This week, we're again sharing excerpts from two of our three new books. We've got fun feline facts from "MeowWow: Curiously Compelling Facts, True Tales & Trivia Even Your Own Cat Won't Know" (HCI, $15). Enjoy!
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Free Bookmark! ![]() Universal Press Syndicate illustration
We can't come to your home to autograph your books, but we're offering the next best thing.
For a free cardstock bookmark autographed by Dr. Marty Becker and Gina Spadafori, send a self-addressed, stamped, legal-sized envelope to Pet Connection, Universal Press Syndicate, 4520 Main St., Kansas City, MO 64111.
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The British government for many years kept cats "on the payroll" to help keep buildings free of rodents.
Like the cheetah -- albeit not as fast -- domestic cats are built for quick bursts of speed. While you could never outrun a dog over distance, you could outrun a cat. They quickly overheat when running and have to stop after just 30 to 60 seconds to cool down.
Modern medicine, no surprise, doesn't look kindly on such theories. And by the way: Dogs are attracted to open wounds because the serum from them is sweet.
People crave sweets, but cats couldn't care less because the taste buds of a cat are incapable of detecting, appreciating or triggering a craving for foods we recognize as "sweet." It's unclear whether the ancestors of cats had the ability to detect sweet and lost it, or whether cats never developed a "sweet tooth" because, as true carnivores, they didn't need it.
The playwright Eugene O'Neill is credited with using the exact phrasing in use today.
-- Excerpted with permission of HCI Publishing.
Dr. Marty Becker, the popular veterinary contributor to ABC-TV's "Good Morning America," has been writing a syndicated newspaper column for more than a decade. Becker is also the host of "The Pet Doctor With Marty Becker," which airs on PBS stations around the country. He has appeared on Animal Planet and is a frequent guest on national network and cable television, and on radio shows.
Gina Spadafori is the award-winning author of top-selling pet-care books, and a consultant to the Veterinary Information Network. Her Web log and column archives can be found at www.spadafori.com.
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