Kitty Kelley loves Georgetown and The Georgetowner loves Kitty Kelley, so much so that they made her life the cover story of this week’s issue. While the article spends a great deal of time exploring Kelley’s sometimes-scandalous book career, it deals a little bit with how she lives her life in Georgetown. Her secluded garden lifestyle (for those who saw the cover of the NY Times’ House and Home section last week, you were either amazed or confused by her monkey-shaped topiaries hanging in the background) must be nice, especially for an author, but we wonder if it ever gets boring.

Her offices off Prospect Street, the Georgetowner says, are filled with documents relating to her latest book, “The Family,” the indepth inquiry into the Bush family that the White House calls pure garbage.

Over three-and-a-half years, Kelly said that she conducted nearly a thousand interviews for this book with 10,000 pages of transcripts. One of the working rooms in her office includes four bulky filing cabinets, its 28 sections crammed full with some 3,000 files.

And while the White House might think Kitty Kelley is a feral kitty that snoops where she should not be snooping, there is news that there has been a feral cat on the loose in the neighborhood. The Post’s Animal Watch (which washingtonpost.com does not post any longer, sadly) reports that a stray cat ran into a man’s house on 30th Street and “[w]hen he tried to chase it outside, it leapt onto a bed, defecated and jumped through an open window onto a roof.”

There are certainly some frisky kitties in Georgetown.