|
|
|
| Product Description: |
|
| |
|
Walliams makes going to the dentist a wacky adventure with his signature humor—this is one dentist appointment you don’t want to miss. Something strange is happening in Alfie's town. Instead of shiny coins from the Tooth Fairy, kids are waking up to dead slugs, live spiders, and other dreadfully icky things under their pillows. Who would do something so horrific? Alfie is sure that Miss Root, the creepy new dentist in town, is behind it all. There's nothing Alfie hates more than going to the dentist, but to solve this mystery, he may have to book a dreaded appointment…
|
|
|
| |
Most Helpful Customer Reviews: Add Your Own Review |
Five Stars, February 24, 2016
By A Customer
|
|
Scary
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
Are you kidding??!!, January 14, 2016
By 224perweek
|
|
This was definitely not a book meant for little kids as it appears to be. This story made me afraid to go to the dentist. It was full of disgusting things that would make any child afraid. It reads like a bedtime book but don't be fooled. LOL.
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
Great|!!, December 29, 2015
By Joann R. Greene
|
|
I won this ARC in a Goodreads Giveaway. Happy & lucky me as I had never read any of David Walliams books before. Let me start off by saying this deserves a solid 5 star! I will be reading his older books and any future ones as this book has won me over as a fan. This story is both creepy but also hilarious. When the new dentist, Miss Root, moves to his town, Alfie and a little girl called Gabz are the only ones who seem to notice the dentist's peculiar behaviour. What is Miss Root up to? And what will she do to poor, innocent Alfie and Gabz? Read the book to find out! I loved all the outrageous characters in the book Both Alfie and Gabz aren't your popular kids in the school but you will be cheering for both of them as they struggle to find out more about Miss Root. Just a wonderful assembly of characters and they are all illustrated at the beginning of the book. The packaging of this book in a colorful box was ingenious. The illustrations were fantastic. The made-up word alerts were fun too - even though I admit to not even noticing them until I went back to check later. It has 431 pages but it is a quick read because of the numerous and wonderful illustrations and large size fonts for some words. A fun read for an adult and for children of an older age - maybe 10 or older?
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
Another Triumph, (Although Maybe Not for Those with Dentist Issues), October 17, 2015
By Pop Bop
|
|
Quite understandably, David Walliams is the number one bestselling children's author in the United Kingdom. He has been hailed as the heir to Roald Dahl, but for my money he leaves Dahl in the dust.
While I have always appreciated and admired Dahl's books, there is an astringent and slightly nasty undercurrent in some of the books that just leaves me a little bit off, even as I'm enjoying them. I have no problem with the books being unsentimental, dark and a bit macabre, but there's often a hint of contempt or thinly veiled anger that just doesn't quite fit in with everything else. That said, I'll take Dahl over antiseptic cutesy any day.
And that's where Walliams comes in. Just as macabre and grotesque, just as committed to portraying the triumph of the good, young and kind over the old, greedy, and wicked, a Walliams book is sustained by the cheerful, fundamental goodness of his young characters. Just as was the case with Dahl, the stock setup involves adult villains who mistreat children, at least one good adult to help the child heroes, a few completely ineffective adults, and then child heroes who persevere and save the day. The plots are bizarre and extreme, the villainy is outrageously exaggerated, the violence is cartoonishly grotesque, and anything that happens happens to excess. There is child-sized nastiness, farting, tooth-pulling, and icky grossness.
But, Walliams mixes in sweetness, (hero Alfie and his Dad share scenes of heartbreaking tenderness), and a good deal of remarkably restrained deadpan humor. So, manic chase scenes are still loaded with dead funny and crisp throwaway lines and observations. The conversations between Alfie and his compatriot friendgirl Gabz are gems of finely crafted timing and emphasis. Certain set scenes, (Alfie's being comforted by the friendly newsagent Raj after his first dentist visit), are perfectly paced and balanced.
All of this is brilliantly served by the illustrations of Tony Ross, who complements Walliams in the same fashion that Quentin Blake elevated Dahl's work. Ross's drawings capture the moment and advance the story without at all cluttering the text or slowing the narrative, and they fit exactly with the reader's own mental pictures of the characters.
So, whether you call the books clever or funny or zany, or even darkly comic or macabre, they are so well conceived and well executed, and feature such winning child heroes, that you owe it to your child reader to try one on. (Although if you aren't quite sure where your child falls on the ick-tolerance scale you might consider a book like "Ratburger"before this one, which does have a lot of scary demon dentist stuff in it. "Ratburger" just has, well, ratburgers.)
Please note that these books are finally coming up for sale in the U.S., (at least as Kindle books), but I received a free advance ecopy of this particular book in exchange for a candid review. Apart from that I have no connection at all to either the author or the publisher of this book.
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
Five Stars, July 11, 2015
By Shellbug
|
|
Great addition to our classroom library!
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
Short but fun, July 07, 2015
By Fiona
|
|
Quite short but my daughter finds these books 'laugh out loud' funny.
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
See all 21 Reviews.
|
|
|
|