Reviews for Took

by Mary Downing Hahn

School Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Gr 4-7-When Daniel's father loses his job as an executive, his family is forced to move from their comfortable Connecticut home to a run-down house in Brewster's Hill, MA. As if moving to a dilapidated house and leaving behind all his friends is not enough, no one in Brewster's Hill will speak to Daniel or his little sister Erica, except to tell them scary stories about a girl who disappeared from their house and an old witch who haunts the woods with her monster Bloody Bones. Thankfully, Daniel and Erica have each other, and they do their best to ignore the cruel taunting. However Erica begins to withdraw, acting strange and constantly talking to her doll, before she disappears leaving Daniel to rescue her and keep his family from falling apart. Hahn is a master of horror stories, and this is no exception. The story is told mostly from Daniel's point of view but Hahn offers occasional glimpses into the ghost witch Old Auntie's viewpoint, and this helps to build tension. The tone is eerie and ominous, and enhances the pervading spookiness. Bloody Bones' description is haunting and readers will be scared stiff. VERDICT Horror fans and readers looking for a good scare will enjoy this creepy tale.-Ellen Norton, Naperville Public Library, Naperville, IL © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Only Erica (and maybe her precious dolly Little Erica) can hear the beckoning voice through the wind Air-ric-cah, Air-ric-cah leading her to the sweet little cabin up on Brewster Hill. The economic downturn, which led to a move for Mom, Dad, older brother Daniel, and Erica from Fairfield, Connecticut, to the backwoods of West Virginia, is the modern backdrop to a classic ghost story. Through Daniel, Hahn soundly chronicles their relocation from an upper-middle-class lifestyle to a ramshackle farmhouse in Woodville, a town lost to time and abject poverty, complete with haunted woods, a 200-year-old conjuring witch who takes little girls to be her servant every 50 years, and a Frankensteinesque razorback hog. Erica is took and Daniel feels both responsible and driven to champion her release. Stalwart young readers who brave Daniel's telling are rewarded with a resolution that blends the mystical with the hopeful and creates community where once only fear and sorrow thrived.--Bush, Gail Copyright 2015 Booklist


Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

This spooky mystery from one of the genre's longtime virtuosos features seventh-grader Daniel and his seven-year-old sister, Erica, who face severe culture shock when their father's job loss forces them to move from suburban Connecticut to an abandoned farmhouse in rural West Virginia. Readers know from the opening pages, narrated by spell-weaving old "Auntie," that the family is in for big trouble-more than being bullied at school or the parents' disintegrating relationship. Danger beckons from the surrounding woods and mountains; when Erica's beloved look-alike doll, and then Erica herself, vanish in a fashion similar to the disappearance of a seven-year-old girl 50 years ago, Daniel reluctantly ponders the possibilities of his schoolmates' rumors about a "conjure woman" and her resurrected razorback hog, Bloody Bones. Hahn (Where I Belong) smoothly depicts Daniel's spiraling evolution from rational thinker to fearful believer, which is supported by interspersed chapters in Auntie's voice that reveal the dark magic taking place. Satisfyingly frightening, if not quite as gripping as some of Hahn's others, this will be welcomed by readers with an appetite for scary books. Ages 9-12. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

After a family moves to a derelict old house in West Virginia, creepy things begin to happen. Daniel, given substance by his first-person narration, is frustrated. His imperceptive, unobservant, cardboardlike parents fail to understand the difficult situation the move (forced by his father's job loss) has placed his 7-year-old sister, Erica, and him in. Wayward kids at their backward school are bullying, Erica's hearing a creepy voice calling her and taking refuge by focusing only on a new doll, and Daniel is gradually learning of a witch who inhabits the woods and takes little girls from their homes every 50 yearsalthough the exact reason for that interval isn't fully explained. At first he's skeptical, but evidence begins to prove him wrong. With the tale periodically presented from the witch's point of view, the potential suspense entailed by Daniel's disbelief is completely eliminated. After Erica disappears into the woods, doesn't come back, and is replaced by a girl who was taken 50 years ago, Daniel, faced with his grief-stricken parents' disbelief, must confront the witch alone to recover his sister. At that point, the sense of menace rises. A too-neat happy ending undermines the potential for this story to haunt readers' imaginations. A bit flimsy but good for some chills on a dark night. (Horror. 10-13) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Horn Book
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Daniel and little sister Erica find their dilapidated West Virginia home, the woods, and their new school unwelcoming and frightening. As kids tease them with scary tales, Erica becomes progressively stranger. The narrative alternates between Daniel's first-person perspective and a third-person-omniscient narrator who lets readers into the mind of witch "Old Auntie." This creepy tale skillfully weaves in--and honors--the oral tradition of folklore, legends, and ghost stories. (c) Copyright 2016. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.