by SorrelAnderson (Author)
Three crazy, funny stories, featuring the two clumsiest talking mice you'll ever meet...Shortlisted for the ROALD DAHL FUNNY PRIZE 2010 'The mouse started to trundle away, glancing at Howard over its shoulder, nervously. "You may well glance at me nervously," said Howard, picking up an empty water glass and placing it over the mouse. "You'll stay in there so I can eat my breakfast in peace. I shall deal with you afterwards..."' But you can't really deal with the Clumsies, afterwards or at any time. Once you've got them, you're stuck with them. From the moment when Howard Armitage first finds two talking mice under his desk - the inimitable and hilarious Purvis and Mickey Thompson - his life, and his belongings, are turned forever upside down. Obsessed with biscuits and forever playing incomprehensible games of their own devising, the Clumsies are not your average mice - and though they're desperate to help Howard get out of trouble with his evil boss, they're only really good for one thing...making a mess.
Format: Illustrated
Pages: 112
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: HarperCollinsChildren’sBooks
Published: 07 Jan 2010
ISBN 10: 0007330901
ISBN 13: 9780007330904
Children’s book age: 7-9 Years
Prizes: Shortlisted for Roald Dahl Funny Prize: The Funniest Book for Children Aged Seven to Fourteen 2010.
Praise for The Clumsies Make a Mess:
Anderson has a gift for combining simple, sparse elements - meek man, bully boss, shabby office, talking mice - to wonderfully surreal effect. Financial Times
Charming debut... With its stylish cartoons and pages that look crumpled, blotted and scattered with biscuit crumbs, this book will win youngsters over with its child-like illogicality and the way in which Howard goes happily along with anything that the anarchic inventiveness of the Clumsies leads him to. Sunday Times Culture - Children's Book of the Week
Occasionally a book comes along that makes my children collapse into fits of giggles... my children were near hysterical by the end of the first paragraph.
The Telegraph Magazine
The kids will love getting mucky with them Irish World
If you enjoy these stories as much as I did, you will be waiting for the next book in the series Families Magazine
Sorrel Anderson hasn't always been a writer. Once upon a time she worked as a civil servant, and it was there that she found the inspiration for her characters - quite literally. One morning she came into work to find a pair of mice in a plastic bag under her desk, eating up her biscuits. She named them Purvis and Mickey Thompson, and that very day, the Clumsies were born!