Sourcebooks, Inc. is targeting middle-grade boys with the Humpty Dumpty Jr.: Hardboiled Detective series, but I think it will appeal to a much larger audience. Humpty Dumpty Jr. is a hardboiled egg and private investigator who solves various crimes in New Yolk City. (Yes, there are tons of egg puns, but they are silly, not distracting. My 8-year-old daughter laughed at each one and enjoyed pointing them out on her own.) He’s haunted by the only case he’s never “cracked,” which is the one involving his famous father.
In the series opener, The Case of the Fiendish Flapjack Flop, Humpty Dumpty Jr., armed with an egg-beater magic wand that never seems to work right for him, must find out who kidnapped New Yolk City’s best baker, Patty Cake of the Pat-A-Cake bakery. He meets up with Rat, a homeless boy befriended by Patty Cake, and they eventually decide to work together. As they follow numerous clues, the pair run into an interesting cast of characters: Peppermint Pete, Johnny Cakes, the Queen and Jack of Hearts, Crusty Crinkles, and Mr. Fum, among others.
My daughter and I both enjoyed the book. At 120 pages, it wasn’t a tedious read for us; we finished it in under a week, reading a couple of chapters a day before her bedtime. My daughter has pretty much outgrown picture books, but because she’s still not ready to read only chapter books without pictures, The Case of the Fiendish Flapjack Flop was perfect. The Humpty Dumpty Jr. books have an illustration on every page, and they do a great job showing the action in the story. The drawings of the bad guys are creepy, and while the three-headed monster at the end is not scary enough to frighten young readers, it certainly looks mean.
The end of the book was so full of action that my daughter didn’t want to stop reading (and neither did I). She was able to read the book on her own, though we took turns reading pages so we could enjoy it together. If you have a child right around my daughter’s age, I’d definitely recommend the book. We’ve already started book two, The Mystery of Merlin and the Gruesome Ghost, and we’re enjoying it so far.
Here’s The Girl’s take on The Case of the Fiendish Flapjack Flop in her own words (I asked her questions about the book so she’d say a little more about what she thought):
I liked this book because it was funny. My favorite part was when Johnny Cakes ran down the street naked except for a little bit of butter over his private parts. My favorite character was Humpty Dumpty Jr. the hardboiled detective because he is funny when he messes up using his magic wand, which is an egg beater. My second favorite part was when Rat’s legs turned into rock candy. I liked the funny egg jokes in the story, like “New Yolk City” and “unscramble the case.” The three-headed chocolate cake monster was cool. I wanted to read the book all in one night but my mom made me go to bed and read more the next day.
Watch a trailer of The Case of the Fiendish Flapjack Flop here.
Watch a trailer of The Mystery of Merlin and the Gruesome Ghost (review coming soon!) here.
Disclosure: We received a free copy of The Case of the Fiendish Flapjack Flop from Sourcebooks for review purposes. I am an Amazon associate.
© 2008 Anna Horner of Diary of an Eccentric. All Rights Reserved. Please do not reproduce or republish content without permission.
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