Review: The House of Dead Maids by Clare B. Dunkle

 

 

  • Reading level: Young Adult
  • Hardcover: 160 pages
  • Publisher: Henry Holt and Co. (BYR); First Edition edition (September 14, 2010)
  • ISBN-10: 0805091165
  • Source: Blue Slip Media
  •  Eleven-year-old Tabby Akroyd is a young maid, hired out as a nursemaid to a young Master at the dark, dreary Seldom House.  Her charge, a wild, young boy, is only referred to as “Himself.”  It doesn’t take Tabby long to discover that something is amiss at Seldom House.  Himself isn’t related to the “old master” and the other staff are tight-lipped about where he’d come from and how he became master. A ghostly girl with black pits for eyes keeps appearing in the night, a young girl that seems strangely familiar to Tabby.

    Once Tabby realizes the fate of Himself and hers as well, is it too late?  Can she withstand the evil that is hanging over Seldom House?

    The House of Dead Maids  is advertised as “a chilling prelude to Wuthering Heights.”  I can’t deny I was a tad bit skeptical when I read this claim.  Ultimately, I was suprised when this book exceeded my expectations!

    Dunkle paints very dark, cold, & gothic setting.  The prose suits the period for which it was written. I was, particular, worried that text would be too modern for the setting but this clearly was not the case.  While technically considered a young adult novel, this book would be of interest to adults as well.  My personal hope is that young adults pick up this book and get intrigued by the story, rushing out to buy Wuthering Heights to learn more about the fate of “Himself!”

    I’d be remiss not to mention the haunting images that appear at the start of each chapter, illustrated by Patrick Arrasmith:

    My only complaint about this book is the length; at just under 150 pages I was aching for more!  All in all, though, I found this to be an extremely well-crafted book.  This time of year is the perfect time for reading it, the cool air exacerbates the chills already running down your spine as you read…

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    Posted in Fright Fest, Horror, Review, YA | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

    Fright Fest Week 1 Wrap Up & Giveaway!

    Today officially wraps up the first week of Fright Fest!  I hope everyone has been enjoying the guest posts & reviews.  Week 1 of Fright Fest mainly featured middle-grade/ya books. Here’s a recap of what festivities took place this week:

    Don’t forget to link up your thriller/horror posts to be eligible to win the week one giveaway, which includes all the books reviewed this past week that I personally own, two Halloween bookmarks, and an exclusive Jenn’s Bookshelves witch’s broom pen!  The deadline to link up your posts for this week’s giveaway is tonight at midnight (Eastern Time!).

    Posted in Fright Fest | 2 Comments

    Gearing Up For the Readathon!


    Time to take a break in the Fright Fest festivities (say that three times fast!) to officially mention that I will be taking part in the Dewey’s 24 Hour Read-a-thon this weekend!

    I have my snacks ready (cookies, fruit, cheese, more cookies, brownies & chips) and will come up with the stack of books I plan to read tonight.  Since Fright Fest is in full force, I’ll probably be reading a great deal of horror/thriller books, throwing in some picture books that I’ll read with my boys to lighten things up.  Here are a few pictures of some of my potential reads:

    Since I’m a mom, there is no way I can spend an entire 24 hours reading.  I will be taking one long break Saturday afternoon to attend my oldest son’s black belt ceremony (whohoo!) but will otherwise read when I can.

    To prevent all of your feed readers from exploding, I will only be updating every 4 hours but will be doing more frequent updates on Twitter (@jennsbookshelf).

    Ok, with that said, back to your regularly scheduled Fright Fest programming!

    Posted in Dewey's 24 Hour Read-a-thon | 8 Comments

    Guest Post & Giveaway: Clare Dunkle, Author of The House of Dead Maids

    Today I’m excited to welcome Clare Dunkle, author of The House of Dead Maids with a guest post.  A little background first: The House of Dead Maids is a “prequel” to Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights. In today’s post, Clare will describe her inspiration for this delightfully spooky read!

    When I wrote my new novel, The House of Dead Maids (a “volume one” to Emily Brontë’s “volume two,” Wuthering Heights), I put into my book what I liked best about her Victorian classic: interesting and scary ghosts. I’ll never forget reading the scene in Wuthering Heights where the little ghost girl comes tapping at the window, saying, “I’m come home: I’d lost my way on the moor!” Or the scene at the end of the book, just at twilight, where the little boy blubbers, “There’s Heathcliff and a woman yonder, under t’nab”—and Heathcliff has been dead for months. I wanted to bring those sorts of wonderful chills in my book, so I drew on everything I know about hauntings to create them—and I’ve been an avid reader of ghostly folklore and “true” ghost stories since I was a small child.

    The inspiration for one of my novel’s big moments comes from a book called Scottish Ghost Stories, by James Robertson. (Warner Books, 1996) In that “true account,” a young woman named Jean had an encounter with the Black Lady of Broomhill House and ran away in terror, but her grandmother told her she must go back; the ghost was trying to tell her something. So she went back to the ruined house and saw the Black Lady again: “She stood in front of Jean in the same posture, and then her hand stretched out and she pointed behind Jean. When Jean turned to look she was horrified to see the figures of a further thirteen people, standing and sitting on the slope behind her. Two of them were children.” (p. 173) The thought of summoning the courage to face one ghost only to discover many more appealed to me tremendously. I knew right away that this idea belonged in my new book.

    Why do my maids have no eyes? It expresses the fact that their forms have been taken over by something inhuman and are being used as a sort of disguise, but, as any “true ghost-story” reader can tell you, there are a number of eyeless ghosts. Here’s a favorite from Glen Grant’s wonderful Obake Files (Mutual Publishing, 1996): “… As [Tommy] was driving home at about 11 pm, his headlights revealed a sailor boy in his uniform hitchhiking along the road. … So he slowed down to pick him up. As he began to slowly brake and pull over to the side, he looked into the sailor’s face. The boy’s eye sockets were empty; he had no eyeballs!” (p. 97)

    In one scene of my book, Tabby and the young boy she takes care of have a conversation about ghosts. She expresses the traditional Christian view that “the bad dead go to hell and roast in flames, and the good dead go to the kingdom of heaven.” But the young boy says, “Dead people creep into the house at night to hunt for crumbs under the table.” He comes from an Eastern culture with the tradition of hungry ghosts, deceased beings that have either unfulfilled desires or lazy descendants who are not taking care of their ancestors, forcing these ghosts to become beggars in the world of the spirit. Hungry ghosts are a terrifying phenomenon in Eastern tales, so Tabby is quite right to shiver at this idea.

    One of my characters sees a ghost that is “a wizened horror, all teeth and hair and fingernails.” I created this ghost out of the very old superstition that hair and fingernails continue to grow on a corpse, and that in the case of evil corpses, the teeth may grow as well. None of this is true, but desiccated corpses do give this impression: the flesh dries up, revealing more of the tooth, hair shaft, or fingernail than could be seen before. This idea has stayed in the popular consciousness because there’s something particularly upsetting about a corpse continuing this kind of mindless growth underground. It calls to mind the voluptuously healthy appearance of Victorian vampires.

    These are just a few of the inspirations for the hauntings in The House of Dead Maids. Other inspirations include the “Cauld Lad o’ Hylton,” a fine old Yorkshire ghost; a truly awful undead train passenger from the Southwest who gave off a horrid stench; a poltergeist who turned kitchen spills into amazing pictures; and an eyewitness account in which a little boy described a ghost as “an old man with eyes like windows.” I even drew inspiration the oral tradition, from one of my daughter’s boarding school roommates. Her mother, she said, had grown up in a house in Austria haunted by a dirty old man—when women or girls would sit down in a vacant chair, they would find themselves sitting in this ghost’s lap! That’s one of the most unpleasant specters I’ve ever heard of.

    So, as you get ready for Halloween, don’t leave the Victorians off your list: Henry James, Robert Louis Stevenson, Sheridan Le Fanu, and other classic authors deliver some delicious chills. And don’t forget to ask neighbors or friends to tell you their own “true” ghost stories. Those are the best of all.

    Thank you, Clare! Be sure to check out the other stops on this tour:

  • October 11—The Spectacle
  • October 12—Darkly Reading
  • October 13—Adventures in Children’s Publishing
  • October 14—Sonderbooks Blog
  • October 18—ScFiGuy
  • October 15—Tor.com
  • October 26—WORD for Teens
  • October 29—Cynsations
  • Now on to the giveaway!

    Special Brontë-themed giveaway!


    One Grand Prize winner will receive The House of Dead Maids, a gorgeous Brontë sisters pocket mirror, and the HarperTeen edition of Wuthering Heights! Two lucky runners-up will receive the two books. To enter, send an email to DeadMaidsBook@gmail.com with your name, email address, and shipping address (if you’re under 13, submit a parent’s name and email address). One entry per person and prizes will only be shipped to US or Canadian addresses. Entries must be received by midnight (PDT) on October 31. Winners will be selected in a random drawing on November 1 and notified via email.

    Good luck to all!  Be sure to stop by tomorrow for my review of The House of Dead Maids!

    Posted in Fright Fest, Horror | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

    Guest Review: The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving

    I’m very excited to welcome Chris from Chrisbookarama as a guest reviewer today.  Chris will be reviewing Washington Irving’s The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.

    I grew up watching the Disney cartoon version of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow every Halloween. I still remember the spine tingling laugh of the Headless Horseman. I loved it. I’ve always wanted to read the short story by Washington Irving so when Jenn was planning Fright Fest, I figured it was finally the right time.

    In The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, schoolteacher Ichabod Crane is a happy bachelor until he gets a look at the farm of Baltus Van Tassel. He starts imagining what his life would be like if he was the owner of that farm. He is then determined to court the daughter of Van Tassel, whoever she may be. That lady just happens to be the lovely and coquettish Katrina who is courted by many a local including the formidable Brom Bones.

    Brom Bones is a good old boy who is at the bottom of every prank that happens in Sleepy Hollow. He’s a big, rough guy, always ready for a fight. However, Ichabod is not discouraged. He has confidence in his own charms. When he is invited to a party at the abode of Van Tassel, he sets off on a borrowed horse, the heart of Katrina just within his grasp.

    Ichabod has a serious character flaw; he is extremely superstitious. Late into the evening, the men start telling hair raising tales, one happens to be the legend of the Headless Horseman. The horseman is the ghost of a Hessian revolutionary who lost his head in battle. Every night he sets out onto the local road, looking for his missing head.

    As the night’s revelry comes to a close, Ichabod must take the road home alone, his head filled with thoughts of the Headless Horseman. I’ll let you find out what happens next for yourself.

    I thoroughly enjoyed The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, even though not one of the characters is sympathetic. Ichabod is greedy, Brom a bully and Katrina a flirt. I did not like how neither of the men treated Katrina like a person, just a prize to be won. Irving does know how to spin a yarn though and this is a fun story for Halloween.

    I downloaded the LibriVox recording of the story for free. The reader, Chip, had a gravelly voice and he was an enthusiastic narrator. He added so much to the experience. He really carried me along through the story. I recommend giving him a listen.

    Now that I can compare the Disney film and the story, I have to say Disney had it spot on, plus a musical number! The film can be viewed in 4 parts on Youtube. Enjoy! The Tim Burton version while visually interesting has almost nothing to do with the Washington Irving story.

    If you don’t want to watch the whole film, here’s a little bite of it, the part where Ichabod hears the story for the first time.

    Thank you Chris!  I, too, grew up watching the Disney version of this tale. Sounds like a tradition I need to get started with my boys, eh?

    Posted in Fright Fest, Horror | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

    Guest Review: Spell of the Screaming Joker by R.L.Stine

    I am beyond excited to welcome a special guest blogger to Jenn’s Bookshelves: The Girl, daughter of Anna, Diary of an Eccentric!

  • Reading level: Ages 9-12
  • Paperback: 144 pages
  • Publisher: Aladdin (May 1, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0671001922
  • Publisher’s summary:

    Do you like to play cards? Yes? Then pick a card. Uh-oh. Brittany picked a joker. And it’s no laughing matter. Because these jokers are deadly.

    On your way home from school – riding your bike – even in your hall closet – they attack! Each time, they stamp a card suit on your arm – first a club, then a diamond, then a heart – then a spade. That’s when the game really starts … when you get all four suits. Because that’s when the joker plays for keeps!

    **The Girl’s review:

    The book, Spell of the Screaming Jokers, is about 4 kids, Brittany, Frankie, Louisa, and Jeff. Their principal tells them that they have to visit this sick kid named Max. His mother, Mrs. Davidson, takes them to his room. Max wants to play cards. Frankie draws a joker. On the way home, a kid hurts him and gives him a bruise shaped like a club. Then weird things start happening.

    I recommend this book for age 8 and up for kids who like creepy stories. I loved this book and hope to read more from the series.

    Thank you, The Girl!  Be sure to check out her mom/Anna’s blog where The Girl occasionally reviews!

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    Posted in 7-10 years of age, 8-12 years of age, Fright Fest, Review | 9 Comments

    Review: In A Dark, Dark Room by Alvin Schwartz

    Reading level: Ages 4-8
    Paperback: 64 pages
    Publisher: HarperCollins (October 2, 1985)
    ISBN-10: 0064440907
    Source: Library copy

    I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention this collection of stories, also retold by Alvin Schwartz, who I consider the king of scary tales for children. In a Dark, Dark Room and Other Scary Stories (I Can Read Books) is perhaps one of my favorite scary stories books for early readers.  Schwartz has collected eight scary stories, all in a format that is easy to read for early readers.  The text is large, the sentences are short and the vocabulary is easy.  Overall, a great introduction to scary stories for children.

    Here are just a few of my favorite stories:

    The Green Ribbon: There was once a little girl named Jenny.  She was your average young girl, except she always wore a green ribbon around her neck.

    There was a young boy named Alfred who liked Jenny, and Jenny liked him in return.  Alfred asked Jenny about the ribbon, but Jenny told him she couldn’t tell him about it.  Jenny & Alfred grew up, fell in love, and got married. After the wedding, Alfred once again asked about the ribbon. Jenny insisted that she’d tell him about it when the time was right.

    Jenny & Alfred grew old, and Jenny got sick.  The doctor confirmed that she would soon die. She called Alfred to his side and said she could now tell him about the ribbon.  Alfred carefully removed the ribbon…and Jenny’s head fell off.

    Let me tell you how much the story terrified me as a child! For the longest time I was wary of women who wore scarves or anything tied around their necks.

    In A Dark, Dark Room: This story is my boys’ favorite!  It starts out by describing things in a dark, dark, house. In that dark, dark, house, there is a dark, dark room. In that dark, dark room, there is a chest, etc. etc. My boys loved to read this story along with me and at 11 and 5, both have it memorized.

    The Pirate: Ruth was spending her summer with her cousin, Susan.  Susan informs her that a pirate used to live in their house. The pirate died and reportedly haunts the room in which Ruth is staying.  The family doesn’t believe in ghosts and haven’t seen anything to change their mind.  Ruth goes to her room and looks under the bed, in the closet, under the rug, etc.  She doesn’t find anything, so she exclaims “There is nobody in this room but me.” A voice replies…”And ME!”

    This story plays with every child’s fear of something living under the bed, or in the closet.  However, telling it verbally versus reading it aloud adds a bit more fear to it.  One of the many things I enjoy about this book is the illustrations.  They make the stories a little scary, but a lot of fun!

    Once again, I highly recommend this one.  Check back tomorrow when I wrap up my middle-grade horror favorites with a special guest review of a R.L. Stine Fear Street book!

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    Posted in 4-8 years of age, 7-10 years of age, Fright Fest, Harper Collins Publishers, Horror, Review | 4 Comments

    Nominate Your Favorite Thrills & Chills

    I’ve seen dozens of lists for top horror & thriller books and movies, but never really know how much I should trust them.  So, I’ve decided to come up with my own unscientific survey! Ok, and I admit..I have a bunch of great scary giveways I need to unload, so this gives me another opportunity!

    Please fill out the nomination form below, nominating your favorite thrills & chills!  Nominations will be collected for the entire month of October.  The nominees will be posted on Sunday, October 31 and judging will take place the first week in November.  Who are the judges? Well, you all are, of course! A prize will be awarded to the individual(s) who nominate(s) the winning books/movies!

    So, get your thinking caps on and get to nominating!

    Posted in Fright Fest | Leave a comment

    Review: Wait Till Helen Comes by Mary Downing Hahn

    • Reading level: Ages 9-12
    • Paperback: 192 pages
    • Publisher: Sandpiper; Reissue edition (April 21, 2008)
    • ISBN-10: 0547028644
    • Source: Personal copy

    When twelve-year-old Molly  and her brother, Michael, are forced to move out to the country with their mother, step-father, & step-sister, they are devastated.  Their new home is a converted church with grave yard in the back yard.  Over the summer, they are forced to watch over their bratty five-year-old step sister, Heather.  Heather enjoys getting Molly & Michael in trouble.  Their mother & step-father always side with Heather, who lost her mother to a fire when she was a toddler.

    If moving to the remote country, into a house with a grave yard isn’t bad enough, Molly & Michael discover the cemetery is rumored to be haunted.  When Heather discovers a neglected gravestone, Molly believes she has uncovered the source of the haunting.

    Heather begins to act a little crazier than normal.  One afternoon Molly finds her in the graveyard, talking to someone. Molly senses a presence and hears Heather referring to it as “Helen.” 

    “Something hung in the space between us.  For a moment, I felt it watching me.   Then it was gone, and all around me the insects struck up a chorus of cheerful summer sounds.”

    When confronted, Heather initially denies it, but then begins to threaten Molly & Michael.  If they don’t treat her well, when Helen comes they will pay. It isn’t until Molly sees Helen for herself that she really begins to worry for her safety, and for the safety of her family. She and Michael head to the local library and learn a bit more about the house they live in and of the tragic history behind it.  Helen is quite well known, she’s reported to have caused several children to follow her into the pond to their deaths.

    Wait Till Helen Comes is a truly chilling ghost story. Originally released in 1987, this book terrified me as a child!  The line “Wait Till Helen Comes” still sends chills down my back. Rereading it as an adult, the same things that made me love this book were reawakened. Something about ghost stories, the idea that a spirit can remain long after a person dies, terrifies me!  This one, in particular.  The description of Helen’s appearance, the cover (specifically the one pictured above) truly makes the story.

    “Too frightened to breathe, I saw the glimmer of blue light shape itself into the figure of a girl no bigger than Heather.  She wore a white dress, and her hair, as dark as Heather’s, tumbled in waves down her ack.  Her features were indistinct, her eyes in shadow, but I knew who she was.”

    Heather’s anti-social behavior & hatred toward her step-siblings really adds to the story as well. There’s nothing creepier than a bratty step-sibling whose goal is to ruin a newly formed family, no matter the cost! In addition, the stress of this family really compounds the emotion, the fright & terror that Michael & Molly fear.

    In case you haven’t guessed it yet, I highly, highly recommend this one! It’s the perfect “timeless” ghost story!

    Posted in 7-10 years of age, 8-12 years of age, Fright Fest, Horror, Kid-Lit/Middle Grade, Review | Tagged , , | 28 Comments

    Review: A Vampire is Coming to Dinner by Pamela Jane

    • Reading level: Ages 4-8
    • Hardcover: 16 pages
    • Publisher: Price Stern Sloan; Pop edition (August 12, 2010)
    • ISBN-10: 0843199644
    • Source: Author

    A little boy learns a vampire is coming to dinner; this book gives him the rules which should be followed and which ones can be broken!

    Each page lists a rule, such as “Don’t serve garlic” or “Make sure all the lights are out.”  Then, by lifting the page, see whether or not the boy followed the rule. A Vampire Is Coming to Dinner!: 10 Rules to Follow is a delightfully charming book that both of my boys (age 5 & 11!) enjoyed!  The illustrations, done by Pedro Rodriguez, are colorful and detailed.

    We highly recommend this book to kids of all ages!  The illustrations are humorous, not scary, and the book is guaranteed to give you a good laugh!

    Thank you once again to TLC Book Tours for giving me the opportunity to review this book!  Please be sure to check out the other blogs on this tour:

    Tuesday, October 5th: Write for a Reader

    Wednesday, October 6th: Savvy Verse & Wit

    Thursday, October 7th: There’s a Book

    Monday, October 11th: The Book Faery Reviews

    Buy this book now from:

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    Posted in 4-8 years of age, Fright Fest, Review | Tagged , , , | 8 Comments