All the old favorites are here--including Mad Uncle Jack and Malcolm (or is it Sally?) the stuffed stoat--along with some worrying-looking new ones. Beware!
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As readers learn in the first book, A House Called Awful End, Eddie Dickens lives in a house called Awful End with his parents, his great-uncle, and Mad Aunt Maud. This second novel, Dreadful Acts, begins one fateful night when Uncle Jack wakes Eddie up to show him that a driverless hearse (drawn by horses) is parked in their driveway. Imagine their surprise to discover that the hearse's coffin contains a living man, the Great Zucchini, a famous escapologist (but definitely not an Egyptologist). Add to the mix the sudden crash-landing via hot-air balloon by the camel-faced, petticoated Daniella who makes Eddie dribble and act like a simpleton, a bunch of "peelers" (police), and a few escaped convicts, and the plot thickens. Oddball characters, compassionately sketched, distinguish this funny, endearingly quirky read. David Roberts's spidery illustrations of pointy-faced people, generously sprinkled throughout the book, are quite wonderful in a rather Quentin Blake-y way. A four-page glossary at the close of the book explains terms such as box hedge, cream tea, and creosote. Stay tuned for the dramatic trilogy conclusion Terrible Times. (Ages 11 and older) --Karin Snelson --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderfully Entertaining,
By
This review is from: Dreadful Acts: Book Two in the Eddie Dickens Trilogy (Hardcover)
I first discovered the Eddie Dickens' Trilogy by sheer good fortune while Christmas shopping two years ago. (I was perhaps a little struck by the comparison to Monty Python.) I promptly bought "A House Called Awful End" for my niece, and spent the night ploughing through the book, laughing the entire way. What a brilliant and witty narrative Philip Ardagh spins. Needless to say, I was eagerly awaiting a chance to read more about the mishaps and misadventures of the young Eddie Dickens."Dreadful Acts" introduces us once again to the hilariously weird world that Eddie inhabits. He lives in a house called Awful End with his Mad Uncle Jack (who lives in a treehouse, well, a dried-fish house), his even Madder Aunt Maud (who lives in a hollow cow named Marjorie - don't ask if you haven't read the first book), his parents and various other servants who have little sense among the lot of them. Eddie is awoken one morning to find a driverless hearse in the driveway and must contend with the coffin that is left behind and the escapologist inside that coffin, The Great Zucchinni. Eddie's escapades with Zucchinni and his helper Daniella, land Eddie in a variety of troubling positions - jail, helping escaped convicts, and a chase on the misty moors that surround the town. Set in Victorian England, Ardagh peppers his narration with whimsical asides to the readers, definitions of possible little-known words and comments about how our hero might feel if he were in a book. Ardagh's pithy narration is sprinkled with sketches (by David Roberts) that enhance the crazy characters that fill Eddie's life. While the series does read a little like Lemony Snicket, Ardagh has his own style and humor that bring Eddie and his insane relatives to life. And while this may be classified as a children's book, it's intelligence and humor are suited for any adult who appreciates good literature.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Very Interesting,
This review is from: Dreadful Acts (The Eddie Dickens Trilogy, Book 2) (Mass Market Paperback)
I really like te Eddie Dickens trilogy. They are fun books to read because of how they are writen. The author knows how to keep someone interested in the book. During the book he will talk to you like he is telling you a story face to face. It is a fun way to read a book. What makes it even better are the characters. Eddie who is very young is like the adult to all the grown ups. He has to tell them what to do and get them out of trouble. With all of his different adventures he goes on, it makes it hard to put it down because you want to see what Eddie will do next.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
the dreadful acts,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Dreadful Acts (The Eddie Dickens Trilogy, Book 2) (Mass Market Paperback)
This book is great! I have already read this book five times and it never gets old! You have to read it for yourself!
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