The Morton family are cursed. Their house is haunted by eerie footsteps, a ghostly figure and whispers in the night. Together, Samuel and Fiona discover a deadly tale of betrayal, revenge, and a family secret long forgotten. Trapped by snow and ice, can they escape the chill or will the Morton children be doomed to repeat the past forever?
Alex Nye is the author of EVEN THE BIRDS GROW SILENT, and is a Fellow of the Royal Literary Fund at the University of Glasgow. She grew up in Norfolk by the sea, but has lived in Scotland for most of her adult life where she finds much of her inspiration in Scottish history. At the age of 16 she won the W H Smith Young Writers' Award out of 33,000 entrants, and has been writing ever since. Her first children's novel, CHILL, won the Royal Mail Award. Previous titles include FOR MY SINS about Mary Queen of Scots, ARGUING WITH THE DEAD, a novel about the life of Mary Shelley, WHEN WE GET TO THE ISLAND, DARKER ENDS, and the classic Kelpies series CHILL and SHIVER. She divides her time between walking the dog, swimming, scribbling in notebooks in strange places, staring at people without meaning to, and tapping away on her laptop. She also teaches and delivers atmospheric candlelit workshops on creative writing/ghost stories/Scottish history. She studied at King's College, London more years ago than she cares to remember.
How in the world did this book win an award? It was one of the slowest and most repetitive stories I've read in a long time. Characters say and do the same thing over and over, chapter after chapter, rarely advancing the plot forward. The dialogue was disjointed and often random. The entire book felt like the author had a beginning and an end, but absolutely no idea what to do with the middle.
Just as good second time I read it. Really interesting ghost story, set in Scotland with a nod to 1715 Jacobite uprising. Great intro for young horror fans.
3.5 stars. My 7 year old son did find this quite scary but that still didn't stop him from wanting to know what happened, or from wanting to read the second book.
A middle grade (4-6) ghost story about two children living on a remote Scottish estate, who encounter a ghost of a weeping woman - a ghost who may be responsible for the death of the girl's father. The children - Samuel and Fiona - begin to investigate who or what is haunting the house, and deal with Fiona's brother, who may be possessed by a centuries old curse. About on a level with Mary Downing Hahn for scariness, entirely appropriate for 4th-6th graders looking for a creepy read.