A trilogy of 494 pages encompassing three novels under one cover is titled, Problem-Solving
and Cat Tales for the Holidays: Historical—Time-Travel—Adventure, by Anne Hart, ISBN: 0-595-32692-7, published: Aug-2004, iUniverse, Inc.
Here is a collection of happy hero cat historical, adventure, and time-travel stories and novels for all holidays. Could this also be life in the eleventh dimension or on parallel universes? But it is set in our own ancient or medieval time settings for two of the novels. And the third novel is set in the near future in an age when family space travel tours are possible.
Presesnted are nourishing hero-cat and loving human family historical, adventure, and time-travel stories and novels for all holidays...in spite of the wars of various time-traveled ancient or medieval eras or space travel in contemporary settings that are approached by a family of healers trekking to exotic places in time, geography, and space. It's Christmas. It's Hannukah. It's Ramadan.
It's all holidays, and time for an adventure. For example, take the
Silk Road stories: The dialogue also could be useful to create new proverbs for passages such as the following memorable tag lines representing peace between all peoples and beliefs that include all peoples united in healing the world within and without. The characters solve problems and get results.
"For where there's worship, there's more trade," Baghatur added. The next morning was another hot day in July, and Bihar went along the road between the fields of wheat. Women were starting to work the fields again. The children carried sheaves on their heads. Everything had to be done by hand. In Nablus, life went with no work. The food was gone, and not enough healers yet.
So Bihar was welcome to mix his herbs and alchemy because they made miracles. He passed an old farmer wearing a large Greek cross. "Keev Halik?" In Arabic Bihar asked the man how he was. "Forget me," the farmer waved back. "Your crops are still rotting?" Bihar asked as he walked toward Jerusalem. "I had to sell my farm cheap." The farmer laughed tensely.
"So did my forefathers in Sarkel," Bihar answered, with a pointed finger. "Are you a Cherkessk Mountaineer?" "What difference would it make to you from where I come? Does the left side of the Sea mean more to you than the right side of it? There's enough fish at both ends to feed the world." "Where are you going?" The farmer shielded his eyes from the sun with his hands. "I'm going to Jerusalem."
The novel is presented in paperback with two huggable cats on the cover. Characters are in their teens, twenties, with parents in their fifties working together in the same workplace settings, and togetherness, cooperation, and healing is the theme on the time-travel trek. The contemporary novel included as part of the trilogy presents space travel as a family voyage, including the pets.