The Time Tunnel looks in on Maxwell Silver Hammer Smith, an alien cat celebrating his 20 birthday

This time out, I join Leah and Dick as they take their cat, Maxwell Silver Hammer Smith, out for a treat at a frozen-custard joint in honor of his 20th birthday. (By the way, the oldest cat recorded by Guinness World Records was 38.)

To learn more about Max, visit his birthday website, where you can hear him howl, yowl, meow and purr. On the site, you can also read about Max's dietary regimen, which includes distilled water and concessions to his increasingly finicky concept of mealtime. At one time, he insisted upon being served Gerber baby food.

Leah, however, has an easy explanation for Max's behavior.

DVD box art for The Cat From Outer Space, a Walt Disney live-action film from 1978, showing a black cat wearing a collar embedded with crystals. In the background a small UFO with green-glowing catlike windows hovers over some humans."For years, I've suspected that Max is an alien," she writes in 'Planet Catnip: My Life With an Alien Cat," a chapter in the just-published book "Cat Women: Female Writers on Their Feline Friends."

"I don't know what planet he beamed down from," Leah writes, "but he's definitely Out There. For one thing, he likes to follow us around the house, watching intently, as if he's taking mental notes on all our doings to report to someone later. I work at home, so his favorite observation spot during the day is my desk. When he's not staring unnervingly at my computer screen while I type, he's sitting on my papers -- he has a sixth sense of just which one I need at any time, and that suddenly becomes his favorite resting spot.

"But anyone could argue that those are 'normal' cat traits. The biggest hint I have that Max is not from this world is his abnormal reaction to catnip. Most cats, when exposed to this herb, become excited, euphorically sniffing, rolling around, shaking their heads, and rubbing against things. Even lions and tigers have this catnip response. Not Max...."

Cover of book Cat Women: Female Writers and Their Feline Friends, to which Leah A. Zeldes is a contributorThis week, several writers who contributed to "Cat Women" -- including Leah, Margaret Littman and Judy Sutton Taylor -- will read from the book at 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 20, at The Book Cellar, 4736 N. Lincoln Ave., in Chicago's Lincoln Square. We'll be there, so stop by and say hey!

ChicagoScope feedback line: 312-683-5272. Send e-mail to ChicagoScope@gmail.com.

Direct download: max.mp3
Category: Chicago -- posted at: 4:42 PM
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About Me
I'm Leigh Hanlon, a writer and photographer in Chicago. Before moving to the Windy City, I worked at daily and weekly newspapers in Arizona, Colorado and Wyoming. (Photo by Marty Larkin)


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Some ChicagoScope podcasts are recorded on genuine analog magnetic tape in our faithful Marantz PMD222, PMD420 and PMD430 or Sony TC-D5 Pro II cassette machines. Otherwise, content is digitally captured with Sony PCM-D50 or Marantz PMD620 and PMD660 recorders. ChicagoScope is edited in GarageBand on an Apple Mac Mini.


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