Mutant Bunny Island Books in Order
Part ofObert Skye Books in OrderBrowse the Mutant Bunny Island books by Obert Skye in order, with quick summaries, series background, and where to start with Perry's wild island adventures.
Last updated: June 7, 2026
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Publication Order
3 books
Mutant Bunny Island
by Obert Skye
2017
When Perry Owens gets a strange plea for help from Uncle Zeke, he heads to Bunny Island convinced something terrible has happened. What he finds is a missing-uncle mystery, suspicious rabbits, and a very weird island.
Bad Hare Day
by Obert Skye
2018
Perry returns to Bunny Island for Carrot Con, but freak microstorms and fresh trouble hit almost immediately. When Uncle Zeke is blamed for a crime he did not commit, Perry and his friends have to clear his name.
Buns of Steel
by Obert Skye
2019
Perry lands on Bunny Island expecting trouble and gets more than he bargained for when hostile robot rabbits appear. To save the island, he has to convince others the danger is real before it is too late.
Series background & context
Mutant Bunny Island is Obert Skye in full nonsense-adventure mode. The series follows Perry Owens, a comic-book-loving kid whose first instinct is rarely the reasonable one. When his uncle Zeke sends a strange distress message from Bunny Island, Perry does what makes perfect sense to him and almost nobody else. He assumes something weird, dangerous, and probably not fully human is happening, then heads straight toward it.
That instinct turns out to be useful.
Bunny Island is the kind of setting that feels suspicious before the real trouble even starts. It is supposed to be a vacation destination, but once Perry arrives the place fills with clues that something is off. Rabbits are everywhere. At least one of them seems very wrong. Perry meets Juliet Jordan and other island residents, and the story quickly slides into conspiracies, inventions, bizarre weather, and animal threats that are much harder to explain away than a normal tourist problem.
The tone is fast, goofy, and heavily illustrated. These books are built for readers who like action, puns, and comic-book energy more than realism. Mutant Bunny Island opens with a missing-uncle mystery and the first hints that the island's wildlife may not be natural. Bad Hare Day brings Perry back for Carrot Con while freak microstorms, false accusations, and more island trouble push the series into another rescue mission. Buns of Steel raises the danger again with robot rabbits and a threat big enough to put the entire island at risk.
Perry is what makes the whole thing hold together. He is imaginative, impulsive, and the kind of kid who trusts comic-book logic because it has helped him notice patterns that more cautious people miss. That makes him funny, but it also makes him brave. Juliet and the other recurring characters help ground the story, or at least ground it as much as anyone can on an island this full of suspicious rabbits.
Expect puns. A lot of puns.
If you want a careful mystery that behaves itself, this series is probably not aiming at you. If you want speedy middle grade chaos, weird creatures, and a hero who solves problems by leaning even harder into the weirdness, it is a good match. The books move quickly, the jokes stay broad, and the island keeps finding new ways to get stranger.
Edited by
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