Synopses & Reviews
Things really stink in the Kingdom of Armpit. King Reginald the Not Very Realistic has had it up to here with his practical joker of a son Prince Harry. Even Sir Bedwetter can?t take the prince?s Royal Clowning Around!
Enter Sir Fartsalot?the bravest, boldest, er, most potent knight in all the land! He?s on a quest to solve the riddle of the Foul West Wind?a ghastly odor that turns up whenever danger is lurking. Prince Harry decides to play the biggest, boogeriest prank of all time! He convinces Sir Fartsalot that The Booger, a frightful and repulsive villain, is on the prowl. But when a real Booger turns up, Harry, Sir Fartsalot and the knight?s old buddy Sir Knotaclew must set out on a hilarious quest to rid the world of the Snotty Scoundrel, once and for all!
Review
"Don Quixote for nine-year-olds, filtered through Captain Underpants and Monty Python. Entertaining and fun." -
Quill and Quire "If your little boy doesn't like to read, give him a copy of Sir Fartsalot Hunts the Booger." -The New Yorker's online books blog
Synopsis
Things really stink in the Kingdom of Armpit, and it's up to Sir Fartsalot to solve the riddle of the Foul West Wind. Misbehavin' Harry convinces Sir Fartsalot that The Booger, a repulsive villain, is on the prowl. So begins a hilarious quest to rid the world of The Booger once and for all. Illustrations.
Synopsis
Being undead is no walk in the park, especially when you've got four extra fingers with a mind of their own!
In this third creepy installment, Ed must contend with a nemesis even scarier than an evil clown: the devil himself! Yes, the devil is the one pulling the strings on Ed's weird additional fingers, and Ed must pay him a visit if he ever hopes to be free.
But the deeds of Ed's fingers have turned everyone in Mortlake against him. Can he win back his friends and make everything right again?
Packed with hilarious black-and-white illustrations and spooky details, Ed's third adventure is his wildest ride yet!
About the Author
Kevin Bolger teaches reading and writing to children from grades 2 to 6 in Ottawa, Canada. He spends every workday reading great kids books with actual kids, which naturally made him want to make one of his own. Books, that is.
As a writer, he has published short humor pieces with McSweeney’s Internet Tendency and several Canadian dailies, and book reviews with the Toronto Star and The Globe and Mail.