The Haunting of Gaspard Feeblebunny
by John Kernow
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Pub Date 15 Sep 2023 | Archive Date 25 Dec 2023
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Description
Young Constable Gaspard Feeblebunny is unfortunate that one evening on a lonely road he sees Death attempting to harvest the soul of Percy Pargeter which has done a runner. It is doubly unfortunate that the new whiz kid in the afterlife civil service decides that Death should have an assistant to handle such a mundane task as tracking down ghosts, because Feeblebunny is pressganged into service as a human subcontractor, though with some powers to assist with his task.
This is the beginning of a series of civil service bungles which leave the unhappy constable with a houseful of ghosts and the enmity of a psychotic Sergeant Hardcastle who is out to do him harm. Over time the ghosts are able to join their powers and take control of the young man's life. This turns out to be a mixed blessing because though they cause mayhem, they also make him a very wealthy man with a series of ventures, not all of which are a spectacular success, particularly their establishment of his flat as a ScareBnB with neither his knowledge nor consent.
Available Editions
ISBN | 9781528928595 |
PRICE | US$4.50 (USD) |
Links
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
This is a silly book, yes. But I greatly enjoyed reading it. I'm drawn to anything that purports to be Sci-Fi Comedy.
This book is about a constable who is recruited by Death to help collect souls that have previously eluded him. The ghosts are obnoxious, Death is caught up in afterlife bureaucracy. The constable is rather incompetent. It's all a bit ridiculous, but that witty ridiculous that makes the genre so fun for some and hated by others.
So this book is solidly in the comedy/scifi genre even if the scifi is really about ghosts and the afterlife. It feels a lot like the series by Andrew Stanek that begins with the book "You are dead (Sign here please)" - different premise, but similar feel.