The Eddie Dickens Trilogy brings Philip Ardagh's gripping and gruesome Eddie Dickens tales together in one volume.
Philip Ardagh's rich and ridiculous stories about Eddie Dickens read like Charles Dickens crossed with Monty Python. This edition collects 3 of the stories in one volume: Awful End, Dreadful Acts and Terrible Times.
The Eddie Dickens Trilogy brings Philip Ardagh's gripping and gruesome Eddie Dickens tales together in one volume.
Philip Ardagh's rich and ridiculous stories about Eddie Dickens read like Charles Dickens crossed with Monty Python. This edition collects 3 of the stories in one volume: Awful End, Dreadful Acts and Terrible Times.
AWFUL END
When both of Eddie Dickens's parents catch a disease that makes them turn yellow, go a bit crinkly round the edges and smell of hot water bottles, it's agreed he should go and stay with relatives at their house Awful End. Unfortunately for Eddie, those relatives are Mad Uncle Jack and Even-Madder Aunt Maud, and it doesn't look as if the three of them are ever going to reach their destination.
DREADFUL ACTS
Eddie Dickens narrowly avoids an explosion, a hot-air balloon and arrest, only to find himself falling head-over heels for a girl with a face like a camel's, and into the hands of a murderous gang of escaped convicts who have 'one little job for him to do'.
TERRIBLE TIMES
Eddie had been given the task of travelling to America to look after his family's interests there. But his life is never that simple; especially with a potential stowaway in his trunk, and Lady Constance Bustle at his side. She's a professional 'travelling companion', whose previous employers seem to have died under the most remarkable and unfortunate circumstances.
'A scrumptious cross between Dickens and Monty Python' - Guardian, U.K
Philip Ardagh, whose very first Grubtown Tale won him the Roald Dahl Funny Prize, is author of numerous books including the award-winning Eddie Dickens adventures, currently in over 30 languages. He wrote BBC radio's first truly interactive radio drama, collaborated with Sir Paul McCartney on his first children's book and is a 'regularly irregular' reviewer of children's books for the Guardian. Married with a son, he divides his time between Tunbridge Wells and Grubtown, where he cultivates his impressive beard.
THE EDDIE DICKENS TRILOGYThree books in one:AWFUL END, DREADFUL ACTS, TERRIBLE TIMESWhen Eddie Dickens's parents go yellow, crinkly around the edges and smell of old hot-water bottles, he's sent away to live with Mad Uncle Jack, Even Madder Aunt Maud and her stuffed stoat called Malcolm . . . And so begins a series of outrageous adventures involving escaped convicts, missing jewels, cucumber-waving orphans, and a hollow cow called Marjorie.'Wonderful.'Sunday Telegraph'Philip Ardagh is a national treasure.'Independent'Hilarious.'Financial Times'A scrumptious cross between Monty Python and Dickens.'Guardian'Completely barking.'Birmingham PostLook out for:THE FURTHER ADVENTURES OF EDDIE DICKENSDUBIOUS DEEDS, HORRENDOUS HABITS, FINAL CURTAIN
Philip Ardagh's rich and ridiculous stories about Eddie Dickens read like Charles Dickens crossed with Monty Python. This edition collects 3 of the stories in one volume: Awful End, Dreadful Acts and Terrible Times. AWFUL END When both of Eddie Dickens's parents catch a disease that makes them turn yellow, go a bit crinkly round the edges and smell of hot water bottles, it's agreed he should go and stay with relatives at their house Awful End. Unfortunately for Eddie, those relatives are Mad Uncle Jack and Even-Madder Aunt Maud, and it doesn't look as if the three of them are ever going to reach their destination. DREADFUL ACTS Eddie Dickens narrowly avoids an explosion, a hot-air balloon and arrest, only to find himself falling head-over heels for a girl with a face like a camel's, and into the hands of a murderous gang of escaped convicts who have 'one little job for him to do'. TERRIBLE TIMES Eddie had been given the task of travelling to America to look after his family's interests there. But his life is never that simple; especially with a potential stowaway in his trunk, and Lady Constance Bustle at his side. She's a professional 'travelling companion', whose previous employers seem to have died under the most remarkable and unfortunate circumstances. 'A scrumptious cross between Dickens and Monty Python' - Guardian, U.K
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