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Boo Who

Boo Who

List Price: $12.99
Your Price: $9.74
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great way to spend a flight!
Review: I fly a lot...and I'm always looking for a good read on those long hours spent in the air with several hundred strangers. Recently, flying across country, I grabbed my copy of Boo Who and, as soon as my fanny was in the aisle seat, I opened it...hoping for a little escape.

I got better than that. Three hours later, I landed. Four hours after that my layover was over and I was flying again. An hour later and I was landing again. Repeat five days later. And do you know what? It felt like a minute! This is one of the most delightful reads I've had the joy of diving in to in a long, long time. The characters are well thought out, they're zany, they're real. The plot just keeps us guessing and wondering and turning page after page.

Rene, you've done yourself proud. Now, I'm a taking a 24 hour flight soon. Any new books? ~~Eva Marie Everson, Author, Speaker, Reader of Good Books

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: great sequel
Review: I loved the first book, Book, and this sequel delivers. I hope there is a third installment in the works. Gutteridge knows how to breathe charm and life into her characters.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Even Funnier Than Boo!
Review: Rene Gutteridge has an amazing way of combining humour, real (even if odd) people, a moral message and God all into one book. I couldn't put it down nor could I stop laughing. I just hope she continues writing about the people of Skary.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Welcome to Skary!
Review: Rene Gutteridge is a - pardon the pun - a hoot!
She writes a great story and liberally sprinkles it with funny moments and charming characters. This is a warm Fall read.
Grab a mug of warm cider, put enough logs on the fire and dive in to the world and zaniness of Skary, Indiana. You will want to come back and visit often. Enjoy!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Full of small-town mystery, hijinks, and humor
Review: Welcome to Skary, Indiana. The setting of Rene Gutteridge's latest novel, BOO WHO, Skary is an unlikely town full of unlikely people doing unlikely things. But if you can get past all of that, you're in for a charming little tale in which the past must be uncovered in order to save the future.

The story opens and it's not long before everyone is in turmoil--- Thief the cat, the sheriff, the mayor, the townspeople, even Skary itself. Until recently, the town had prided itself on being home to the world's most popular horror writer, Wolfe "Boo" Boone, and therefore, the spookiest town around. Everyone got into the act with attractions including the Haunted Mansion restaurant and Sbooky's bookstore. Even the local "wildlife" --- the small town's population of cats outnumbers people --- fed into the theme.

But a few weeks ago Wolfe Boone had a transformation. He almost died, became a Christian, and hung up his horror-writing cap. In fact, he stopped writing completely and is, instead, trying to sell cars down at Oliver Stepaphanolopolis's car lot. Now the town and its people don't know quite what to do with themselves.

Without the tourism revenue Boone's fans brought into the community, Skary is on the verge of civic collapse. The stress has caused Mayor Wullisworth to break with reality. He's running around town in Bermuda shorts and sunglasses in the winter, insisting it's balmy outside.

Missy Peoples, Skary's oldest and most despised resident, decides to take matters into her own hands. She determines that their cat population is the town's new meal ticket and buys ads in major newspapers advertising Skary as a cat lover's paradise. No one seems excited about this idea, much to her chagrin.

Melb Cornforth is getting ready for her upcoming wedding to Oliver Stepaphanolopolis. But she has to lose four dress sizes to fit into her wedding gown. Things aren't looking good when she goes back for thirds at Ainsely Parker's Christmas dinner.

Of course, no one would blame Melb for eating three helpings of Ainsley's food. The local domestic diva, daughter of the Sheriff and fiancée to Wolfe Boone, is on track to become the next Martha Stewart thanks to the cajoling of Wolfe's former editor. But a meltdown is waiting in the wings as she tries to plan her own wedding and take up Martha's mantle.

Add to all of this some strange "ghost people" who started appearing around town, a phony psychologist who has more patients than he can handle, a pastor who has started charging for bulletins and coffee on Sunday mornings, and an owl that keeps asking the all-important question, "Who, Whooo," and you have a community for which the word "quirky" was invented.

And maybe, that's just the way it's supposed to be. Because when Martin Blarty, yet another character in this community's cast, goes in search of something that will save Skary, what he finds reminds everyone who they are and why Skary exists in the first place.

BOO WHO is technically a sequel to BOO, but it stands alone quite well. Just put the plausibility meter away and settle in some small-town mystery, hijinks, and humor.

--- Reviewed by Lisa Ann Cockrel

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: 4 1/2 Stars...The Munsters Move to Mayberry
Review: When I heard that "Boo" had a sequel, I laughed out loud. I couldn't wait to read more about the quirky town of Skary, Indiana.

Once again, Gutteridge throws us into a quaint and strange little place, full of quaint and strange little people. Ainsley Parker and Wolfe Boone are looking forward to their upcoming nuptials; a mysterious doctor has arrived in town; owls and cats and clone-like figures are prowling the darkness; and overweight Melb is trying to prepare herself for life with Oliver. The characters are memorable, sympathetic, and humorous. It's as though the Munsters moved into Mayberry. At times, the story will have you laughing; other times, it'll glue you to your seat.

The true triumph of "Boo Who" is that it doesn't feel like a forced sequel, produced for sales quotes. It has an engaging plot that leads naturally from the first book, while still standing on its own two legs. It deals with the identity crises of a town and it's inhabitants. And it leaves room for another in the series--with a rumored title of "Boo Hiss."

I'll be adding it to my wish list.


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