Cat-A-Lyst

Alan Dean Foster

Publisher: Orbit

Published: Jul 1, 1991

Description:

From Publishers Weekly

Reading Foster ( Quozl ) is like eating a meringue: it's not very filling, but it tastes just fine. Foster likes to put silly twists on old stories. In this case, he has a race of guardians (called Monitors) whose function is to guide the races of different planets through their evolution--the twist being that the Monitors take the form of cats. The plot involves a Renegadeuppercase ok?/yes/pk Monitor who tries to disrupt Earth by bringing about the return of a lost tribe of South American natives. The natives, now called Contisuyuns, live on another world, which they landed on by way of transmitters left by a group of aliens called Boojums, who look like trees and speak with British accents. The Contisuyuns plan to take long overdue revenge for the conquistadores' 15th-century ravaging by creating a TV show that broadcasts subliminal anti-Spain messages. The main characters, who encounter these variously fey creatures, include a pretty-boy actor, a wardrobe designer, their faithful Indian guide, an aspiring archeologist, a pair of Peruvian capitalists, a tabloid reporter and a large and power-hungry Peruvian woman.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Actor Jason Carter travels to Peru to follow up on a stolen treasure map showing the location of the lost gold of the Incas. Instead, he locates the lost Incas themselves--in an alternate dimension from which they plan to reconquer the world--and joins with an ever-increasing and bizarre array of allies and antagonists (including a race of sentient cat-like beings) to stop them. Veteran sf author Foster ( The Last Starfighter , LJ 5/15/84; Cyber Way, LJ 5/15/90) strings together a number of conventions from his many movie novelizations in an affectionate tribute to bad sf films. Though entertaining, this is not an essential purchase.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.