There's something rotten in the state of Ohio, and it's smellier than a pile of putrid gym socks! Steer clear -- it's Sir Stinks-A-Lot!
George and Harold, and their doubles, Yesterday George and Yesterday Harold, have a good thing going. Two of them go to school, while the other two hide in the tree house and play video games all day -- then they switch! But when their malicious gym teacher, Mr. Meaner, creates a method of mind-control that turns their fellow students into attentive, obedient, perfect children, the future of all humanity will be in their hands!
David "Dav" Pilkey (b. March 4, 1966), is a popular children's author and artist. Pilkey is best known as the author and illustrator of the Captain Underpants book series. He lives near Seattle, Washington with his wife, Sayuri.
Captain Underpants has always had a very special place in my heart. I think Pilkey has crafted very amazing books, especially in helping young boys to learn to read (like myself). It is amazing reading these books as adults, there is so much hidden in there that, much like other "children" media such as Pixar movies, they are actually for "all ages".
I think that while this is not the most amazing or fun Captain Underpants adventure, it is probably the most important one. To me, Captain Underpants has never been a silly fun book, but actually has a very serious point. That point is that it is okay to be yourself. Are the two main characters the smartest kids in the school? No. Are they most athletic, no. However, they are passionate about what they love, and take no apologies for that. This is such a special quality, especially since so many other uptight people want to ban the books or say they are not appropriate. I think this idea is no more evident in the book than the scene where homosexuality is mentioned. I think that this how's Pilkey's true view on life, that nothing matters except that if you are happy, and I felt this scene showed this beautifully.
In summation I hope this is not the last Captain Underpants book. I feel that Pilkey has created something special and an important commentary on or society today
I got halfway until it was revealed Harold was gay. I immediately put the book down and got rid of it. Not okay in a children's story. I felt the rest was good clean fun, but this added nothing to the story and is not something that should have been brought up in these books.
Oh lord we have reached the end, the final book in the epic series of Captain Underpants. If you haven't never read Captain Underpants lets recap quickly. 3.5 stars!
George and Harold are fourth graders who as we find out in this last book have ADHD. So they tend to get into mischief because they have a hard time paying attention, are easily distracted and have a hard time with impulse control. They tend to wreck havoc on the school teachers mostly, but sometimes their fellow students...mostly to Melvin Sneedly the school brainiac and tattle-tale. One day the boys get in big trouble and Mr. Krupp the principal decides he's finally going to separate the boys. He's going to put them in separate classes. (By the way, this is a rant, but I just found out that to take apart and to put something in two groups is spelled the same. Seperate is not a real word. It's the misspelling of separate. Food for thought) George and Harold panic and do the only thing 4th graders can do. They decide to hypnotize the principal. Some how through kid magic it works and the boys turn Mr. Krupp into Captain Underpants the superhero from their homemade comic books. Through the entire series Captain Underpants has to fight off all the villains and save the day.
In the conclusion of this series we have one last villain, Sir Sticks A Lot who is the gym teacher Mr. Meany. However he is being taken over by a alien particle called the Zygo-Gogozizzle 24. The alien decides that it doesn't want to rule the world like most evil villains, it does feel the need to brain wash all the children in Piqua, Ohio to become its slave. Then all the kids on the planet. So Mr. Meany a.k.a Sir Sticks A Lot builds an ape like robot exoskeleton that has powerful armpit sprayers. These spray cans are filled with Rid-O-Kid 2000 which turns all the kids into compliant slaves. They will do what ever an adult says to do. George and Harold find out and decide they need a grownup to help them save the day. But who do they turn to? I'm not going to spoil it.
Overall I really enjoyed this series. Dav Pilkey suffered from ADHD, dyslexia and behavioral problems. He was often out in the hall as a punishment for his disruptive behavior. This gave him time to write and draw his own comic book stories. In second grade Dav created Captain Underpants. His teacher ripped it up and told him he couldn't spend his life creating silly books. He sure got the last laugh. I love that Dav got to use his disability growing up to create something that most kids are very fond of. I work at an elementary school and the Captain Underpant books are sooo well loved that they are all falling apart at the seams. The library doesn't have enough copies for the amount of kids that want to read them. A lot of the teachers have their own class sets because of this. I have very much enjoyed reading George and Harolds adventures out loud to my own kids. The cherry on top. These books are filled with high vocabulary words. They promote science, helping others and solving problems. There are current events in these books which are funny to see AND future Harold is married to a man. I'm happy to see a bit of gay representation in a children't book. There all kinds of parents out there!
My boys LOVE the Captain Underpants series and have read all the books but this is the first one I've read. I was actually pleasantly surprised. It wasn't nearly as gross as a thought it would be and had some adult humor thrown in that would probably go over most kids heads. For instance, one of the teachers is named Miss Anthrope. There were also some big words (e.g. megalomaniac) that can build up kids' vocabularies. Lastly, I loved that there is a same-sex couple and people of different races in this book.
I'm not sure my 11 year old cared about any of that. He just thought it was hilarious. And that's okay too.
I can't believe this is the last one in the series! Surely not?! My boys have loved all of these, and I have to admit that I was the driving force behind choosing them as bedtime stories. There is something for everyone in these stories. I have heard that there are certain districts (?) in the U.S. That have banned these books, which I find utterly bizarre and rather sad. It's hardly graphic violence or pornography, and one can always chose not to buy a book. It's not like it's forced into a child's hand and they're forced to read it (Clockwork Orange style, with eyelids pinned open, tied to a chair). Why people feel the need to impose THEIR opinions on others and force their way of life on others, this is something that I will never comprehend. And it invariably backfires on the enforcer. But hey, that's my opinion. For me and my family: we love these books. There's nothing better than getting into bed with my sons, one on each side, reading these books and laughing at all the silly jokes. That's what I'll remember when my boys tell me they're too old for bedtime stories (how does 30 years from now sound?!).
I was unaware of this book being banned by several school districts in the U.S. until I researched it. But, I remember growing up and Captain Underpants being one of the funniest and most creative books that kids thoroughly enjoyed. The Captain Underpants series I believe was banned because it could have encouraged disobedience with children and had an inappropriate taste to it, which made it hard to suit for a certain age group. This particular book, the twelfth addition in the series, concerned teachers and parents because there were some references to Harold being gay, which parents didn't want their kids reading into. Personally, I also didn't like how in every book there was comically bad spelling. It is aimed towards kids and how they would sound out the words, but I think it could influence students to spell the same way as they are in this book.
And that's the end of Captain Underpants! It's been a long hilarious, successful journey that has come to a close with little fanfare. I can't say I found this volume as delightful as the usual outings. The silly toilet humour has been pared down and Pilkey sadly sinks to political correctness but it was still a wacky wild ride that tied up the Underpants story while at the same time leaving Harold and George wide open for further adventures ... in time!
My son absolutely adores these books (and the show), and while I'm not a fan, it's really increased his interest in reading. Mr. Meaner becomes super smart and tries to convert everyone to be like him. With all the usual hijinks, the boys, along with Captain Underpants, save the day.
You know the tone of these books has really shifted and they've lost a lot of their charm. Captain underpants books were always a celebration of letting kids be kids and just having fun, but this book starts off by getting political and taking shots at conservatives. It paints old republicans as being people who are offended all the time and ruin things for kids...The book predicts outrage from these people and then tries to bait the outrage by unnecesarily slipping in that Harold is gay. And for the record this was never a banned book, the banned book list is a misnomer and it simply means that in some places, parents requested it not be included in a school library...which is absolutely not the same as being banned.
And yet Pilkey does have a book that was banned Ook and Gluk... I've read Ook and Gluk and there's not a thing in it that was even the slighest bit offensive..and it wasn't pulled because of Fox news watching hard candy eating republican geriatrics. It was pulled from publication by demands from mostly young, left wing activists. Either way this is not the place for political messages, it's not the place to ponder the human condition in relation to nuclear proliferation and references to political discourse of Donald Trump it's the place for kids to read fart jokes and pranks.
Also as someone with a psychology degree the message being delivered to children that their psychological diagnosis is a badge of honor to be worn with pride is a very dangerous and harmful message. It tends to make peoples disorder worse and encourages them to make no effort to better themselves while also giving them an excuse for negative behaviours. It's one thing to say it's ok and they can still live fulfilling and productive lives and even find a nice niche like mr Pilkey did...but a badge of honor is a step too far and is just as harmful as telling kids the inverse extreme.
Speaking of fart jokes, a series that began with villains who are toilets, and pieces of poo now can't even have a stink spray come out of a fake mechanical butt? The barometer on what's offensive and what is acceptable is way off and the result is a less interesting and less funny book for children.
I also hated the ending, I'm glad the series is over because it had been going downhill for a while but the way they did it was not a very satisfying ending. If I were you, whether you be a kid or an adult looking to check out the series again for nostalgia I would stop after book 5. Book 6 and 7 were pretty good but book 6 starts a trend where every book bleeds into the next one with a cliffhanger and the quality rapidly drops after book 7. Overall a very enjoyable series that either needed to not change so much or needed to end much sooner.
...Where to begin with this one. It started out good, had an interesting plot and funny characters. But then we get almost to the end, when George and Harold go find their future selves for help... and it shows that Harold has a husband. Call me whatever you want, but despite the times we live in, I still find that inappropriate for a children's book. When we got to that bit, my 6 year old stopped me and asked if he had heard that right, so we had a little discussion about it. Which is fine, we've talked about this subject before. It just has me worried about what else might be in children's books that he will eventually read without me. Is there going to come a time when I will have to read children's books before he can, to make sure it doesn't have adult content in it? I found Pilkey's humor to be funny, and I laughed right along with my kids throughout the series. These were cleverly done, but I'm relieved that this seems to be the last one, unless you count the Dogman and cavemen ones.
This is not a book for kids. I was disappointed that the author promised he would take out immature and explicit content. At the end of this book he presents the main character as a married Gay man. I don't want my children reading this at a young age.
My daughter loves these books and we’ve enjoyed most of them until this last one where Dave Pilkey decided to make future Harold Gay. I don’t care if I’m in the minority but I don’t want my daughter exposed to these issues from a children’s book. So inappropriate and unnecessary.
I'm happy to report that this, the proclaimed final book of the current Captain Underpants series, is a worthy ending.
I first picked up The Adventures of Captain Underpants back in the year 2000, attracted by its light take on superheroes and all round silliness. Since then it has had the rare honour of being a series that I have taken through to my adulthood. While the characters are of course fun and memorable, the real reason I've stuck by the Waistband Warrior is that Pilkey's wry but absurd humour chimes so well with my own.
This book in particular is a fine example from its Vonnegut-esque science fiction ('Zygo-Gogozizzle 24 is a slightly radioactive substance that can bind with organic matter, morph into complex organisms, and be mixed with mayonnaise and dill-pickle relish to create both a tasty salad dressing and a clean-burning fuel source with enough power to light up an entire city.') to its exceptionally tongue-in-cheek sound effects (CHIMBA-LOOSHI! and CHEFFGOAL-D'BLOOOM! anyone?).
It is also surprisingly progressive considering that it shows a future Harold Hutchins with a rather dapper husband. I had no idea that this proved such a controversy in America that some schools banned the book. It baffles me that such details are still so vehemently protested.
However what makes me most sad is the thought that this wonderful book series has come to a credible conclusion. I am sure the recent successful film adaptation and TV show will herald more stories but, quite frankly, neither format offers the unique chance to control the action via Flip-O-Rama fight sequences.
Regardless I will end on a happy note of 'Tra-la-la!' at least until somebody throws water on me.
I recommend this book and the rest of the series before it, to anyone who isn't an old-fashioned fuddy duddy or a 'Mr Krupp'.
NOTE: If you are a gym or PE teacher without a sense of humour, this may not be the book for you...
I think I laughed a bit too much with this book. I am, after all, an adult. An old person. I read this book for this year's banned/challenged books week. This particular book in the series features something so awful and horrendous that most kids can't handle it. I'm talking about someone who is *whispers* g-a-y. OMG!!!! No!!!
Ok, now that we survived, we can move on. I love Dav Pilkey. He wrote Cat Kong and Dogzilla. Two of my favorite children's books. I think this man is brilliant in his writing. He has lots of jokes that only adults will understand and if adults are not reading these books they just miss out. It's a shame.
A few notes I wrote down while reading:
page 11 - Harold and George have 3 pets, part hamster and pterodactyls. Tony, Orlando, and Dawn. You have to be an adult to understand that.
page 15 - "These books have been criticized for words like heck, tinkle, fart, and pee-pee. These words are offensive to grouchy old people." I guess you have to be an adult to use these words because I have a perfume called fart kitten.
page 16 - GOP - Grouchy old people.
page 36 - chapter title - A Paradox for a pair of docs.
page 43 - chapter title - Crimes and Mr. Meaner.
and more chapter titles are song titles but just a bit off. Again, this will be for the adults.
Of course, the kids are the same rambunctious, let's get into trouble, normal type kids. It's a shame there aren't any good kind of adults, like me, after all I do wear a perfume called fart kitten.
Hey, Dav Pilkey, could I be a cool adult in one of your books?
So, the final Captain Underpants book, and I was faced with the daunitng task of explaining to a five year old why Harold had a husband instead of a wife. Sigh. Still, great fun all round and a sad yet fitting end to the series.
Es el segundo o tercer libro que leo de esta saga y la verdad es que lo recomiendo mucho. Es genial para entretenerse y desconectar un rato. También es ideal para llevarlo de viaje, porque no ocupa mucho y no pesa. Además, las historias son muy divertidas.
My son loves Captain Underpants books! This was the first one I sat down and read cover to cover with him. I think I enjoyed it just as much as he did. There was some adult humor woven into the entire story that my son did not pick up on, but I thought was very funny. I also loved how Harold was nonchalantly outed, no big deal! Sad that this was the last book in the series.
make another one,please? to Dav Pilkey:Captain Underpants and the Sensational Saga of Sir Stinks-A-Lot:Re-Heated (2025) (plot:At the beginning of the book, the author explains that unlike previous books which appealed to both adults and children, this book will attempt to appeal to solely children, for their safety and the pleasure of older readers. Continuing from where the last book left off, George and Harold and their doubles from the day before, Yesterday George and Yesterday Harold, are in big trouble once again. A few weeks from their last adventure, in which there were many loose ends, the city has been rebuilt and things are getting back to normal. Unfortunately, all their teachers including Mr. Krupp are still in jail, and they still have to take care of three bionic hamster/pterosaurs, Tony, Orlando, and Dawn. Soon after, the narrator mentions that it is always important to be smart as it helps us become successful in life. However, it's also important to not be too smart otherwise people will end up making huge mistakes, some even life threatening. Meanwhile, in a different universe where a planet called Smart Earth orbits around the center star in Orion's Belt, everyone who lives their is highly intelligent due to the planet being made from a slightly radioactive element named Zygo-Gogozizzle 24 that can be mixed with mayonnaise and dill-pickle relish to create a clean-burning fuel source to light up an entire city and serve as a tasty salad dressing.
Even though Smart Earth is inhabited with geniuses, it has many similarities to our planet, having McDonald's, smartphones and the Huffington Post (which on Smart Earth are called Smart McDonald's, smart smartphones and the Huffington Post). One day, one of the smartest scientists at Smart Harvard University (a parody of Harvard) decided to do an experiment mixing Smart Diet Coke with Smart Pop Rocks and a third ingredient to the highly volatile concoction: Smart Mentos. The conduction of the experiment caused Smart Earth to explode, sending chunks of Zygo-Gogozizzle 24 throughout the galaxy, some landing in a pond on Badpun, a grape vineyard on Pinot, and one piece that approached our own planet's atmosphere, in a small midwestern town of Piqua, Ohio. The tiny chunk crashed through the roof of the Piqua Valley Home for the Reality-Challenged, where George and Harold's elementary school teachers are being held.
Ms. Ribble thinks the piece of Zygo-Gogozizzle 24 is a meteorite, and the doctor warns them not to approach it. Unfortunately, Mr. Meaner, the gym teacher, doesn't listen and eats the chunk. He then becomes highly intelligent after the Zygo-Gogozizzle reaches his mind and supercharges all his brain cells. Mr. Meaner then speaks in a standard British accent and decides to leave the insipid infirmary, but the psychologists block the doors. Mr. Meaner immediately comes up with a plan to trick them and tells them they should take his advice not to follow his advice. The two distracted doctors begin to argue if following his advice not to follow his advice is following his advice, Mr. Meaner slips out the open doors. Ms. Ribble notices her chance to escape, and she, along with all the other teachers, dart past the increasingly frustrated and confused doctors.
Outside, the teachers and staff follow Mr. Meaner up to the hilltop and watch in awe as he looks over the horizon and announces that it occurred to him that all their recent problems were caused by willful and disobedient children. He tells the teachers to follow his every command and to return to school and act normal. School restarts and it appears everything is back to normal and nothing unusual has happened such as crime happening at the school or Mr. Krupp being snapped into a trance becoming Captain Underpants. Meanwhile overnight Mr. Meaner goes to an old, abandoned factory near Franz Pond and turns it into a makeshift laboratory. Inside, he creates Rid-O-Kid 2000™, a mind-control potion which turns even the unruliest child into a well-behaved child who follows the instructions of adults. He makes it from a base mixture of sodium thiopental containing liberal doses of butyric acid, tryptophan and Clamato juice and filters the solution through a pile of old, dirty gym socks.
The next day, Mr. Meaner arrives at school with two large spray tanks on his back and a metallic belt with buttons around his waist. After gym class, Mr. Meaner excuses all of the children except for Yesterday George and Yesterday Harold. He orders them into his office (actually the school's boiler room) and locks the door after them. Inside his office, he sprays Yesterday George and Yesterday Harold with Rid-O-Kid 2000™ from the nozzles of his spray tanks. Yesterday George and Yesterday Harold go to their math class and are well-behaved. Their math teacher, Miss Calculator, is pleased with their behavior. For the rest of the day, the other teachers notice how well the boys are behaving and after school finishes, they go to all their teachers and collect extra-credit homework.
Yesterday George and Yesterday Harold return to the tree house, where George and Harold are horrified at the amount of homework they have brought home. The four of them start completing their assignments, but George and Harold keep getting distracted. They work until bedtime. While Yesterday George and Yesterday Harold complete their half of the work, George and Harold barely do any of their halves. Yesterday George suggests that he and Yesterday Harold should go to school the following day while George and Harold stay up until 5:00 am completing their work.
The following morning at school, Mr. Meaner also has robot arms and hands, having built a giant mechanical ape suit named 'The Stinky-Kong 2000'. He sprays all of the children in his classes with Rid-O-Kid 2000™, giving them all 'Attention Superfluous Lethargy Syndrome (ASLS). Mr. Krupp is delighted that Mr. Meaner has transformed all the children. Ms. Ribble asks if Rid-O-Kid 2000™ is dangerous and Mr. Meaner explains to her that it only affects children and that adults are immune to it.
A few days later, George and Harold have caught colds due to staying up late to complete the homework Yesterday George and Yesterday Harold have brought home during the week. They decide to watch TV and come across a TV advert for Rid-O-Kid 2000™ featuring Mr. Meaner, which says:
Are your kids annoying? Do they fight and whine and complain all the time? Do they refuse to eat anything but macaroni and cheese? Are they sucking the LIFE out of you? Well, Rid-O-Kid 2000™ is here to help. Our scientifically proven formula will transform even the most willful child into an obedient, respectful and hardworking slave– er, I mean, angel. And Rid-O-Kid 2000™ has a full day's supply of Vitamin C, so you can feel GOOD about dosing your child with a narcotic that has never been tested for long-term effects. So turn your brat into a brown-noser... with Rid-O-Kid 2000™. Rid-O-Kid 2000™ - the cure for childhood.
George and Harold dress up as an adult and go to school to find out what's going on. They see all the students acting as slaves for the teachers by doing their work for them, giving them massages, shaving their beards, plucking their eyebrows, giving them haircuts, filling out their tax forms and washing their cars. Harold exclaims that the teachers must have turned all the students into mindless slaves.
The disguised George and Harold then manipulate the children into doing the opposite of what they have been told to do, such as washing the windows wrong, filling their cars with cottage cheese and humiliating the teachers by drawing on their faces with permanent marker. When the teachers and staff noticed this, they, along with Mr. Krupp, try to find out who is responsible for this but all the children in a trance could tell them that it was a grown up. Mr. Krupp then tells Mr. Meaner about what has happened, and this angers him to go out and get to the bottom of what's going on and to find who caused the prank. He rushes to his car that was filled with cottage cheese and drove off the school premises to find the grown up who caused this. He came across a group of kids in the trance who were watering the inside of the house, mowing the garden and painting the lawn. He asks them who told them to do all those things and all the children could say was a grown up but didn't say who the grown-up was. Mr. Meaner rushes back to the car angry and drives off back to the factory going to his invention with new modifications. He feels that a kid has caused this, but he doesn't know who the kid is.
Later, he returns in his ape suit causing havoc in the town of Piqua unleashing the foul odor everywhere. Present Harold and George who are still sick witnessed what Mr. Meaner was doing; however, they couldn't smell so the stench has no effect on them, however, Harold and George were almost better, so they went to their parents who were having dinner with their yesterday counterparts. The Present counterparts left in a deep depression. Present George then had an idea. So, he and present Harold rushed to Melvin's house, and they took off with the Glow in the Dark Time Traveling Robo Squid.
Later, after Present Harold and George were in the future meeting their future counterparts and meeting the family they return with their future counterparts in the present timeline meeting Crackers and Sulu's children. Adult George and Harold tell their younger selves to stay in the clubhouse and rest up for they have already been through a lot.
Adult George and Harold rush to Mr. Krupp's house needing help. As they snapped their fingers several times, Mr. Krupp however wasn't coming to his trance into becoming his alter ego "Captain Underpants due to his face and head being wet at the time" Mr. Krupp wanted them to go away because to him he assumed they were acting like kids but as this was happening Mr. Meaner overheard what Mr. Krupp said and he grabbed the two adults and he beat them using his ape suit. Mr. Krupp demanded him not to kill them because he didn't want any blood on his lawn. Adult George and Harold were nearly in a lot of pain but as they finally noticed that Mr. Krupp's Face was dried up, and they saw that there could be their final opportunity, so they quickly snapped their fingers at Mr. Krupp, and he finally came into his trance becoming the amazing Captain Underpants to save his friends. Captain Underpants charged after and battled Mr. Meaner in his ape suit and Mr. Meaner was defeated for now and taken to jail.
The next day after eating an egg salad sandwich with pickle relish, Mr. Meaner turns into a blob of pure energy (because the egg salad contains mayonnaise and he added pickle relish; this would create Zygo-Gogozizzle 24) and becomes Sir Stinks-A-Lot. He then causes havoc downtown wanting revenge on Captain Underpants for being locked up. Captain Underpants returns to fight him back, but when Old George and Old Harold are captured, Captain Underpants couldn’t save them, as Sir Stinks-A-Lot turns him back into Mr. Krupp with a lot of water, therefore falling down (he was still unharmed because of his superpowers). Sir Stinks-A-Lot then extracts the superpowers as well as the effects from the 3D Hypno Ring ceasing the existence of Captain Underpants from Mr. Krupp. Mr. Krupp (dressed as the fallen hero Captain Underpants) then runs off screaming in terror as Old George and Harold telepathically calls for younger George and Harold who were sleeping but Tony, Orlando, and Dawn, who are completely awake caught onto the call and came to the rescue. They find Mentos, Diet Coke, and Pop Rocks and feed them to Sir Stinks-A-Lot, causing him to explode. Luckily, the three Hamsterdactyls and Old George and Old Harold are unharmed, as well as Mr. Meaner.
Things were back to the way they were, and as young George and Harold return their older counterparts to their own time, they find that Mr. Krupp didn’t turn into Captain Underpants at the snap of a finger, because Sir Stinks-A-Lot erased Captain Underpants from existence. As a woman was passing by jogging listening to music and snapping her fingers, Mr. Krupp was still as mean as usual yelling at the woman passing by. George and Harold and their older counterparts decided that they were not going to contribute to the plot and fix the problem which indicated that they were going to move on without Captain Underpants. George and Harold with Melvin's invention "Glow in the Dark Time Traveling Robo Squid." return their older selves back to their future timeline with Tony, Orlando, and Dawn. George, Harold and the 3 offspring of Crackers and Sulu take off once more with the Time Traveling Robo Squid going on a new adventure back in time to save Crackers and Sulu to meet their children.
Yesterday George and Yesterday Harold are back to normal now that Sir Stinks-A-Lot has been defeated. They wake up and go back to their tree house, only to find out that Tony, Orlando, and Dawn are gone. They can't even find their present selves. Back in the present, seeing that they feel that everything is going to be okay, Harold feels that he and George should make another Captain Underpants comic book, but George decides that he and Harold should do a comic book featuring Dog Man instead. The book and series ends with a shocking plot twist as the next two pages show George, Harold, a brown, fuzzy hamster. Beyond his furry exterior is a mechanical exo-skeleton, the source of Sulu's bionic powers that is assumed Sulu and, a purple pterosaur with a large, pointed beak and leathery wings. She had a small crest in her first appearance that is assumed Crackers being chased by a figure that is assumed to be Tippy Tinkletrousers as George cries out "Oh No!" while Harold says "Here we go again.", the book ends with a teaser for an untitled 13th book in the series.) (George is a 10-year-old African-American boy. He is introduced as being "the kid on the left with the tie and flat top". True to this description, George wears a white collared T-shirt with a red tie and has a crew cut (before Harold gave him a haircut during their final anti-bully prank, he had an afro that was bigger than his body at the time). He also wears shorts and brown shoes. In the animated incarnations, his hair is curlier.) (Harold is an 11-year-old blonde-haired boy with a large, fluffy hairstyle. His outfit usually consists of a T-shirt and shorts. Like most human characters, he has black dots for eyes, while in puppetry scenes in The Epic Tales of Captain Underpants, he is depicted as having heterochromia (green on the left and blue on the right).) (Mr. Krupp is a mostly bald, overweight man with a pear-shaped body and a piggish nose. As shown by the design of a dummy that resembles him, he has green eyes. Sometimes, when he laughs or becomes angry, his teeth grow sharp.
Benjamin covers his bald head with a messy, spider-like toupee. He wears an office shirt, a tie, and a pair of trousers.) (Similar to his alter ego, Captain Underpants is a bald, overweight man. He has a pear-shaped body and a piggish nose. Captain Underpants has green eyes, as shown by the appearance of Mr. Krupp's Dummy.
His attire is nothing more than a pair of white briefs and a red polka-dotted cape fashioned from curtains. In the book series and movie, Captain Underpants' cape always looks the same, while in the Netflix series, it changes design depending on what type of fabric he uses for it. He can’t fly without his cape, so it is very important he wears one.) (Professor Poopypants is a short man with a large grey puff of hair. He has a mustache. He wears semicircular glasses. He also wears a purple shirt with a blue bow, blue trousers, and black shoes.) (it needs to be a re-publishment of Captain Underpants and the Sensational Saga of Sir Stinks-A-Lot) (it needs to follow the plot mentioned) (it needs a script with dialogue) (tell Dav Pilkey to make this a full color book and an audiobook,please?)
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
My son loved this. Brilliant books that keep him interested. He likes to read bits himself which is great. these are good for introducing children to reading. Got to say I quite enjoy them myself lol