Welcome to Wonderland '1: Home Sweet Motel, Paperback/Chris Grabenstein
Descriere
``Outrageous hijinks and nonstop hilarity--five-stars `` --Lincoln Peirce, author of the Big Nate series From the bestselling author of Escape from Mr. Lemoncello's Library and co-author with James Patterson of I Funny, House of Robots, and Treasure Hunters, comes a hilarious illustrated series about all the wacky things that happen when you live in a motel Eleven-year-old P. T. Wilkie may be the greatest storyteller alive. But he knows one thing for a fact: the Wonderland Motel is the best place a kid could ever live All-you-can-eat poolside ice cream A snack machine in the living room A frog slide A giant rampaging alligator(Okay, that last one may or may not be made up.) There's only one thing the Wonderland doesn't have, though--customers. And if the Wonderland doesn't get them soon, P. T. and his friend Gloria may have to say goodbye to their beloved motel forever. They need to think BIG. They need to think BOLD. They need an OUTRAGEOUS plan. Luckily for them, Gloria is a business GENIUS, and OUTRAGEOUS is practically P. T.'s middle name. With Gloria's smarts and P. T.'s world-famous stories and schemes, there's got to be a way to save the Wonderland BONUS: Includes fun extras like P. T. Wilkie's outrageous (and sometimes useful) things you learn living in a motel. Installment 1: How to say ``Help The toilet is clogged `` in over twenty languages Here's What People are saying about Welcome to Wonderland``Outrageous hijinks and nonstop hilarity--five-stars Kids who check into this madcap motel will want to stay forever `` --Lincoln Peirce, author of the Big Nate series ``So funny I fell off my bed ``--Izzy B., age 10 ``Classic Grabenstein. The mystery should satisfy Grabenstein's ``Mr. Lemoncello`` followers, and the humor and visuals will appeal to fans of his collaborations with James Patterson. This new series should be a hit.``--School Library Journal``A delight. P. T. is a hoot and a half. A funny, madcap dash. Grabenstein . . . threads in a mystery that blooms in the