Measle and the Wrathmonk
Cover of the US edition | |
Author | Ian Ogilvy |
---|---|
Illustrator | Chris Mould |
Cover artist | Jimmy Pickering (US edition) |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Series | Measle |
Genre | Children's fantasy |
Published |
|
Media type | Paperback & Hardcover |
Pages | 208 |
ISBN | 0-19-271952-1 |
OCLC | 59137744 |
Followed by | Measle and the Dragodon |
Measle and the Wrathmonk is a children's fantasy novel written by Ian Ogilvy and illustrated by Chris Mould. It was released in 2004 by OUP in the UK and by HarperCollins in the US.[1] It received the Georgia Children's Book Award.[2] It has been translated into at least seven languages,[3] and a film version is in development.[4]
The first edition was published with a lurid green vinyl cover; the author commented: "It smells like a beach ball or a lilo... It's the brightest, most seeable thing in the whole store. The next one’s going to be luminous orange."[3]
The novel was reissued by OUP in 2010 under the title The Train Set of Terror! [5]
Plot summary
A 10-year-old boy named Measle is living with his horrid guardian, Basil Tramplebone. Measle's life is horrible and boring. Basil builds a detailed train set using money that was left for Measle by his parents and plays with it, while all Measle can do is watch him. Desperate to play with it, Measle tricks Basil into leaving the house by telling him that there is extra money in the bank. His plan backfires, and Basil catches him playing with the train set when he gets home. Basil magically shrinks Measle and placed him in the train set. Measle meets Frank, the electrician who wired the train set, who is all plastic except for his mouth. Measle then feeds him some carrot, which restores Frank to his previous human-form.Frank reveals that the glazed-donut crumbs and lemonade left by Basil turn you to plastic if eaten. Together they continue Prudence, a wrathmonkologist; William, an encyclopedia salesman; Kitty, a Brownie scout; Lady Grant, a town official; and Kip, the carpenter who built the table and most of the train sets detail work.
Characters
Measle Stubbs - The main character in the book. A thin 10-year-old boy who is under the legal guardianship of a horrid "wrathmonk" named Basil Tramplebone. He is called 'Measle' because wrathmonks enjoy confusing people by rearranging words. When his parents appear again he learns his real name (Sam Lee), but he still prefers to be called Measle.
Basil Tramplebone - The villain in the book. He is a "wrathmonk", which is a warlock that has gone mad or insane. He is the legal guardian of Measle Stubbs. He is also after the money that Measle is supposed to inherit from his "dead" parents. Described as thin, tall, and has black hair that is kept on his head with black shoe polish. According to Measle, Basil never lies.
Griswold Gristle - A bank manager that helps Basil claim Measle's money. Oddly looks and talks like Basil, and is a wrathmonk according to later books.
Frank Hunter - An electrician who ate some of the lemonade and doughnuts, thus he was turned into plastic. Measle helps him turn back to normal.
Lady Grant - A victim of Basil Tramplebone. She is a borough councilor from town hall that tried to make Basil repair his house. This caused Basil to get mad, and so, she was shrunk. She also uses the word 'revolting' often.
William O. Durham - A victim of Basil Tramplebone. He is a traveling salesman that tried to sell Basil expensive encyclopedias. His foot got caught when Basil closed the door, making Basil angry, and William shrunken. He often uses tasteless jokes that no one usually finds amusing.
Kitty Webb - Another victim of Basil Tramplebone. She was a girl scout that was selling cookies, but was scared by Basil's appearance and tried to run away. Basil caught her and shrunk her. She is often afraid but can be brave.
Kip Lovell - A victim of Basil Tramplebone. He is a carpenter who made a table for Basil; however, Basil was not pleased by it, so Kip was shrunk. Kip had been there the longest so he was almost all plastic.
Prudence Preyer - A victim of Basil Tramplebone. She was a wrathmonkologist, someone who studies wrathmonks, and was spying on Basil for six months but got caught one day because her dog, Tinker, had barked, causing Basil to notice them.
Sam Stubbs - Measle's dad. He is a wizard.
Lee Stubbs - Measle's mum. She is a manafount which means she, although unable to do spells herself, has an unlimited supply of mana, which is what magicians use to cast spells. This mana can be tapped into either by her husband holding hands with her or by her being eaten. (see Measle and the Dragodon)
Major themes
- Little people can make a big difference.
- Eat your vegetables.
- Looks can be deceiving.
- Don't look at the sun
- What goes around comes around.
Awards
- Georgia Children’s Book Award [2]
Film adaptation
The plans for Warner Brothers to produce a film based on Measle and the Wrathmonk were scrapped.[6] A company called PRANA has since shown interest and plans to turn the book into a Pixar type animated film.