Don't Be Put Off by the Whole Dung Thing
Every once in a while I find a fart based book that's clever and fun, but most of the time the book is a lame excuse to just go all fart all the time and generally take the easy way out. So I had an open, but probably biased, mind as I approached this dung-heavy tale. Well, excuuuuse me for being such a know-it-all. This book starts with a heavy emphasis on dung and dung farming, but then it quickly turns into a sly and clever action/adventure mystery buddy story. Who knew?
The set up is that Nobbin is the youngest son in a family of dung farmers. (That was a real thing. They cleaned out the pit under the King's garderobe, that is, privy tower,) Anyway, Nobbin finds the king's signet ring in the dung and goes to the castle to return it. While there he meets Ulff, a gate warden who becomes his sort of sidekick, and then watches the fumble bum Prince Charming. This isn't too far into the book, and it's the point at which the book takes off.
From then on, Nobbin is tasked with accompanying Prince Charming as they search for two missing children, (Hansel and Gretel), dally with a witch, encounter a troll, engage in solving a half dozen mysteries, and generally wander around trying to figure out who is trying to undermine Prince Charming as the King's heir. Here's the good part. All of this is funny. Some of it is sly and clever. Some is slapstick. Some of the banter is a bit edgy. There are lots of references to other fairy tale characters, many of which are just pithy little asides. The Prince is an O.K. guy; the King isn't a dope. Nobbin and his Dad, who is a fourth generation dung farmer who doesn't understand Nobbin's reluctance to carry on the family tradition, have a few touching moments.
The whole tale is entertaining and smart, and all of the characters are appealing just a bit more than you would expect. The mystery isn't very demanding, but it works to keep everybody running around, and the resolution is satisfying, if open ended. This has a "come for the dung but stay for the clever bits" feeling, and that seemed just right for an engaging early middle grade read. A nice find.
(Please note that I received a free advance will-self-destruct-in-x-days Adobe Digital copy of this book without a review requirement, or any influence regarding review content should I choose to post a review. Apart from that I have no connection at all to either the author or the publisher of this book.)