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* ShoutOut: "Summer Reading is Killing Me" is filled with literary references, ranging from obvious to subtle. Just one example is when the Trio claims to be book characters from a series. Frankenstein is upset upon hearing this, but the boss calms him down as they don't seem to be from a horror series, telling him "settle down your Literature/{{Goosebumps}}".
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* ThisIsAWorkOfFiction: "Summer Reading is Killing Me" has the following disclaimer: "Any similarity to real characters or real events is very interesting. Does this happen to you often?"
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* SomethingCompletelyDifferent: While most of the books are time travel adventures, "It's All Greek to Me" and "Summer Reading is killing me" has The Book taking them into fiction. The former has them going into the world of Greek myths, while the latter has them in a mash up of all the books on their summer reading list.
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* NarrativeProfanityFilter: In "The Not So Jolly Roger", Joe mentions that Blackbeard says a string of words too nasty to list in this book. Which is something saying something as he said "Damnation and hellfire" earlier. In "The Good and the Goofy", "hell" is directly censored for us.
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* UnfortunateNames: Seen often.

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* BlackKnight: The very first antagonist in the series, when the boys are sent back to King Arthur's court in "Knights of the Dinner Table".



* LetsYouAndHimFight: When Camelot is attacked by Bleob the Giant and Smaug the Dragon at the same time, Sam talks Bleob into attacking Smaug by claiming Smaug was mocking giants. The two monsters soon kill each other.



* OneSteveLimit: The Tut in "Tut, Tut" isn't Tutankhamun. It's lampshaded.

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* OneSteveLimit: The Tut in "Tut, Tut" isn't Tutankhamun. Tutankhamun, but Thutmose III. It's lampshaded.lampshaded.
* OurDragonsAreDifferent: Smaug in "Knights of the Kitchen Table" is a pretty standard western dragon. Unlike [[Literature/TheHobbit his namesake]], he never speaks.
* OurGiantsAreBigger: Bleob in "Knights of the Dinner Table" is a huge, monstrously strong, dimwitted, disgusting {{Gasshole}} who uses HulkSpeak and likes to eat "fair maidens".
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* AdvertOverloadedFuture: "2095" has the boys travel to Manhattan in the titular year, which is full of HardLight holographic advertisements. They also get cornered and pursued by a floating machine that they initially fear is a KillerRobot, but turns out to be a "Sellbot" that spews advertisements.


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* FishOutOfTemporalWater: The boys are often this (Particularly in the books where ''The Book'' yanks them away without warning), but their getting thrown into the future in "2095" is a special case, where they have no frame of reference for a great deal of what's happening around them and end up needing to be rescued by their descendants.
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The series received a short-lived but acclaimed cartoon adaptation that aired on Creator/DiscoveryKids in 2005. For more information on that series, see [[WesternAnimation/TimeWarpTrio here]].

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The book series ran from 1991 to 2007, with sixteen volumes published. It also received a short-lived but acclaimed cartoon adaptation that aired on Creator/DiscoveryKids in 2005. For more information on that series, see [[WesternAnimation/TimeWarpTrio here]].

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A series of books following the eponymous Time Warp Trio: Joe, Sam, and Fred, three unlikely best friends who, thanks to the help of Joe's [[BumblingDad bumbling uncle]] magician's birthday present to Joe - a book that allows the boys to get warped into different aspects of history - get into wacky adventures, ranging from the far future, to the age of the dinosaurs. It would be nice, except people seem dead intent on causing the boys nothing but most-likely-lethal trouble wherever they go. And the boys would very much like to stop ending up in random places, ''and'' get home in time for dinner.

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A ''Time Warp Trio'' is a long-running children's book series of books following created by award-winning children's author Creator/JonScieszka (also known for ''Literature/TheTrueStoryOfTheThreeLittlePigs'' and ''Literature/TheStinkyCheeseMan''). The story follows the eponymous Time Warp Trio: Joe, Sam, and Fred, three unlikely best friends who, thanks to the help of Joe's [[BumblingDad bumbling uncle]] magician's birthday present to Joe - a book that allows the boys to get warped into different aspects of history - get into wacky adventures, ranging from the far future, to the age of the dinosaurs. It would be nice, except people seem dead intent on causing the boys nothing but most-likely-lethal trouble wherever they go. And the boys would very much like to stop ending up in random places, ''and'' get home in time for dinner.
dinner.

The series received a short-lived but acclaimed cartoon adaptation that aired on Creator/DiscoveryKids in 2005. For more information on that series, see [[WesternAnimation/TimeWarpTrio here]].
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* UnfortunateNames: ''Once a book.''

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!! This contains examples of the following tropes:
* ArtEvolution[=/=]ArtShift: The series changed artists around "Sam Samurai", and the art style becomes markedly different, switching from overexaggerated cut-out styled near-abstractions, to moderately exaggerated, clean-cut cartoon characters.
* ALittleSomethingWeCallRockAndRoll: "Tut, Tut" has the boys introduce basketball to the eponymous character.

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!! This contains ----
!!''Time Warp Trio'' provides
examples of the following tropes:
of:

* ArtEvolution[=/=]ArtShift: ArtEvolution: The series changed artists around "Sam Samurai", and the art style becomes markedly different, switching from overexaggerated cut-out styled near-abstractions, to moderately exaggerated, clean-cut cartoon characters.
* ALittleSomethingWeCallRockAndRoll: ALittleSomethingWeCallRockAndRoll:
**
"Tut, Tut" has the boys introduce basketball to the eponymous character.



* FamilyUnfriendlyDeath: ''Would'' have happened to the boys in [[spoiler:"Tut, Tut"]] - the main villain turns them into living-but-not-prepared-for-embalming mummies and triggers a trap door that sends several tons of rocks completely encasing the room the boys are in, trapping them in the sarcophaguses. If the rocks didn't crush them and they didn't die of starvation and dehydration, they'd die of asphyxiation. Fortunately, Joe's sister Anna has a cat that finds the book in the rubble...

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* FamilyUnfriendlyDeath: FamilyUnfriendlyDeath:
**
''Would'' have happened to the boys in [[spoiler:"Tut, Tut"]] - -- the main villain turns them into living-but-not-prepared-for-embalming mummies and triggers a trap door that sends several tons of rocks completely encasing the room the boys are in, trapping them in the sarcophaguses. If the rocks didn't crush them and they didn't die of starvation and dehydration, they'd die of asphyxiation. Fortunately, Joe's sister Anna has a cat that finds the book in the rubble...



* UnfortunateNames: ''Once a book.'' Hatsnat (pronounced "Hot Snot"), Owattabatt (pronounced "Oh, what a butt"), and so on. Each time, it usually gets the boys nearly killed or in trouble. For example, they are discovered eavesdropping on Hatsnat's plans to become great and powerful by trying not to laugh at his name, and are nearly executed by Owattabatt (a samurai) for bursting into laughter at his name.

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* UnfortunateNames: ''Once a book.'' ''
**
Hatsnat (pronounced "Hot Snot"), Owattabatt (pronounced "Oh, what a butt"), and so on. Each time, it usually gets the boys nearly killed or in trouble. For example, they are discovered eavesdropping on Hatsnat's plans to become great and powerful by trying not to laugh at his name, and are nearly executed by Owattabatt (a samurai) for bursting into laughter at his name.



** In one of the later books, this actually gets a LampshadeHanging-- "We always run into villains and they always seem to have terrible names."
* VolleyingInsults: With Hatsnat. Made funnier by the fact that the priest is taking the situation seriously (and is clearly on the verge of blowing a fuse), while the boys...are not.

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** In one of the later books, this actually gets a LampshadeHanging-- LampshadeHanging -- "We always run into villains and they always seem to have terrible names."
* VolleyingInsults: With Hatsnat. Made funnier by the fact that the priest is taking the situation seriously (and is clearly on the verge of blowing a fuse), while the boys... are not.



* WeirdnessCensor: The book comes with this - it not only works a UniversalTranslator, but it also assigns random people in the era to become friendly (when they were trying to kill them mere moments ago) and show them the land without questioning the weird garments or pale skinned foreigners.

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* WeirdnessCensor: The book comes with this - -- it not only works a UniversalTranslator, but it also assigns random people in the era to become friendly (when they were trying to kill them mere moments ago) and show them the land without questioning the weird garments or pale skinned pale-skinned foreigners.



* WordSaladHumor: When Owattabatt is about to execute the boys in "Sam Samurai", his deadly threat is as such: "Now you will ''bark bark meow meow oink oink''." It's justified in-universe: the time-travelling book has language options that automatically translate for the travelers, and the book decided to go on the fritz.

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* WordSaladHumor: When Owattabatt is about to execute the boys in "Sam Samurai", his deadly threat is as such: "Now you will ''bark bark meow meow oink oink''." It's justified in-universe: the time-travelling book has language options that automatically translate for the travelers, and the book decided to go on the fritz.fritz.
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* UncannyFamilyResemblance: Jo, Freddi, and Samantha look ''exactly'' like their great-great-grandfathers, except with longer hair.

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* UncannyFamilyResemblance: Jo, Freddi, and Samantha look ''exactly'' like their great-great-grandfathers, great-grandfathers, except with longer hair.hair. Turns out the girls were actually named after them.
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* FamilyUnfriendlyDeath: ''Would'' have happened to the boys in [[spoiler:"Tut, Tut"]] - the main villain turns them into living-but-not-prepared-for-embalming mummies and triggers a trap door that sends several tons of rocks completely encasing the room the boys are in, trapping them in the sarcophaguses. If the rocks didn't crush them and they didn't die of starvation and dehydration, they'd die of asphyxiation. Fortunately, one of the boys' nieces has a cat that finds the book in the rubble...

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* FamilyUnfriendlyDeath: ''Would'' have happened to the boys in [[spoiler:"Tut, Tut"]] - the main villain turns them into living-but-not-prepared-for-embalming mummies and triggers a trap door that sends several tons of rocks completely encasing the room the boys are in, trapping them in the sarcophaguses. If the rocks didn't crush them and they didn't die of starvation and dehydration, they'd die of asphyxiation. Fortunately, one of the boys' nieces Joe's sister Anna has a cat that finds the book in the rubble...
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* HurricaneOfEuphemisms: At a few points in ''2095'', the trio find themselves on the verge of throwing up. Scieszka gets creative with it; by the time he gets to [[AddedAlliterativeAppeal "perform peristaltic pyrotechnics,"]] most readers will probably get the gist of it, but may be looking for a dictionary regardless.

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* EvilChancellor: Used a few times, often to add tension to the boys' interactions with real historical figures (or make those historical figures more sympathetic by comparison). [[SinisterMinister Hatsnat]] and [[MagicalNativeAmerican Bull Bear]] stand out.



* HistoricalHeroUpgrade: Thoroughly averted in ''The Good, the Bad, and the Goofy'', with respect to Lt. George Custer. He's not especially demonized, either, but the boys fall in with [[BadassPacifist Black Kettle]] partway through the book, and it's pretty clear who the reader is meant to sympathize with. (At the beginning of the book, before the timey-wimey stuff starts, the boys are watching a Western TV show that plays this trope [[StylisticSuck dead straight]]; Sam has a few things to say about that.)
** Being one of the only women to rule Ancient Egypt[[note]] and probably the one who effectively wielded the most power in doing so[[/note]], the real Hatshepsut [[IDidWhatIHadToDo may not have been as nice]] as ''Tut, Tut'' makes her seem. Then again, her portrayal in the book may have been an attempt to balance out her successors' attempts to [[UnPerson erase her accomplishments]].



* UnfortunateNames: ''Once a book.'' Hatsnat (pronounced "Hot Snot"), Owattabatt (pronounced "Oh, what a butt"), and so on. Each time, it usually gets the nearly killed or in trouble. For example, the boys are discovered eavesdropping on Hatsnat's plans to become great and powerful by trying not to laugh at his name, and the boys are nearly executed by Owattabatt (a samurai) for bursting into laughter at his name.

to:

* UnfortunateNames: ''Once a book.'' Hatsnat (pronounced "Hot Snot"), Owattabatt (pronounced "Oh, what a butt"), and so on. Each time, it usually gets the boys nearly killed or in trouble. For example, the boys they are discovered eavesdropping on Hatsnat's plans to become great and powerful by trying not to laugh at his name, and the boys are nearly executed by Owattabatt (a samurai) for bursting into laughter at his name.


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* VolleyingInsults: With Hatsnat. Made funnier by the fact that the priest is taking the situation seriously (and is clearly on the verge of blowing a fuse), while the boys...are not.
-->"We are magicians, [[MaliciousMisnaming Hot Slop]]."\\
"Minions of Set!"\\
"Roasting Goober!"\\
"Temple thieves!"\\
"Steaming Greenie!"
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* FirstPersonPerspective: The books are always told from Joe's perspective.
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No Circular Links, please.


A series of books following the eponymous TimeWarpTrio: Joe, Sam, and Fred, three unlikely best friends who, thanks to the help of Joe's [[BumblingDad bumbling uncle]] magician's birthday present to Joe - a book that allows the boys to get warped into different aspects of history - get into wacky adventures, ranging from the far future, to the age of the dinosaurs. It would be nice, except people seem dead intent on causing the boys nothing but most-likely-lethal trouble wherever they go. And the boys would very much like to stop ending up in random places, ''and'' get home in time for dinner.

to:

A series of books following the eponymous TimeWarpTrio: Time Warp Trio: Joe, Sam, and Fred, three unlikely best friends who, thanks to the help of Joe's [[BumblingDad bumbling uncle]] magician's birthday present to Joe - a book that allows the boys to get warped into different aspects of history - get into wacky adventures, ranging from the far future, to the age of the dinosaurs. It would be nice, except people seem dead intent on causing the boys nothing but most-likely-lethal trouble wherever they go. And the boys would very much like to stop ending up in random places, ''and'' get home in time for dinner.
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** In one of the later books, this actually gets a LampshadeHanging-- "We always run into villains and they always seem to have terrible names."
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* CantTakeAnythingWithYou: In one book, the boys decide to go back to cavemen days with a bunch of modern technology to change the future. ''The Book'' doesn't like that, and not only refuses to bring their stuff, it [[NakedOnArrival leaves behind their clothes]], save for Sam's NerdGlasses and Fred's baseball cap. (Joe got to a keep a straw he was using for a magic trick.)

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* ArtEvolution[=/=]ArtShift: The series changed artists around "Sam Samurai", and the art style becomes markedly different, switching from overexaggerated cut-out styled near-abstractions, to moderately exaggerated cartoon characters.

to:

* ArtEvolution[=/=]ArtShift: The series changed artists around "Sam Samurai", and the art style becomes markedly different, switching from overexaggerated cut-out styled near-abstractions, to moderately exaggerated exaggerated, clean-cut cartoon characters.



* FamilyUnfriendlyDeath: ''Would'' have happened to the boys in [[spoiler:"Tut, Tut"]] - the main villain turns them into living-but-not-prepared-for-embalming mummies and trigges a trap door that sends several tons of rocks completely encasing the room the boys are in, trapping them in the sarcophaguses. If the rocks didn't crush them and they didn't die of starvation and dehydration, they'd die of asphyxiation. Fortunately, one of the boys' nieces has a cat that finds the book in the rubble...

to:

* FamilyUnfriendlyDeath: ''Would'' have happened to the boys in [[spoiler:"Tut, Tut"]] - the main villain turns them into living-but-not-prepared-for-embalming mummies and trigges triggers a trap door that sends several tons of rocks completely encasing the room the boys are in, trapping them in the sarcophaguses. If the rocks didn't crush them and they didn't die of starvation and dehydration, they'd die of asphyxiation. Fortunately, one of the boys' nieces has a cat that finds the book in the rubble...



** Once more averted in "Sam Samurai". For insulting a samurai, they would have been executed on the spot, had it not been for their granddaughters. [[ShownTheirWork Yes, insulting a samurai was a grave insult that usually resulted in death for peasants.]]



** A helpful servant of the Emperor in "Sam Samurai" is literally named "Silly Elephant". The samurai that guides around the boys is befuddled.

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** A helpful servant of the Emperor in "Sam Samurai" is literally named "Silly Elephant". Elephant" in Japanese. The samurai that guides around the boys is befuddled.befuddled.
* WeirdnessCensor: The book comes with this - it not only works a UniversalTranslator, but it also assigns random people in the era to become friendly (when they were trying to kill them mere moments ago) and show them the land without questioning the weird garments or pale skinned foreigners.
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* IsTheAnswerToThisQuestionYes: At the end of "It's All Greek to Me", one of the boys asks Apollo, the god of music, if he can play anything but [[ItMakesSenseInContext "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star"]].
-->Apollo stared at us as if we'd just grown another head.
-->"Can I play music? Is Aphrodite beautiful? Is Athena smart? Can Dionysus drink wine? Give me that stringed thing; I'll show you music."
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* LetsSplitUpGang: Done in "Tut, Tut." Fred protests, citing films where this leads to the characters getting "bumped off", but their Egyptian helper is merely confused.
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\n------\n!! This contains examples of the following tropes:
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** "See You Later, Gladiator" has the boys avert this. Normally, their fight with their companion should end in death - but they then introduce professional wrestling (not pankration, ''professional wrestling'') to the Romans.
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* IShallTauntYou: Fred employs this against the Black Knight in ''Knights of the Kitchen Table'', reasoning that trying to spear them while wearing tons of armour will wear him out. He's right.
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* WeWillAllFlyInTheFuture: In "2095", personal anti-gravity discs the size of large lapel pins are commonplace, and worth only a few cents (when a slice of pizza is over a hundred dollars).
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* RidiculousFutureInflation: In "2095" a slice of pizza is worth well over a hundred dollars.
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* BecauseDestinySaidSo: In "See You Later, Gladiator", the Vestial Virgins [[spoiler:spare Sam, Joe, and Fred, as well as allow them enough time to get back home. When one of the boys ask why, one of the Virgins pulls out a prediction that details the boys' entire trip to Rome.]]

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* BecauseDestinySaidSo: BecauseDestinySaysSo: In "See You Later, Gladiator", the Vestial Virgins [[spoiler:spare Sam, Joe, and Fred, as well as allow them enough time to get back home. When one of the boys ask why, one of the Virgins pulls out a prediction that details the boys' entire trip to Rome.]]
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Added DiffLines:

A series of books following the eponymous TimeWarpTrio: Joe, Sam, and Fred, three unlikely best friends who, thanks to the help of Joe's [[BumblingDad bumbling uncle]] magician's birthday present to Joe - a book that allows the boys to get warped into different aspects of history - get into wacky adventures, ranging from the far future, to the age of the dinosaurs. It would be nice, except people seem dead intent on causing the boys nothing but most-likely-lethal trouble wherever they go. And the boys would very much like to stop ending up in random places, ''and'' get home in time for dinner.

---

* ArtEvolution[=/=]ArtShift: The series changed artists around "Sam Samurai", and the art style becomes markedly different, switching from overexaggerated cut-out styled near-abstractions, to moderately exaggerated cartoon characters.
* ALittleSomethingWeCallRockAndRoll: "Tut, Tut" has the boys introduce basketball to the eponymous character.
** "See You Later, Gladiator" has the boys introduce ''professional wrestling'' to the Romans, as an alternative to having to stab and kill a fellow slave.
* BecauseDestinySaidSo: In "See You Later, Gladiator", the Vestial Virgins [[spoiler:spare Sam, Joe, and Fred, as well as allow them enough time to get back home. When one of the boys ask why, one of the Virgins pulls out a prediction that details the boys' entire trip to Rome.]]
* FamilyUnfriendlyDeath: ''Would'' have happened to the boys in [[spoiler:"Tut, Tut"]] - the main villain turns them into living-but-not-prepared-for-embalming mummies and trigges a trap door that sends several tons of rocks completely encasing the room the boys are in, trapping them in the sarcophaguses. If the rocks didn't crush them and they didn't die of starvation and dehydration, they'd die of asphyxiation. Fortunately, one of the boys' nieces has a cat that finds the book in the rubble...
* GladiatorGames: The entire point of "See You Later, Gladiator".
* MadeASlave: The boys in "See You Later, Gladiator", as well as their guide, who they try to help win freedom.
* MrExposition: Actually justified in-universe: the book has a "guide" option that not only turns normally hostile people into, well, guides for whoever uses it, but will also help them point out features of the era and install a WeirdnessCensor, so people don't ask why there are three kids in the most bizarre clothing running about in foreign countries. It saves their life a few times, as their "guides" included a samurai who was about to slice off their heads for trespassing.
* OneSteveLimit: The Tut in "Tut, Tut" isn't Tutankhamun. It's lampshaded.
* {{Samurai}}: The point of, well, "Sam Samurai".
* UncannyFamilyResemblance: Jo, Freddi, and Samantha look ''exactly'' like their great-great-grandfathers, except with longer hair.
* UnfortunateNames: ''Once a book.'' Hatsnat (pronounced "Hot Snot"), Owattabatt (pronounced "Oh, what a butt"), and so on. Each time, it usually gets the nearly killed or in trouble. For example, the boys are discovered eavesdropping on Hatsnat's plans to become great and powerful by trying not to laugh at his name, and the boys are nearly executed by Owattabatt (a samurai) for bursting into laughter at his name.
** A helpful servant of the Emperor in "Sam Samurai" is literally named "Silly Elephant". The samurai that guides around the boys is befuddled.
* WordSaladHumor: When Owattabatt is about to execute the boys in "Sam Samurai", his deadly threat is as such: "Now you will ''bark bark meow meow oink oink''." It's justified in-universe: the time-travelling book has language options that automatically translate for the travelers, and the book decided to go on the fritz.

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