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A personal memoir detailing who I am and how I inadvertently landed in the field of Animal Rescue via my love for Siamese cats. Having no ‘official’ rescue or non-profit experience, join me as I put together ‘Team Meezer’, a group of volunteers who came together to help rescue over 12,000 cats. Covering the Eastern third of the U.S., we learned as we grew, making lots of mistakes in the process. Join us as we share those mistakes, some funny, some sad. See how we grew from a “Crazy Cat Lady” with way too many cats into a successful non-profit animal rescue. We shed blood, tears, and yes, even clothes as we deal with sad, loving, and angry cats. We rescue cats from drawers, rifles, bathtubs and hoarders. We find soulmates, both furry and human. We laugh at ourselves as we take a look at some of our misadventures over the years. You will laugh, you will cry, and you will learn something!
196 pages, Kindle Edition
Published April 10, 2019
This is a story of adventure, deliverance, learning, steadfastness, and above all, love. Rescue Meez: My Journey Through Siamese Rescue is about cats, more especially that very special breed known as Siamese: yes, there are stories that bring tears (for me they started immediately when I read about the “very sad looking seal point male [who] sat on the abandoned front porch” of a rural Virginia home, “wondering what happened to his family”) but also smiles: think about a cat who is badly broken but finds its spirit again. The author is bent on turning what is painful into salvation. So this is a story about very needy cats and their very determined rescuer.
The author, Siri Zwemke, is creator of the highly successful non-profit Siamese Cat Rescue Center (SCRC at siameserescue.org). Over the last twenty years the SCRC has saved some 12,000 Siamese cats and, assisted by 3,000 dedicated volunteers throughout the country, found the cats forever homes. The stories of the cats are tales of heartbreaking and awful
circumstances with many happy endings though, inevitably, not always: the author is direct about the things that went wrong during her challenging journey to learning the art of cat rescue and matching cats to people.
The calls to rescue are true adventure stories: there are stories of hoarding, of abandonment, of threats of mayhem and terrified cats hiding out in abysmal squalor. There are cats that seemed too damaged to ever be placed in new homes.
But these cats, all of them, are stars, and they do shine. Here are two of the book’s many stories (edited with spoiler alerts): Duke is “a cat that had been found in a home with the pet parakeet, both of them sitting loyally by the side of their owner who had been deceased for several weeks.” And there is PowPow, who had been rejected by her family and preferred to keep to herself. Until the day a special child came to the SCRC a child “who twirled around in circles waving his arms and whooping.” From her solitary perch, PowPow watched the autistic child run and circle around, then PowPow jumped down and followed until the boy “sank to the floor, wrapping his arms around his knees and curling up on himself,” his energy spent. Whereupon PowPow “went right up to him, nudged his arms aside, and parked herself in his lap.”
A large part of the charm of this book is the author’s writing talent: her descriptions of cats, their behavior, the expressions in their eyes, the situations they find themselves in, along with her descriptions of people and ability to find the humorous in utter chaos, all these are a delight. It is a fast-paced, thoughtful and thoroughly rewarding story.
Years ago in Salt Lake City, when Miss LilyBelle, a seal point kitten, agreed to live with me, a woman said, “These are not ordinary cats you know.” Beautiful (Siamese truly are), and articulate (also true of Siamese), Miss LilyBelle lived for sixteen and a half years, enduring moves from Utah to Texas to Illinois and finally to Florida. She sealed my love for Siamese and took my heart with her when she died. I didn’t think it could happen, but when Charlie came to me from the SCRC, I found my heart once more. The author and her band of volunteers keep on making love possible.