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Of Course, It's Butterfingers Again Paperback – 26 November 2018
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Bang! Thump! Crash! Who's the wizard of the woeful, the foremost lord of the foul-up, the bumbling baron of blunders? Of course it's Butterfingers!
Even when Amar Kishen-better known as Butterfingers-isn't stumbling through misadventures, he sure has disaster tailing him every step of the way.
And now that he's back, his 'brilliant' ideas land him in trouble (as usual), whether it's messing around with an Egyptian mummy, playing cricket with an all-girls team, dropping a watch in a swimming pool or saving a rock star's life!
Join the irrepressible Butterfingers in this exciting new instalment of side-splitting short stories.
- Reading age9 years and up
- Print length208 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions19.8 x 12.9 x 1.22 cm
- PublisherPuffin
- Publication date26 November 2018
- ISBN-100143443267
- ISBN-13978-0143443261
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Review
Whether your favourite subject in school is physics, English or PE, you're bound to enjoy the charming and hilarious exploits of Butterfingers and his eclectic bunch of friends. Like a good game of cricket, it keeps you hooked till the very end! -- Mithali Raj
The imaginative world conjured by Khyrunnisa in the Butterfingers stories is charming, witty and boisterous, full of good-humoured mischief and benign fun, stylishly and effortlessly evoked through the clear-eyed magic of her captivating prose. With sports at the heart of many stories, the Butterfingers books are delightful and make school
sound like so much fun. Khyrunnisa's Butterfingers is a gift to the children of our nation!
Who's at his every-disaster-has-a-silver-lining best? Who can snatch defeat (almost) from the jaws of victory? The Wizard of the Woeful . . . the Foremost Lord of the Foul-Up . . . the Bumbling Baron of Blunders . . . of course it's Butterfingers! I laughed, loved it and look forward to the rematch -- Robin Jeffrey
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Product details
- Publisher : Puffin (26 November 2018)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 208 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0143443267
- ISBN-13 : 978-0143443261
- Reading age : 9 years and up
- Item Weight : 220 g
- Dimensions : 19.8 x 12.9 x 1.22 cm
- Country of Origin : India
- Generic Name : BOOK
- Best Sellers Rank: #117,708 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,833 in Children's Humour (Books)
- #3,343 in Children's Action & Adventure
- #10,402 in Children's Literature & Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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I couldn’t bring myself to wait (of course) for the formal release and had already bought a copy of it on Amazon and greedily gobbled all of it by myself first before passing it on to anyone else.. For a book, as all know, can afford the unique satisfaction of having one’s cake, and eating it, secure in the knowledge that a thousand others can eat it too, without any diminution of the experience or loss of flavour or freshness—quite the contrary, in fact.
Just a word about the release. Shashi Tharoor spoke excellently, as expected, without repeating anything from his speeches at the earlier releases, and so also did other fans of Butter and Co, a special visitor this time being the well-known writer Robin Jeffrey. As on earlier releases, one chosen young reader was given pride of place at a well-organized and professionally compered function. (All as per usual.)
Now to the book. For some reason, I find it’s my favourite among the six, somewhat to my surprise, as all of them are equally good. Perhaps the novella-plus-short-stories format (as in #5) better expresses the temperaments and (mis)adventures of Amar (Butter) and Friends than a novel. Perhaps it’s to do with the developing craft of the writer. I hope to find out, perhaps with the next book, whether it’s just my joy that the new Butterfingers novel has rolled off the printer’s onto my lap, after keeping me and other readers waiting (too long, in our not unbiased judgement).
The book begins with the novella “The Historic Girls vs Boys Cricket Match” which has humour and suspense, adventure and misadventure, literature and music, sport and mystery, all mixed in good measure. And the denouement brings everything together, with a prize for the ‘man/girl of the match’ going not to one who had played the game, but who had ‘earned’ the prize nevertheless.
The Principal, Mr Jagmohan, is one of the shining stars of the Butterfingers series, not always for what he would consider the right reasons. However, for all his bluff and bluster it is easy to see that he is at heart a good person, and not someone who should never be around young people, however much his physician would advise that course of treatment. The children might privately laugh at some of his sayings and doings, but they defend him stoutly in ways that count, to his superiors and outsiders.
One last word about the novella that opens the collection. It brought more girls into the picture than usual, and a good thing too, I’d say. At the launch the author said that one shouldn’t look for three things in her works—religion, politics, and sex—and one can see the sense in that. However, bringing boys and girls together in fiction intended for ‘children of all ages’ will probably help future generations of boys and girls and men and women to understand and appreciate and respect each other. (Perhaps, a whiff of romance might follow, and will not be looked at askance.)
The bakers dozen of stories that make up the collection are all first-rate. “Mummy” is about an itinerant Egyptian embalmed mummy that prompts the young hero half-unknowingly to take on a museum-robbing mafia and outwit them butterfingeredly. In “World Environment Day”, Amar’s school walks off with a prize against all odds, all because of what might have been various buttery slips between the cup and the lip. “The Beach Adventure” sees Amar and his friends manage to hide and lose a pair of sandals hated by its owner but prized by his wife, and in looking for it chance upon a gold earring dropped by none other than the wife. “The Music Makers” lures the rock-group Heebie Jeebies to the school, thanks, of course, to Amar.
“The Booby Trap” tells the tale of a childish prank that trapped a couple of robbers, without causing any incidental harm to Amar’s mother, or to his friend, for whom it had been intended. In the story “In a Spot of Bother” Amar gets chicken pox, and a dearly beloved Dalmatian to keep him company during convalescence. The (reluctant) swimming champion in a story of that title, is prodded by Amar’s butterfingers to save a precious watch, and earns a swimming medal on the side. In “Russel’s Cap” a famous musician is not kidnapped, as Amar believes, but he nevertheless saves the cap that hid a fortune. “A Sartorial Adventure” tells of an ill-advised attempt at tailoring that earned for Amar and his school a rather contrarian award. When “Amar is Locked Out” he still finds a stolen treasure; he is almost “Kidnapped” by a kid, and in the story that concludes the collection, “De Stressed” both Amar and his Principal learn to value each other a little more.
I have no doubt that children of all ages will indeed relish this dab of butter with their daily bread.

I couldn’t bring myself to wait (of course) for the formal release and had already bought a copy of it on Amazon and greedily gobbled all of it by myself first before passing it on to anyone else.. For a book, as all know, can afford the unique satisfaction of having one’s cake, and eating it, secure in the knowledge that a thousand others can eat it too, without any diminution of the experience or loss of flavour or freshness—quite the contrary, in fact.
Just a word about the release. Shashi Tharoor spoke excellently, as expected, without repeating anything from his speeches at the earlier releases, and so also did other fans of Butter and Co, a special visitor this time being the well-known writer Robin Jeffrey. As on earlier releases, one chosen young reader was given pride of place at a well-organized and professionally compered function. (All as per usual.)
Now to the book. For some reason, I find it’s my favourite among the six, somewhat to my surprise, as all of them are equally good. Perhaps the novella-plus-short-stories format (as in #5) better expresses the temperaments and (mis)adventures of Amar (Butter) and Friends than a novel. Perhaps it’s to do with the developing craft of the writer. I hope to find out, perhaps with the next book, whether it’s just my joy that the new Butterfingers novel has rolled off the printer’s onto my lap, after keeping me and other readers waiting (too long, in our not unbiased judgement).
The book begins with the novella “The Historic Girls vs Boys Cricket Match” which has humour and suspense, adventure and misadventure, literature and music, sport and mystery, all mixed in good measure. And the denouement brings everything together, with a prize for the ‘man/girl of the match’ going not to one who had played the game, but who had ‘earned’ the prize nevertheless.
The Principal, Mr Jagmohan, is one of the shining stars of the Butterfingers series, not always for what he would consider the right reasons. However, for all his bluff and bluster it is easy to see that he is at heart a good person, and not someone who should never be around young people, however much his physician would advise that course of treatment. The children might privately laugh at some of his sayings and doings, but they defend him stoutly in ways that count, to his superiors and outsiders.
One last word about the novella that opens the collection. It brought more girls into the picture than usual, and a good thing too, I’d say. At the launch the author said that one shouldn’t look for three things in her works—religion, politics, and sex—and one can see the sense in that. However, bringing boys and girls together in fiction intended for ‘children of all ages’ will probably help future generations of boys and girls and men and women to understand and appreciate and respect each other. (Perhaps, a whiff of romance might follow, and will not be looked at askance.)
The bakers dozen of stories that make up the collection are all first-rate. “Mummy” is about an itinerant Egyptian embalmed mummy that prompts the young hero half-unknowingly to take on a museum-robbing mafia and outwit them butterfingeredly. In “World Environment Day”, Amar’s school walks off with a prize against all odds, all because of what might have been various buttery slips between the cup and the lip. “The Beach Adventure” sees Amar and his friends manage to hide and lose a pair of sandals hated by its owner but prized by his wife, and in looking for it chance upon a gold earring dropped by none other than the wife. “The Music Makers” lures the rock-group Heebie Jeebies to the school, thanks, of course, to Amar.
“The Booby Trap” tells the tale of a childish prank that trapped a couple of robbers, without causing any incidental harm to Amar’s mother, or to his friend, for whom it had been intended. In the story “In a Spot of Bother” Amar gets chicken pox, and a dearly beloved Dalmatian to keep him company during convalescence. The (reluctant) swimming champion in a story of that title, is prodded by Amar’s butterfingers to save a precious watch, and earns a swimming medal on the side. In “Russel’s Cap” a famous musician is not kidnapped, as Amar believes, but he nevertheless saves the cap that hid a fortune. “A Sartorial Adventure” tells of an ill-advised attempt at tailoring that earned for Amar and his school a rather contrarian award. When “Amar is Locked Out” he still finds a stolen treasure; he is almost “Kidnapped” by a kid, and in the story that concludes the collection, “De Stressed” both Amar and his Principal learn to value each other a little more.
I have no doubt that children of all ages will indeed relish this dab of butter with their daily bread.

I find that these books make the perfect gifts to my younger cousins, nieces and nephews. But I must admit that a reader of any age would find these books tremendously enjoyable. The prose is vibrant and the humour has its own unique flavour. But the greatest fun is in spotting the subtle jokes hidden here and there.
Though we've had three novels featuring these characters, I'd wager Butterfingers & co. shine the brightest when we encounter them in short story form.
The author has treated us to thirteen lovely stories in this volume. I do hope she has more in store and bestows them upon her eager readers soon.
Would I love another visit to the world of Butterfingers? Of course!
Kids would enjoy the books if the language is kept as simple as possible.