The first few chapters of this book are discussing the science of cats, especially their evolution and their physiology, and its information just wasn't sitting right. There wasn't anything in particular I could say for certain was wrong, but at the same time much of it just didn't seem right. Then I hit this sentence:
"Domestic dogs have been so manipulated and changed by humankind that today's dogs are an entire genus--not just a species, like domestic cats-- away from their closest wild relatives."
Canis lupus familiaris is NOT a genus away from canis lupus. They're a subspecies of canis lupus! This author has really never heard of wolf-dog hybrids?
I can't imagine how a mistake that profound could even happen, much less make it to print, if the author were doing even a minuscule amount of research. With such basic and easily verified information so incredibly wrong, I don't think I can trust anything else this book says.