A GoodReads GiveAway
This is a book aimed at 7 or 8 year old girls. Or grandfathers of 7 or 8 year old girls. And it is gem-dandy.
Agatha accepts her own eccentricities and the eccentricities of her friends — Ellie, for instance, who is scared of non-fat milk because she thinks it comes from skeleton cows and who “…can’t eat sandwiches because she feels sorry for the bread that gets sliced up by a big machine full of horrible knives.”
Agatha is sensitive about the possibility of politically incorrectness hurting a friend’s feeling, especially a friend who “…can’t really share a chair because…” as Agatha so considerately states, “…if we were all grapes, then she’d (Martha) be a melon.”
The sound of the school’s bell-tower…well, bell-tower’s bell, awakens Agatha and her friends nightly. Together, since they believe that a ghost is ringing the bell, the girls set out to locate and —
I s’pose — exorcise the spook.
While this chapter book is aimed mostly at girls, there are boys in the story. There is one unfortunate who has cheese and onion hair!
Yes, cheese and onion hair! You will see how that is possible.
However, boys are relegated to the sidelines, so to speak. According to Agatha, “…you shouldn’t laugh at boys; it only encourages them.”
Of course there is a mean girl — Gwendoline Tutt — who, as Agatha’s nemesis, puts nasty hurdles in the ghost hunters’ way.
Will Gwendoline get her comeuppance?
There is only one way to find out since I am not telling.
This story’s setting is often a classroom; a classroom where mischief happens. So, girls and…okay, a couple of boys, it is not a spoiler for me to promise that someone sits on a thumbtack.
Books written for youngsters nearly always include a moral or, at least, offer answers to troublesome questions. Agatha Parrot’s story is no exception. It provides the answer to the question of why one should never, never ever, scare a Tiddly Tot.
Oh, and there is a creepy-crawly ghost hand in this book.
WOO HOO, says the ghost of Odd Street's school.