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    I have a book at home that may be what you want.  It was given to me
    for my birthday as I was a new kitty owner.
    
    It has a chapter on each: cat types, cat habits, breeding, kittening, anatomy
    and an appendix on cat emergency care.  It tells the owner how to
    determine illness and some charts the say which symptoms merrit your
    attention, vet attention, and emergency vet attention.
    
    I found a couple of funny things in this book.  Apparently, it was
    originally written in England and the metrics for pounds and
    temperatures were re-written for Americans.  There some mistakes here.
    It says, "A cat's adult weight is about 12 pounds and at birth they are
    four pounds".  Then it talks about cooking something for a cat and it
    says, "Set you oven to 372 degrees".
    
    I'll get the name and publisher tonight when I go home.
    
    aud...
    
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|  |     You can do a "show key/full books" at the notes prompt to list all the
    topics in this conference that talk about cat books.  There are several
    discussions that mention cat health books if I remember correctly.
    
    One book that I have found to be very complete is the Cornell Book of
    Cats, edited by Mordecai Siegal.  It has detailed chapters on interal
    organs, anatomy, respiratory, circulatory systems, etc. and lists
    diseases that can affect each.  It also has a chapter on how to tell
    when your cat is sick, poisonous substances for cats, and how to care
    for an aging cat.  All this plus the usual "how to choose a cat" and
    cat breeds chapters.  Great book.  Cost was about $24 two years ago
    when I bought my copy.  This is a hard back book.
    
    I have a quick reference emergency guide book at home that is a
    paperback and probably cost about $10 when I bought it.  Will have to
    look up the name and get back to you.
    
    Jo
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