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In a world where cats and dogs act like people, absurdity reigns supreme. With Sinson Rascalion threatening to plunge society into darkness, Oscar Teabag-Dooven is once again thrown into the fray. After stumbling upon the arrogant bard The Dodosette and the beautiful cat Vaasi-Vee, the unlikely trio argue their way across the world to do something about it. With lots of begging, too much snow and a wake of shattered infrastructure increasingly synonymous with these books, they set off on a ludicrous journey into the politically absurd. They did not, however, anticipate having to fight…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In a world where cats and dogs act like people, absurdity reigns supreme. With Sinson Rascalion threatening to plunge society into darkness, Oscar Teabag-Dooven is once again thrown into the fray. After stumbling upon the arrogant bard The Dodosette and the beautiful cat Vaasi-Vee, the unlikely trio argue their way across the world to do something about it. With lots of begging, too much snow and a wake of shattered infrastructure increasingly synonymous with these books, they set off on a ludicrous journey into the politically absurd. They did not, however, anticipate having to fight invisible Rottweilers, smash kitchens to pieces, lick frozen cars or fund taxi drivers' sister's eye operations. But for Oscar Teabag-Dooven, such absurdity is becoming routine. Welcome back to the New Fable fiction genre, where fluffy just got dangerous. "These books quite possibly give credence to book burning." - Jennifer Woodly, Local Barn Historian. "They read like a phone book, but with less intrigue." - Cavan Daahl, Royal Academy of Things in General. "Not so much an ebook as an eeww-book." - Demstra Yogon, BookReporter.com.
Autorenporträt
Thomas Corfield was born in London several years ago, definitely before last Thursday. This was a good year for all concerned, and for him in particular, because without it, later years would mean little. He owes a lot to that first year and now lives because of it in undisclosed locations after having successfully absconded from probation. Although he finds making friends difficult, this is only because no one likes him, including his mother, who didn't bother giving him a name until he was nine. His solicitor describes him as having an allergy to apostrophes and an aversion to punctuation that borders on pathological. This makes the popularity of his books all the more remarkable-at least it would if there was any. But there isn't, so it doesn't. He was recently interviewed in Joomag's Meals of Food magazine, which didn't help anyone. He does, however, have a PhD in Forensic Odontology, which on occasion has.