ALA Booklist
When 20 dollars goes missing from Stinkbomb's piggy bank, his first thought is that his little sister, lovingly called Ketchup-Face, stole it. After listening to her vehement denials, though, it's clear who the culprits must be: badgers. The only thing for it is to see the king, who promptly sends the siblings out to rid the land of all badgers. This early chapter book is loaded with silliness and adventure, ideally suited for young readers. Plentiful illustrations ramp up the humor and often interact with the text, keeping it manageable for newly independent readers; likewise, large, dynamic fonts give readers an assist. Ketchup-Face's boisterous personality bounces the story along, and the scheming badgers mplete with evil false mustaches ke amusing villains. There is an interactive quality to the narration, which frequently addresses the reader, such as, "In most stories, if the heroes were to set off to see the king, you'd expect their journey to take a really long time. Chapters and chapters." The playful tone and slapstick humor will draw in youngsters.
Horn Book
On a quest to get King Toothbrush Weasel to rid the kingdom of Great Kerfuffle of robber badgers ("Think about it. They do bad things because they're badgers"), Stinkbomb and his younger sister, Ketchup-Face, end up pursuing the bandits themselves. Brief chapters are chock-a-block with nonstop silliness, snarky fairy-tale tropes, playful type, and exuberant illustrations. This is literary candy for kids, especially reluctant readers.
Kirkus Reviews
Upon orders from the king of Great Kerfuffle, white siblings Stinkbomb and Ketchup-Face embark on a taleworthy quest to rid their home of mischievous badgers.Take a dollop of Jon Scieszka's classic fairy-tale sendups, add a swirl of M.T. Anderson's humorously perilous quests, garnish with a Snicket-ian narrator's crumbled fourth wall, and you have the hilarious first adventure of Stinkbomb and Ketchup-Face on the island of Great Kerfuffle. With their parents conveniently out of the way until the end of the story, the sibling duo awakens to find $20 has been pilfered from Stinkbomb's piggy bank, and the only obvious suspects (once they rule out Ketchup-Face, of course) are a band of badgers. Taking their complaint to the king (also white), they are, in turn, sent to rid the kingdom of the badgers, but the pair's quarry is nothing if not wicked ("if they weren't bad, they'd just be gers"). Even with a cat army, a sentient shopping cart, and every story trope on their side, Stinkbomb and Ketchup-Face may be outmatched. With metafictive flare, a truly expert deployment of absurdity, and an unrelenting song about jam, Dougherty's narrative is as self-reflexive and entrancing as a Penrose staircase, populated with delightfully inscrutable characters and brought to rollicking life with Ricks' spot illustrations. A study in parodic mayhem. (Fiction. 7-11)
Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Exuberantly silly from start to finish, this madcap fantasy from British author Dougherty introduces a boy named Stinkbomb and his younger sister, Ketchup-Face, who live on the tiny island of Great Kerfuffle. When Stinkbomb-s piggy bank is burgled, he blames badgers (-Think about it. They do bad things because they-re badgers. If they weren-t bad, they-d just be gers-). But after the siblings travel to the (cottage-size) castle of King Toothbrush Weasel, hoping he will banish badgers from the island, the king instead assigns them that very task. Dougherty packs his story with winking references to adventure story tropes, as well as self-referential, metafictional humor (-Do you mean you-re in a story now?- the king asks the children. -Oh, yes,- responds Ketchup-Face. -You can tell because of all the chapters and page numbers and stuff-). Between playful typography, a nearly nonstop onslaught of jokes, and Ricks-s jittery b&w cartooning, it-s a solid choice for readers who have exhausted the Captain Underpants library. Ages 8-12. Author-s agent: Julia Churchill, A.M. Heath. Illustrator-s agent: Minju Chang, Bookstop Literary. (Feb.)