I’ve been looking for the Spooksville series at garage sales and thrift stores for years without ever coming across a single one, even though that’s how I procured most of my Pike collection. It was a lovely surprise gift for Christmas (I didn’t even ask? Apparently, companions just listen when I talk. <3), and I could hardly wait to get started. I’m familiar with the world and the characters from the Spooksville (2013) TV series when it ran on Netflix, and I’m disappointed I won’t be able to watch it alongside the novels. It’s a well-casted and underrated kids horror show, and I’m sure I would have watched it alongside Are You Afraid of the Dark? (1990) and Goosebumps (1995) if it had been around back then. (The horror-love goes back a long, long way.) Trigger warnings: minor body/eye horror.
Adam isn’t thrilled to be moving to Springville, a small, sleepy coastal town, and he’s even less thrilled to learn that the local kids refer to it as Spooksville. Strange things seem to happen there, and children often go missing. When Adam meets Sally and Watch, he’s persuaded to help them look for the Secret Path–a path that leads to the Spooksvilles of other dimensions–but they may get more than they bargained for.
This is a delightful piece of middle grade fiction, and I would have loved it growing up. Even as an adult, I’m having a hard time pausing between books long enough to write reviews; I just want to binge them all. Like most Pike books, the concept is similar to a lot of other stories, but he brings his own twists to it so that it doesn’t read quite like anything else. He’s also up to his usual genre-blending tricks, since the alternate dimension Spooksvilles are pure science fiction. The concept is never above middle grade level though, and the novel is more solidly in the horror genre. The alternate Spooksville they discover is fairly terrifying, home to a witch who steals body parts from children to make dolls. The on-page body horror is minimal (it is a book for kids, after all), but the concept is creepy enough all by itself.
The characters are enjoyable and surprisingly three-dimensional for a novel that’s barely over a hundred pages. Adam is the archetypal narrator, a classic hero in the style of Harry Potter or Percy Jackson. He’s sometimes sassy and often clueless, but you can always count on him to be good. Watch is the brains of the operation, the one who figures out the clues and (so far) is the first in trouble. Naturally, because it’s a Pike book, Sally outshines them all. He seems to enjoy writing about powerful women more than anything. She’s fast-talking, sarcastic, and brave, and more importantly, she’s never sidelined in favor of the boys. Sally does the saving rather than needing to be saved.
The dialogue is occasionally clunky, which is another Pike characteristic. Sometimes, the kids just don’t talk like kids. Plot-wise, the book has a little of everything. It doesn’t linger long on introducing the town or characters, instead launching right into the search for the Secret Path. There’s a fun riddle to decode, a witch with a prophecy, and an alternate dimension full of scary things– ax-wielding animated knights, giant spiders, kids missing body parts, and a frightful witch who I suspect will be making repeat appearances. The end circumstances are rather dire, and I’d have been worried about the trio if this wasn’t a middle grade novel. It’s a great introduction to the series.