What do you think?
Rate this book


336 pages, Hardcover
Published July 26, 2022
Reggie is a twelve-year-old boy who is grieving the death of his father. Processing his grief is made even more difficult with an agoraphobic mother who is not coping in a healthy manner. When a mysterious subway conductor (get ready for the double-entendre) offers Reggie one last opportunity to see his deceased dad, Reggie climbs aboard a midnight subway ride that carries him (and many other grieving children) deep into tunnels below the city, where each child is “reunited” with their lost family members. Or are they? As the reader can guess, all is not what it seems, and this weird and creative story (inspired by The Pied Piper of Hamelin) takes Reggie, his new friends, and the reader on a wild ride that touches on (among other things) grief, individuality, friendship, and emotional regulation.
The only Canadian nominee on the longlist for the Bram Stoker Middle Grade Award 2022 (but sadly did not make it to the final ballot), Ravenous Things is an age-appropriate entry into the horror genre for 12-14 year olds. I consumed this book ravenously (see what I did there?) in less than a day, something that I have not done since I read Susin Nielsen’s Optimists Die First in 2017. While reality definitely required suspension (as it often does in the horror genre), I would have no qualms about recommending this to students. Bonus points for this debut novel with BIPOC representation from an Asian-Canadian artist.