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Contents

   



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1 Plot  





2 Sequels  





3 References  





4 Regular occurrences  














The 13-Storey Treehouse






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The 13-Storey Treehouse
First edition
AuthorAndy Griffiths
IllustratorTerry Denton
SeriesThe Treehouse series
GenreJuvenile fiction
Published2011 (Pan Macmillan Australia)
Publication placeAustralia
Pages239
ISBN978-0-330-40436-5
LC ClassPZ7.G88366 Th 2011
Followed byThe 26-Story Treehouse 
Websitehttp://www.andygriffiths.com.au/abook/?id=9781760986520

The 13-Storey Treehouse is a 2011 book[1] written by author Andy Griffiths and illustrated by Terry Denton,[2] and a stage play based on the book.[3] The story follows Andy and Terry, who are living in a 13-storey treehouse, struggling to finish their book on time among many distractions and their friend Jill, who lives in a house full of animals and often visits them. According to the book, the 13-storey treehouse has "a bowling alley, a see-through swimming pool, a tank full of man-eating sharks, a secret underground laboratory, a vegetable vaporizer and a marshmallow machine that shoots marshmallows into your mouths when it sees that you are hungry".

The 13-Storey Treehouse won the Australian Book Industry Awards Book of the Year for Older Children 2012[4][5] and the 2012 COOL Award for Fiction for Older Readers.[6]

Plot[edit]

The book begins with the narrator and fictional depiction of the author, Andy Griffiths, giving an introduction to himself, his friend and illustrator Terry Denton, and their treehouse.

Andy wakes up one morning, and on his way to getting breakfast, he meets Terry, painting a white cat yellow to turn it into a canary, or a "catnary". After being dropped from the treehouse, the cat grows wings and flies away. Andy and Terry are then greeted by their animal-loving friend Jill, who wants to find her pet cat, Silky. It turns out that the cat Terry painted was that exact cat. Andy and Terry try to remain innocent when Jill questions them. Right after Jill leaves, Andy and Terry receive a call via a 3D video phone by their publisher, Mr Big Nose, who is upset that the duo is behind schedule.

They soon try to come up with ideas for a book, but Terry only has a few self-portraits of his finger. Since they're Terry's only pictures in his folder, he and Andy end up in an argument which starts a drawing competition. Once they compete for the best banana drawing, Andy gets upset and gets in a fight with Terry, armed with the Giant Banana Terry grew in the intro. Terry ends up knocking Andy out and pours a bucket of water to save him. They come back to ideas for their book, and it turns out that Andy has four pages that read "Once upon a time". But before anyone can say more, Terry gets distracted by television as his favorite show, Barky the Barking Dog, is airing. Andy is not amused at all and throws the TV out.

Right afterwards, the duo are greeted by Bill the Postman, who is giving them sea-monkeys that Terry ordered. Andy is very unhappy with this. Terry goes down to the Secret Underground Laboratory to hatch the sea monkeys. After Andy waits for a long time for him to come back, he goes down to the Secret Laboratory. Andy gets even more bored and angry while Terry finishes hatching a sea-monkey. He then starts feeding it, but it grows into a mermaid named Mermaidia whom the duo put in a bathtub. She and Terry grow attached, leaving Andy alone. He overhears the love conversation from the bath door, which ends in Terry kissing Mermaidia. Once Terry runs off, Andy enters the bathroom and finds out that Mermaidia was a sea monster in disguise. Andy records her singing a song about how disgusting she is. He runs down the stairs to find Terry, who is eating marshmallows. After being shown the proof that Mermaidia is a monster, Terry sides with Andy, and questions on what to do. They end up going to the underground laboratory so they can shrink her down with the banana enlarger.

Later, the duo began to work on their book, but Terry was too sad to concentrate. Andy then gets Terry popcorn and lemonade to cheer him up. Terry additionally got himself bubblegum. He burps a bubble which he had trap himself. Terry floats away and Andy does a golf swing which successfully saved him.

Then, Terry gets an idea of a book about a superfinger. So they wrote and illustrated it. Terry gets distracted by a package, which contained the real sea monkeys, he then goes to the lab to make the sea monkeys. However the sea monkeys were causing chaos. Terry grabs the Giant Banana and whacks the flying object out of the tree. Then the duo launched the monkeys and the Giant Banana far away with a catapult.

When Andy and Terry began to write their book, a giant gorilla started shaking the tree yelling, “BANANA!” Then a chauffer arrives, informing Terry has won the Barky the Barking Dog drawing competition and gets to meet Barky. But squished by the giant gorilla. As the duo loses hope. 13 flying cats, led by Silky, began fighting the gorilla. Which was successful. The canaries then lift the gorilla away.

A doorbell rings, however the duo discovered it was Jill, in which she thought she saw Silky. Andy confessed that it was Silky but Terry turned her into a canary. But Jill was glad and thanks Terry.

However, Andy is still upset with how he and Terry haven't got their book done, but Terry suggests that they write what happened that day. They write the events up and with the help of Jill in a Santa-like sleigh, get their book to Mr Big Nose for it to be published.

Sequels[edit]

The book has spawned a series of sequels, each of them adding 13 stories and new characters, as well as continuing the use of meta and absurdist humor. The series concluded with the 13th entry, the 169 Storey Treehouse.

References[edit]

  • ^ "Review: The 13-Story Treehouse". Kids' Book Review. 24 July 2012. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  • ^ Blake, Jason (September 23, 2013). "Andy Griffith's 13-Story Treehouse goes to the edge of the ridiculous". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  • ^ "Winners of the Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIA) 2012 Announced". Readings. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  • ^ "History - Past ABIA Winners". Australian Book Industry Awards. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  • ^ "2012 COOL Awards winners announced". Books+Publishing. 2012-11-20. Retrieved 2021-09-02.
  • Regular occurrences[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_13-Storey_Treehouse&oldid=1225650080"

    Categories: 
    Australian children's books
    2011 Australian novels
    2011 children's books
    COOL Award-winning works
    Macmillan Publishers books
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Articles with MusicBrainz work identifiers
     



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