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Book Review: The Phantom Hour (Babysitting Nightmares #2) by Kat Shepherd

The Phantom Hour (Babysitting Nightmares #2) by Kat Shepherd

Imprint, 2019

ISBN-13: 978-1250156990

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, audiobook, audio CD

 

This summer has been a great one for discovering books with all kinds of girls, from reckless risktakers to insecure new girls, facing their fears– literally.  What a victory for representation, am I right? I wanted to make a list, but I would have spent hours on it.

Babysitting Nightmares by Kat Shepherd is a series I want to see succeed like crazy. I encountered the second book, The Phantom Hour, at the library, and it is so much fun! Apparently there’s a third out now, The Ghost Light, so I’ll be back at the library soon.  The book centers on four friends, all seventh graders, with very different interests and backgrounds. Clio is the leader,  and the book is worth reading, if for no other reason, than to encounter her aunt, Kawanna, who runs a costume shop called Creature Feature located in a storefront on Coffin Street, wears a Godzilla print skirt, hosts horror movie nights for the girls, and drives them where they need to go on their secret missions without actually interfering. Doesn’t she sound like someone you’d want to be friends with?

If you were thinking “this sounds like The Babysitters Club dressed up with ghosts”, you’d be wrong. While there is a standalone storyline in this book, there’s also a thread that connects it to the first book and on into the third. In the first book, the four girls had to enter the Nightmare Realm to retrieve one of their charges who had been replaced with a changeling,  but apparently the Nightmare Realm is not done with them. So as they go about their daily lives and babysitting jobs, they also have to contend with containing the Nightmare Realm. In The Phantom Hour,  Clio takes a job babysitting for the Lee family, who have just moved into the abandoned Plunkett Mansion. Of course the mansion has a supernatural resident, and it’s up to Clio, with help from her friends, to figure out what’s going on and resolve it.  Shepherd does a nice job not just of portraying a diverse group of girlfriends (including three girls of color) who really support each other. The little girl Clio is babysitting is hearing impaired and she’s also represented respectfully.

While most hardcore horror lovers might not get much of a scare out of this book, it has some genuinely creepy and frightening moments– the ghost in the story is not a friendly one.  This series is a nice change from books about girlfriends who are crushing on boys and tearing each other down. It’s not every day you see a positive depiction of four smart, geeky girlfriends taking on and defeating the supernatural, and this one is tops.  Highly recommended.

 

Book Review: The Nightmare Room and The Hungry Ones (Messy Man series, vols 1 and 2) by Chris Sorenson

The Nightmare Room (Messy Man series, vol. 1) by Chris Sorensen

Harmful Monkey Press, 2018

ISBN: 978-0-908342-41-2

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

 

The Hungry Ones (Messy Man series, vol. 2) by Chris Sorenson

Harmful Monkey Press, 2019

ISBN: 978-0998342-42-9

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

 

The Nightmare Room and The Hungry Ones are the first two volumes in an ongoing horror series by Chris Sorenson.  Despite being billed as stand alone novels, they do need to be read in order. Otherwise, the second volume won’t make any sense.  The initial book, The Nightmare Room, features Chris and Hannah Larson, a couple in their mid-thirties who have suffered through the tragedy of losing their only child to cancer at a young age.  In an attempt to put the past behind them, they uproot themselves from New York City and move back to Peter’s hometown of Maple City, Illinois.  Peter’s parents live there in an assisted living facility, and his dad suffers from dementia.  Peter and Hannah move into an abandoned farmhouse owned by Peter’s dad, and Peter soon has to deal with spectral events (strange audio recordings, scratching sounds, ghostly figures) in the house, which tie back to his own upbringing.  The Hungry Ones is more of the same in Maple City, but with a different protagonist (Jessie Voss) and a different haunted building:  an old, abandoned motel with a history of murder being done within its walls.

 

Both books are similar in their writing style, although The Hungry Ones is clearly the stronger of the two.  The first book feels like an author taking his first trial steps at writing a full length horror novel.  It’s written in a sparse fashion, without a whole lot of description.   That works for certain types of stories, but when dealing with the supernatural, it helps to go heavy on explaining what’s happening.  Sorensen’s writing is vague enough in the first book that understanding what is going on can be confusing at times, when Peter is combating the antagonist, known as the “Messy Man’. The second volume in the series is an improvement over the first.  The descriptions are better, and the hotel is a much more interesting backdrop.  Sorenson peppers it with a variety of ghostly characters, and he wisely intersperses the narration with brief chapters explaining how each of those spirits came to be.  These interludes provide some of the best writing in the book, as each character proves to be entertaining, with a unique backstory.  Jessie Voss also proves to be a more interesting protagonist. She got a large sum of money in an accident settlement, and decides to invest it all in revamping a motel with a tragic past.  She’s a headstrong woman, and holds the attention better than Peter’s character. Jessie’s friend Stephanie also adds some depth to the story.  The variety of characters in The Hungry Ones accounts for a good deal of the improvement over the first volume.

Both books combined give a decent start to the series, but as noted, explaining things a little better would help the series in the future.  The character of Woodrow in the second book was important to the plot, but it was difficult to understand his reason for vaping fluid with bits of bone mixed in, as well as his control (or lack thereof) over three ghosts that occupy the same room as him at the hotel.  Peter’s dealings with the Messy Man and his melding with him were also difficult to follow.  Example: at one point, Peter threatens the spirit attached to him with “if you try to stop me, I’ll split myself in two and drown you in life, every single second of it.”  It sounds good, but what does it actually mean?  Writing in a metaphysical sense sometimes works, but in this case, and in many other places in the book, the flow would be helped if it were more straightforward.

If you are okay with some things not making total sense, and you like supernatural stories with minimal gore, this is a book series you could probably get into.  These books could probably be classified as ‘horror lite’, so they would be perfectly suited for YA readers looking to start getting into ghost and horror reading.  Veteran readers of ghost and horror stories may want to look elsewhere.  Both books are quick reads, clocking in at under 300 pages.  The easily readable length, combined with the style of writing, make them perfect gifts for literary kids around Halloween.

Contains: mild violence, mild profanity.

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

Book Review: The Monstrumologist by Rick Yancey– Two Reviews!

The Monstrumologist by Rick Yancey

Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing, 2009

ISBN: 9781416987987

Available: Hardcover, paperback, mass market paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook

In The Monstrumologist, twelve year old Will Henry is thrust into danger when a grave robber brings a horrifying creature to his mentor, Dr. Warthrop, in the middle of the night. Dr. Warthrop is a monstrumologist, a monster-hunting doctor, and now Will and his mentor are in a race to find and stop these creatures before there is more bloodshed.

The Monstrumologist is an incredibly well written book that contains elements of mystery, horror, and adventure. Yancey fills this book with both atmosphere and gore. Written in a gothic style, there is no romance here, only a world of darkness and dread. The relationships of the characters, especially between Will Henry and Dr. Warthrop are complex and develop throughout the story. The difficult language will be a barrier for reluctant readers, though- this is a book for advanced readers and not for the faint of heart. In short, The Monstrumologist is a wonderful, old-fashioned horror tale, and since it is the first in a series, readers can expect to see more from Yancey soon. Readers advisory note: The Monstrumologist would make a good stretch title for those who are attracted by action and darker themes and are looking to read something more complicated and nuanced in the writing style. Highly recommended for middle and high school libraries and public library YA collections.

Contains: Gore and violence

Reviewed by Dylan Kowalewski

 

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A second look at The Monstrumologist:

The Monstrumologist is the first book in a continuing series. Rick Yancey explores the life and times of Dr. Pellinore Warthrop through the eyes of his young assistant/foster child Will Henry. Dr. Warthrop is a monstrumologist, devoted to studying the physiology and physiognomy of monsters. Through Will’s authoritative journals, we discover that they were quite prevalent in his childhood.

In this initial volume of the series, Dr. Warthrop and Will must do battle with the Anthropophagi– a headless primate version of a shark. A nest has developed in their New England town’s cemetery, and Dr. Winthrop must enlist the help of hunters, such as the cold-blooded Jack Kearns, to assist in the eradication of the monsters. The Monstrumologist is a fun, absorbing look into the dark recesses of the human mind. Recommended for advanced young adult readers, and older.

Contains: Violence and gore, cannibalism, medical dissection.

Reviewed by Ben Franz