help of two unlikely friends attempts to save her cat, her dad and make peace with the ghost. The two friends were genuine fun, another kid who had a crush on her (Cotter) and a much older boy (Eddie) who had an acquired brain injury from an unexplained baseball injury some years earlier. The scenes featuring the three provide many of the story’s lighter moments and highlight the fact that Tess is not that easy to get along with and her personal problems become more obvious.

This was an accessible and realistic way of writing about grief, which dealt with emotional trauma and how support could be found in friendships. However, some of the scenes felt misplaced and I would question the need of the séance at all, it just felt unnecessary in this style of Middle Grade book, for the way in which Tess and the other characters contacted the ghost. Ultimately it was a very hopeful book in which anger was well portrayed and even though Tess had a slightly odd-ball personality, being different was okay too.

I did struggle with the language which is perhaps why the book has several different age ranges quoted. The slang used ranged from ridiculous to completely unbelievable, with words such as ‘buttnuggets,’ ‘freakiacs,’ and ‘crapballs’. This type of vocabulary made the narrative feel very childish whilst the subject matter felt a little too adult. I would also question the appropriateness of discussing the breast size of a twelve-year-old girl, as these types of body image discussions can come across as insensitive if they are not a necessary part of the story (it wasn’t).

I warmed to Tess as Alice the Cat progressed, with the book tackling very tough issues with humour and an easy-to-read style. Once Tess settled down she became more likable, but I also felt her two friends could have been fleshed out more fully, particularly with a backstory revealing more the brain injury. It is important to have relatable characters in Middle Grade novels and Tess will be attractive to many, even if they have never heard of the word ‘buttnuggets.’

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A wacky story about grief and loss and moving on. Thank you, Net Gallery, for the advanced copy. I enjoyed the book and would recommend. It is the story of a girl who loses her mother and her cat and how she reacts then seeks help.

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I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are my own

Alice the Cat brings out a lot if emotions. By the 4th or 5th chapter teared up more then once. It deals a lot with grief and the multiple ways one deals with is. Checking out.
zombie)anger and depression

They aside the imagery is phenomenal! Tom Cummings has found the sweet spot between non descriptive and over descriptive.

Alice the Cat is a beautiful book that is fun to read, even if you may cry.

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This children's chapter book follows twelve year old Tess who recently lost her mother to cancer. The book deals with grief and anger issues, which Tess especially feels towards her father who has been acting like a zombie since his wife died. When he refuses to take their cat Alice to the vet, Tess decides to run away with her feline friend.

The story and writing was engaging, but things felt a bit all over the place with many characters and side-stories, including a pretty thin ghost story. It all comes together with a happy ending at least, and the main story is given most of center stage throughout.
Some references felt outdated for kids today and there were several instances that made me cringe a bit - this book could have used a sensitivity read-through. Like when the main character uses the word "fat" in a derogatory way, or when she's thinking about her own body.

Those factors lower my rating, but overall it's a book worth reading for kids (~11-14). There are some funny side-characters, some action and it's a bit scary which most kids love! It's an especially useful story for encouraging kids to talk about grief, and it leaves off on a positive note about the importance of family, friends and going to therapy if you need to.

Thank you to Regal House, Fitzroy Books and NetGalley for sharing an eARC for review consideration. All opinions are my own.

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