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GHOST TOWN

Spooky fun woven around themes of growth and handling change.

Mysterious power outages lead a group of young investigators to the discovery that their small town is positively thronged with ghosts. But why?

Though feeling angry and mutinous at the imminent prospect of having to leave her familiar town and friends behind to move away and attend an exclusive science academy, 11-year-old Lily Cole is determined to make her last summer in Crater, New York, a memorable one. And so it turns out to be. Lily and her close-knit circle timidly venture into an old, abandoned mansion and unleash a veritable tide of spectral encounters and visions, revealing that something’s not only preventing all the town’s deceased residents (including animals) from passing on, but also threatening the living residents, too. In his cleanly drawn panels, Colossal depicts plenty of dramatic ectoplasmic wisps and whirls both menacing and benign. He also has his preteens, as they work toward a solution to the mystery, set up a ghost-removal service. Entertainingly animated by snarky squabbles and punctuated by moments of pop-eyed terror, the cast makes its way past tests of wit and courage to the revelation of a culprit more tragically obsessed than malign. Following a suspenseful climax, a tidy finish resolves both the ghost problem and Lily’s, too. Lily presents Black, and her group of friends is racially diverse.

Spooky fun woven around themes of growth and handling change. (Graphic paranormal. 9-12)

Pub Date: March 25, 2025

ISBN: 9781419745843

Page Count: 256

Publisher: Abrams Fanfare

Review Posted Online: Jan. 18, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2025

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GHOST GIRL

A didactic blueprint disguised as a supernatural treasure map.

A girl who delights in the macabre harnesses her inherited supernatural ability.

It’s not just her stark white hair that makes 11-year-old Zee Puckett stand out in nowheresville Knobb’s Ferry. She’s a storyteller, a Mary Shelley fangirl, and is being raised by her 21-year-old high school dropout sister while their father looks for work upstate (cue the wayward glances from the affluent demography). Don’t pity her, because Zee doesn’t acquiesce to snobbery, bullying, or pretty much anything that confronts her. But a dog with bleeding eyes in a cemetery gives her pause—momentarily—because the beast is just the tip of the wicked that has this way come to town. Time to get some help from ghosts. The creepy supernatural current continues throughout, intermingled with very real forays into bullying (Zee won’t stand for it or for the notion that good girls need to act nice), body positivity, socio-economic status and social hierarchy, and mental health. This debut from a promising writer involves a navigation of caste systems, self-esteem, and villainy that exists in an interesting world with intriguing characters, but they receive a flat, two-dimensional treatment that ultimately makes the book feel like one is learning a ho-hum lesson in morality. Zee is presumably White (as is her rich-girl nemesis–cum-comrade, Nellie). Her best friend, Elijah, is cued as Black. Warning: this just might spur frenzied requests for Frankenstein.

A didactic blueprint disguised as a supernatural treasure map. (Supernatural. 10-12)

Pub Date: Aug. 10, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-06-304460-9

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: June 10, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2021

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NIGHTMARE ON NIGHTMARE STREET

Another reliably eerie outing from a master of under-the-sheets reading.

Terrified children find the borders between bad dreams and reality breaking down in this stand-alone screamfest.

Stine kicks off what he dubs in his introduction an “Everything Scary Story” (inspired by eating an everything bagel) for middle graders and their parents, “who read my books when they were kids!” He throws in a cheery evil laugh—“Mmmmwahahaha…!”—before launching into a four-part story that packs a creepy old house just off Cthulhu Street that serves as the main setting with all the stuff of nightmares from his considerable arsenal. In short chapters alternating between two equally surreal storylines that may each be a dream of the other, he chucks in an impressive array of disquieting tropes and elements—ranging from spooky creaks and howls to purple worms emerging from noses, a mom who sells crocheted body parts online, teachers in “weird animal masks,” and classics like evil toys and an ominous message scrawled in blood. Even though the point-of-view characters are in a constant state of round-eyed terror, this outing is plainly meant to be in fun, and aside from being splashed with hot green vomit or spending a little time as ventriloquist’s dummies, none of the young people here suffer actual harm from the cascade of supernatural threats, for reasons the author explains at the end. The cast presents white.

Another reliably eerie outing from a master of under-the-sheets reading. (Horror. 9-12)

Pub Date: Feb. 17, 2026

ISBN: 9798228588301

Page Count: 214

Publisher: Blackstone

Review Posted Online: Dec. 12, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2026

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