![]() ![]() It’s a lot to take on, but they’re up to the task. It’s up to Harold, Howie and Chester to stop Bunnicula before he bites and enslaves every vegetable in town. Then Bunnicula goes missing and the family is too distracted to notice. ![]() The logic is sound when you consider that there have been an unusually high number of white vegetables popping up, white because they’ve had the life juices sucked out of them, of course. The story is about one family’s well-meaning, dramatic, paranoid pets (Harold the dog and narrator, Howie the dachshund puppy and Chester the cat) who have reason to believe the family’s rabbit is a vegetable-sucking vampire rapidly turning the town’s gardens into a ravenous horde of zombies. Indeed, there was nothing in the elements to foreshadow the events that lay ahead. This is my first Bunnicula book and I didn’t know what to expect, but I loved the opening: You can tell this copy has been read many times, which is fitting for a children’s classic. They’re so fragile they sound like they may crack. The pages of this copy are golden and dark around the edges. ![]()
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