Reviews for Ghost

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Readers may not wish to read this chilling collection of stories and poems alone at night.A frame story begins and concludes this collection, with a haunting twist. Two young boys sneak out of their camp cabin late at night to seek out Old Man Blackwood, the keeper of the 13 true ghost stories. Blackwood begins with the story "Reflection," about a haunted mirror that looks back at the viewer, the reflection tapping while the hapless viewer peeks at it from beneath the covers. The short vignettes continue with "The Old Pond," a grief-laden tale of a haunted sibling who becomes the victim of the vengeful dead. The seemingly innocent poem "The Doll" leaves a young girl motherless while "Depth" takes readers to the eerie corridors of a sunken submarine. With further stories such as "Widow in Black" and "The Boy in the Basement," even the titles themselves may cause readers to wonder if they should keep the lights on. Illustrtus is a design collective including authors Blaise Hemingway and Jesse Reffsin and illustrators Chris Sasaki and Jeff Turley. The latter perfectly punctuate this book of horror with wild apparitions, dark woods, and creepy dolls, the chill of the unknown brought to life by their haunting images. The inclusion of characters of multiple races makes these tales shiveringly accessible. Ghastly and imaginative storytelling for the youngand not-so-young. (Horror. 10-14) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Publishers Weekly
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The footprints of an inkily indistinct figure trail across the cover of this chilling story collection by design collective Illustrátus. Inside, the 13 tense tales, some told in verse, skew toward horrors that may not be suitable for readers at the younger end of the stated age range. In “The Old Pond,” a guilt-ridden child is dragged to his death by the spirit of his dead sister. In “Point Whitney,” a boy trips and falls—“he spit, seeing his two front teeth and blood spatter in the snow”—then watches helplessly as his friend drowns, trapped under ice. Framed by a stereotypically creepy storyteller (with a “flesh-colored prosthetic arm and hook”) as the only “true ghost stories,” the well-told tales deal in themes of transformation and entrapment. Still, some readers may scratch their heads at the fact that boys seem to take center stage. Grainy, muted illustrations deftly combine texture and shape to conjure truly nightmarish moments. Ages 8–12. (Aug.)

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