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And Then There Were Gnomes - (Guinea Pig, Pet Shop Private Eye) by Colleen Af Venable (Paperback)

And Then There Were Gnomes - (Guinea Pig, Pet Shop Private Eye) by  Colleen Af Venable (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 6.95 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Sasspants, reluctant Guinea Pig PI, solves the case of the pet ship ghost (and the multitude of missing mice) with the help of her sidekick, Hamisher the Hamster. Once again, they must circumvent well-meaning pet shop owner Mr. Venezi, who still cant tell mice from walruses or hamsters (in birthday hats) from gnomes.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>Sasspants, PI(G), the world's fluffiest detective, is back on the case―or she will be, if her sidekick Hamisher can convince her there's really a mystery afoot. Hamisher has made up so many stories, Sasspants doesn't believe him. But one by one the mice in Mr. Venezi's pet shop are going missing, and all the spooky clues point to...a ghost! Once our shaggy Sherlocks start digging for answers, they will stop at nothing to ferret out the truth!</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>The denizens of Mr Venezi's Pets & Stuff return for another hilarious mystery. Sasspants the guinea pig solved the mystery of the missing sandwiches in Hamster and Cheese (2010); now she's doomed to be thought a detective even though she has replaced the final 'G' on her cage label. Hamisher the koala (actually hamster; Mr. Venezi is nearsighted and clueless, though not neglectful) loves being a sidekick, and he comes up with so many fake mysteries that Sasspants doesn't believe him when he has a real one. The mice are going missing one by one, and everyone's sure it's a ghost. Sasspants takes the case to get Hamisher off her back so she can get back to reading her much-loved books. Venable's second adventure does not disappoint. The celebutante chinchillas--er, camels--(one of whom has a pet mouse, 'Mr. Sparkles, ' à la Paris Hilton's chihuahua) and the bubble-headed goldfish will inspire giggles. The deadpan expressions of Yue's pudgy animals colored by Hi Fi Design supply many of the laughs. <strong>A gem--please, tell us we'll be seeing more of Sasspants!</strong> --<em>Kirkus Reviews</em></p>-- "Journal" (10/1/2010 12:00:00 AM)<br><br><p>This charmingly goofy, slightly goose-pimply graphic novel is just right for a gently spooky laptime or independent read. Venable brings back the mismatched stars of <em>Hamster and Cheese: Guinea Pig Pet Shop Private Eye #1</em> (April 2010). Hamisher the hamster had hired Sasspants the Guinea Pig to help solve the mystery of their missing pet store owner's sandwiches--because the 'G' in 'PIG' had fallen away from the label on her cage, Hamisher took Sasspants to be a P.I. Now Hamisher can't wait to solve another puzzle, so he keeps fabricating them ('This is like the fifth fake mystery you made up this week!' says Sasspants). As with Peter and the Wolf, Hamisher's false alarms cause him to lose credibility, so when all of the mice really do disappear, he has trouble enlisting Sasspants in his cause. That's not all: Hamisher believes there's a ghost in the aisle of their pet shop; he's seen its shadow and felt the telltale cold spot a phantom would inhabit--even Mr. Venezi thinks the aisle is haunted. Using a palette of muted blues, greens and earth tones, Stephanie Yue plants clues with a wide-panel shot of the pet store's next-door hardware neighbor up for sale, and exploits the comic potential of the pet store owner's fear of ghosts with a one-page image of a newly cleared bookshelf and a sign that reads, Please enjoy the rest of the shop. This aisle is currently haunted. Yue also has fun with a Philip Marlowe-style get-up for Hamisher, and the hamster's attempts to get Sasspants to wear a matching hat, plus a humorous sequence that chronicles Hamisher's dangerous mission to see if Gerry the snake was the culprit for the missing mice. (A close-up of the hamster shows him--'Gulp'--before he leaps into the snake's cage.) <strong>Together, Venable and Yue strike just the right balance between funny and frightening. Youngest readers will appreciate the many visual clues to this puzzle's solution, while slightly older readers who love a good mystery will enjoy putting the pieces together.</strong> --<em>Shelf Awareness</em></p>-- "Website" (9/29/2010 12:00:00 AM)<br>

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