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I finally got a further benefit of the weirdness of these books on my second perusal of this one. After all the rabbits and monkey business are seen to, we get a story of the town library. Any editor might think this was an odd tack-on, but the slapdash-seeming whimsy of Beardy Ardagh will not be picked up on so easily by the young readers for whom he writes this series, and so it just gets to be an even fuller, even funnier, even wackier example of what makes reading great. And these books, with this quality, are definitely proof of that.
I must thank the publishers at Faber for my review copy. You might like to have a look at the [http://www.visitgrubtown.com Grubtown website] too.
I first met the series with [[The Wrong End of the Dog (Grubtown Tales) by Philip Ardagh|The Wrong End of the Dog]]. A similar reason for a glut of furry critters plaguing a place can be seen in the similarly humorous and engaging [[Raven Mysteries: Magic and Mayhem by Marcus Sedgwick|Magic and Mayhem by Marcus Sedgwick]].