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Porridge the Tartan Cat and the Bash Crash Ding: the Bash Crash Ding

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Porridge the Tartan cat (it's a long story involving a tin of tartan paint!) has been framed! Someone is sabotaging Isla and Ross' attempts to reunite Groovy Gran's band, the Tattie Scones, and Porridge is the top suspect. Only he knows the real villain is a dastardly dog – the Dug o' Doom. Will the Tattie Scones ever rock again? Can a balloon-riding, wool-chasing, saucer-flying tartan cat stop the crafty canine and clear his name?
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    • School Library Journal

      August 1, 2017

      Gr 2-4-Porridge the Tartan Cat addresses readers directly in a sassy brogue in this humorous Scottish import. Porridge lives in Tattiebogle Town with twin siblings Ross and Isla, their parents, and Gadget Grandad and Groovy Gran (collectively known as The Big Yins). Varying typefaces emphasize Porridge's frequent exclamations, such as "Me-yawn, me-oops, or me-yum." In Bash-Crash-Ding, the children spend a week with Groovy Gran who is trying to get her old band, the Tattie Scones, back together for a reunion concert to benefit the children's school. Former bandmates Biff McBash and Scruff McDuff are easy enough to track down, but Rab McDrab has been missing for years. As the family searches for him, they are foiled at every turn by the Dug-o-Doom, a large hairy, scary dog. In Brawsome Bagpipes, the twins (and Porridge, of course) spend an adventure-filled week with Gadget Grandad, purveyor of such inventions as a "tripewriter" (a typewriter that spits out sensible advice, no matter what you type into it) as Grandad battles with his archenemy, Fergus McFungus. Fergus has stolen a page out of the famed Splotter's Guide To Cooking Up Trouble and is planning something dastardly. Frequent line illustrations reminiscent of Quentin Blake enrich the story's zippy pace and comedic effect. The books are appended with a few pages of puzzles, word games, and kid-friendly jokes. VERDICT Readers will enjoy the surprise endings, unusual characters, and absurd humor. Some Scottishisms may trip up new readers, but these books work wonderfully as silly read alouds.-Madigan McGillicuddy, Atlanta-Fulton Public Library, Atlanta, GA

      Copyright 2017 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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