Not that I don't believe that animals can't sense things but I do believe the writer took a little liberty with the story. "The fast-acting feline sat on Jung's chest in an attempt to wake her up and when that didn't work, he nudged and nipped her face until she briefly returned to consciousness." How does the writer know the cat sat on her chest and that the sitting didn't wake the lady? Did the cat tell the writer? I don't know who made the assumption, the lady or the writer, but it would be nice if the writer or the editor had clarified that before the story was sent to press.
On Feb 27, 2012 Chunkychuck wrote:
Not that I don't believe that animals can't sense things but I do believe the writer took a little liberty with the story. "The fast-acting feline sat on Jung's chest in an attempt to wake her up and when that didn't work, he nudged and nipped her face until she briefly returned to consciousness." How does the writer know the cat sat on her chest and that the sitting didn't wake the lady? Did the cat tell the writer? I don't know who made the assumption, the lady or the writer, but it would be nice if the writer or the editor had clarified that before the story was sent to press.