The story: Everyone in town thinks the old house is haunted...but things have gotten a lot worse since Paige and her family moved in. There's the creepy buzzing, her brother's seizures, the swarms of flies and spiders. When she starts looking for answers with her goth friend Chloe and hot-but-gay downstairs neighbor Raph, things go from strange to downright dangerous--and it's not clear whether Paige will end up with answers, or just end up dead.
June Cleaver's ratings: Language R; Violence PG-13; Sexual content PG; Nudity PG; substance abuse PG; magic and the occult PG-13; GLBT content PG; adult themes PG; overall rating PG-13 (probably 9th-up, due to the language).
Liz' comments: Although rather unevenly paced, this was still interesting enough to hold me until the very end--which I HATED: it was as bad as having the narrator wake up and find out that everything was a dream. Plus, even though the tension ratcheted up nicely throughout, the complete unexpectedness of Paige's actions lacked foreshadowing (or at least, nothing the average MS/HS kid who isn't a very sophisticated a reader would catch), and were so unexpected as to be out of character. This reader, anyway, felt a little betrayed by that. Boo!
ANNOTATION WITH SPOILERS:
Paige's mother, just clear of a nasty divorce, has moved Paige and her younger brother Logan to Moscow, Idaho, where mom's going to go to graduate school. As soon as Paige walks through their Victorian-era rental house, she notices a creepy buzzing noise in her brother's bedroom. There are also swarms of flies and spiders plaguing the house, and a strange multiplying of objects on occasion. What is going on here? Her mother, descended from "a long line of mystics" declares that they're just going to have to learn to get along with any spirits who might also be present...and even forbids Paige to kill any of the spiders or flies (whose presence never really is adequately explained, in my opinion).
Raph, the landlord's son and their basement neighbor, is a former TA for Professor Montague Verano (supposedly the person presenting Paige's diary). In the past, he has done research work for the Professor concerning the Psychiana Society, which was run by Dr. Williamson back in the day, and headquartered in this house. They hypothesize that something bad must have happened here, but there's no documentation to prove it. Eventually Raph became so obsessed with the project that he was let go, and even banned from accessing the documents about it.
Paige's brother Logan, whom she loves dearly, starts to have seizures (or wait--is he being possessed?)--and eventually ends up seeing a psychiatrist. Paige's mother decides that her daughter might also benefit from seeing the shrink too.
Eventually the group finds a cache of letters hidden in a secret floor in the house (which also served as a de facto asylum for Williamson's epileptic daughter) and decides to burn them in an effort to exorcise what's wrong with the place. But sadly, the burning doesn't take care of the problem--rather, it exacerbates it, and by the next morning, Paige (the human channel of the bad stuff going on in the house) has murdered both her brother and Raph. Finally, she realizes she can only cleanse her own soul by means of fire. The increasingly psychotic ramblings in her diary end here and she runs out into a wildfire encircling the Idaho town. Dr. Verano, who put in an "editor's note" at both front and back, points out that the final entries in the diary were written after Paige supposedly died in the fire, and says that while it's possible Chloe finished them up, the girl denies having done so. The end.
Yikes. Didn't see that coming, and because Paige had been such a lucid narrator throughout, I didn't believe her slip over the edge into possession/madness. Phooey.