Here Be Monsters Part 1: Pants Ahoy!: Pants Ahoy! Pt. 1

Here Be Monsters Part 1: Pants Ahoy!: Pants Ahoy! Pt. 1

by Alan Snow (Author)

Synopsis

When Arthur is cornered by the frightful Snatcher and his men, there seems to be no way out. But luckily help is at hand in the form of a retired judge, a timid cabbagehead, and some very excitable boxtrolls. It's monsters to the rescue! This is the first part of the incredible Here Be Monsters saga - now published in paperback in three easy-to-digest volumes. Illustrated throughout with nearly two hundred incredible black and white drawings, this is the start of an astonishing journey into the unbelievably weird world of Ratbridge.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 208
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Published: 01 May 2008

ISBN 10: 0192755404
ISBN 13: 9780192755407
Children’s book age: 9-11 Years
Book Overview: The first book in the enormously inventive, endlessly entertaining, overwhelmingly original, and astonishingly illustrated Here Be Monsters series

Media Reviews
Here Be Monsters kicks the imagination into overdrive with belting characters, adorable illustrations and other fantastic inventions that will keep a child's appetite for fun fully satisfied. With superb illustrations and a lavishly imaginative plot, Here Be Monsters suggests that Roald Dahl might well have a 21st century successor - and that JK Rowling could have some competition on her hands The Big Issue Snow's drawings suggest a Dickensian town, and his caricatures with their gormless faces and his lovingly rendered machinery make this book as much fun to look at as it is to read. NICOLETTE JONES, The Sunday Times Snow has written an amiable, at times surreal story accompanied by hundreds of fantastic black ink drawing, executed in a style half way between Mervyn Peake and Edward Gorey. It's not often a text gets as generously illustrated at this these days, and some of the architectural drawings are particularly atmospheric. Books for Keeps The story engages the reader quickly. It is a zany and funny story as quirky as the author's picture books... the visual imagery is fantastic in both senses of the word. The sheer vibrant fun of the story shines throughout. The School Librarian