I thought I was reading the Groo books in order, but that turned out to really not be the case, and this book was a much later one than the two ones I have read previously, having come out around 2010. Because this was a much later volume, it deals with a lot of themes I hadn't really encountered before in Groo, and a few characters I didn't recognize, but which were well-established characters in-universe. Rather than a collection of several smaller stories like I expected, it was one big parable about the interconnectedness of global commerce with most of the factors destabilized by Groo's destructive nature. I knew him as kind of bumbling, but not quite so much of a walking disaster as this, so it was a bit jarring, but I was able to accept it after a fashion, and it was a pretty in-depth look at the topic with humor along the way. Just the same, it was quite dense, and didn't make me laugh quite as much as earlier Groo books did. This isn't a good early book or introduction, but it was a fairly interesting story that showed a great deal of insight.