Hey there, WGUK
I'm going to have to digree into a little literary criticism here.
It's that it is so funny that I think is the problem. As a read it is a darn good one, as is his other "Boogie" books - 500 Mile Walkies, Boogie Up the River.
But what i would like to know is where does the anecdote stop, and fancy take over. The book is full of funny stories that he and Boogie get up to, but some of them seem so ridiculous that they just can't be true, and so he must be making more of them. I suppose I was exagerrating a little, I'm sure Wallington walked the Pennine Way, I'd just like to know how much of what he describes is true.
Sorry, if I've upset any Wallington fans out there
. Boogie incidently is his city dog, brought up on a diet of curries and Eastenders!
I wouldn't pay £5.00 for it, I'd wait until you see it cheap in a secondhand bookshop somewhere, you can also get his 500 Mile Walkies and Boogie Up the River in one paperback.