SOUNDTRACK: CAT DOORMAN-“So Many Words” (2012).
This is a fun folkie kids song about unexpected ABC words. There’s a line about “flipping through my OED” and indeed the list of words for A is impressive : archipelago, allosaurus, abacus. I actually thought she might do all As, in the song but then she moves through the alphabet (bandicoot, eavesdrop, yarmulke).
The song has some big fiddles, which sound fun, and Cat’s voice is lilting and fun too. I’m led to understand that Cat has a number of alt rockers on the album (Chris Funk from the Decemberists, for example) although I can’t find too many details about the album.
You can hear the track here.
[READ: February 11, 2013] Goofballs #1 The Crazy Case of Missing Thunder
As faithful readers know, I love Tony Abbott and so does C. We’re still waiting on another series to come in from the library, but in the meantime I found this book on the shelf: Goofballs #1. It appears to be a brand new series from Mr Abbott and it is aimed at a slightly younger audience than Droon and the other series. The print is bigger, there are lots of pictures and there’s only 8 chapters. So I decided to read it to both kids at bedtime.
I fear that they just weren’t quite as into it as I thought they might be. And I fear I wasn’t really that into it either. It feels a little forced.
The story is about Jeff, Mara, Brian and Kelly, four kids who are silly and who get called goofballs all the time. So they decided to join together and become a detective agency. Well, first they had solved some mysteries around town together–like the mysterious pizza problem (which got them their own pizza named after them, The Goofball Pizza: cheese garlic pineapple and peanut butter).
Then the kids get a call for a real mystery–Randall Crandall has lost his thunder. Turns out that Thunder is the beloved pony of Randall Crandall and he has gone missing from his stable.
There are some simple clues (and Jeff writes them down in his clue book) and some red herrings. There’s also a potential bad guy. But the story hinges more on coincidence than any actual mystery and it kind of ends with humor more than a satisfying conclusion.
There were some funny bits to be sure and the whole premise that they are a bunch of goofballs is explored very well. But again, it never really rose to the heights that I’m used to from Abbott. I have found that sometimes Abbott’s first book in a series doesn’t quite hit the stride that later books do, so maybe we just need to wait for book #2.

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