No place for monsters

Kory Merritt

Book - 2020

Cowslip Grove seems like the perfect place to raise a family until the children start disappearing. Nobody looks for the children because nobody can remember them. Nobody except Levi and Kat. Now they must figure out what terrible presence is taking the chilren and fight it to save the missing kids, before the whole town disappears.

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Location Call Number   Status
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Subjects
Genres
Horror fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Illustrated works
Published
Boston ; New York : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Kory Merritt (author)
Physical Description
379 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780358128533
  • Front Cover
  • Front Matter
  • Half Title
  • Title
  • Dedication
  • Copyright
  • Prologue
  • Chapter 1: Cindy Who?
  • Chapter 2: Levi and Kat
  • Chapter 3: Alone
  • Chapter 4: The Cryptid Research Station
  • Chapter 5: The Stranger
  • Chapter 6: The Cryptid Hunt
  • Chapter 7: The Mushpits
  • Chapter 8: Elephants for Lunch
  • Chapter 9: Snotty Who?
  • Chapter 10: Not Quite Right
  • Chapter 11: Twila
  • Chapter 12: Morning
  • Chapter 13: The Loose Pieces
  • Chapter 14: Plans
  • Chapter 15: Bump in the Night
  • Chapter 16: Strangers in a Strange Land
  • Chapter 17: Bombarded
  • Chapter 18: Goatsucker
  • Chapter 19: Good Cop, Bad Cop
  • Chapter 20: Heckbender
  • Chapter 21: The Watch
  • Chapter 22: Trust
  • Chapter 23: When the World Was Wild
  • Chapter 24: Violations
  • Chapter 25: Out of the Night
  • Chapter 26: I Scream You Scream
  • Chapter 27: Following
  • Chapter 28: The Surface
  • Chapter 29: Iced
  • Chapter 30: Slynderfell
  • Chapter 31: Beneath the Surface
  • Chapter 32: Where the Wild Things Are Now
  • Chapter 33: The Boojum
  • Chapter 34: Kat's Dream
  • Chapter 35: Levi's Dream
  • Chapter 36: Waking
  • Chapter 37: Escape
  • Chapter 38: Fading Memories
  • Chapter 39: Triggered
  • Chapter 40: Where Sidewalks End
  • Back Matter
  • Acknowledgments
  • Back Cover
  • Spine
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Twelve-year-old new kid Levi doesn't want to be Kat Bombard's class work buddy: she's as loud, disruptive, and energetic as he is quiet, studious, and reserved--and she tells unbelievable stories about having been abducted by aliens. They become tentative friends, however, and when several local children vanish, including Levi's beloved younger sister Twila, only Kat and Levi remember they even existed. Monsters are preying upon suburban Cowslip Grove, and the duo must discover what lurks in the shadows and below their home's surface before they become the next victims. With this darkly humorous, fully illustrated romp, Merritt (The Dreadful Fate of Jonathan York) creates a world threatened by all manner of horrors, from banal (petty neighbors) to the unspeakable (being completely forgotten by loved ones). Merritt's scratchy black-and-white line illustrations expertly embody Levi's calm practicality, Kat's hyperactive exuberance, and the twisting otherworldliness of their cryptid foes. Solid use of light and shadow manipulate the atmosphere and tension levels as the story goes from mundane to frightening, while tongue-in-cheek visual jokes make every scene worth studying. Weird, wild, and warmhearted, this is a real page-turner for the spooky season. Ages 8--12. Agent: Daniel Lazar, Writers House. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 4--6--After several nights of dreams about a Really Tall Man, Cindy vanishes from her home and her family's memory. All of her things are gone, and her family doesn't remember her when they wake up. The story cuts to new kid Levi, whose parents recently divorced. Levi meets Kat, a mischievous classmate who becomes his partner on a project. Kat talks Levi into using an abandoned vehicle as their office on the edge of town. One evening when Levi comes home too late, he is chased by the dark shadow of a Really Tall Man. Levi's younger sister, Twila, falls victim to the same fate as Cindy. No one but Levi remembers Twila. As Levi and Kat work together to try to catch the monster, they camp out on a hill beside a farm and instead discover a chupacabra who may be able to help them find out who's taking children. By putting some clues together, Levi and Kat make their way to the local ice cream factory where they uncover an operation to cast sleeping spells on children and bring them underground. Levi's quick thinking and Kat's bravery rescue the children trapped in a dreamland underneath the factory. The copious illustrations and unusual page formats offer a varied reading experience, but at times the pacing is slow. VERDICT A story for persistent readers who are interested in fantastical mysteries with many twists, turns, and lively illustrations.--Lindsay Persohn, Univ. of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

Children are disappearing at night from the suburban town of Cowslip Grove -- and no one remembers that they ever existed. No one, that is, except new kid Levi, who teams up with classmate Kat to find his little sister after she goes missing, too. They soon realize it's up to them to save their neighborhood from monsters living underneath the local ice-cream factory. Merritt's black-and-white line drawings of legendary creatures -- which are truly the spooky stuff of nightmares -- and the interspersed shaky hand-lettered text add extra creepiness. Cynthia K. Ritter September/October 2020 p.51(c) Copyright 2020. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Children are snatched from their beds and erased from all memory. Levi and Kat often feel like they're the only ones out of place in their small suburban town of Cowslip Grove. The two children feel a slight remove from their classmates and families; the one thing binding them together is their ability to see what everyone else cannot: Children are disappearing. And no one else seems to remember these children ever existed. After Levi's younger sister, Twila, is taken by this evil force, Levi and Kat embark on a journey into the town's sinister past to try to save her and stop the monster once and for all. The spooky tale is complemented by ink illustrations that will give even the bravest reader a case of the willies. The narrative is smartly structured, moving the characters forward at a perfect pace that balances the tricky trifecta of thrills, exposition, and character development. This is one hell of a middle-grade read, the kind that will spark imaginations as it is read late at night under the covers with a flashlight. Levi and Kat appear White; the black-and-white illustrations seem to show some human ethnic diversity. (This review has been updated to reflect changes to the final book.) A wonderfully frightening tale. (Horror. 9-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 Cindy Who? On Monday Cindy Fogle woke her parents at 2 a.m. with a scream.       Mr. and Mrs. Fogle found Cindy sitting bolt upright in her bed, eyes wide and skin clammy. Night terrors, figured Mrs. Fogle. Cindy slept with her parents the rest of the night.       On Tuesday Cindy woke at 1:45 a.m. She was hysterical when her parents arrived to calm her.       She spent another restless night in her parents' room, babbling about the Really Tall Man.       On Wednesday Cindy's screams started shortly after midnight. She begged to spend the night in her parents' room again.        Her room was bad.       The closet was bad.       The curtains were bad.       Under the bed-- bad, bad, bad.       Mr. Fogle even checked under the bed. See? No monsters. No "Really Tall Man." Just a plush rabbit that Mr. Fogle didn't remember buying.       At last her parents relented, and while Cindy snuggled between them, Mr. Fogle silently vowed this would be the final time his daughter slept in their bed.       On Thursday Mrs. Fogle was roused in the middle of the night by a faint shuffling noise. She held her breath and listened.       Silence.       Probably just the fridge or the water heater or one of many strange house noises she noticed only at night. She fell back into sleep.       In the morning Mr. and Mrs. Fogle woke and went about their business. They did not notice that Cindy was gone.       Her room was empty. The speckled wallpaper, the pony border, the Tinker Bell bed sheets, the toy chest, the clothes that should have been hanging in the closet: gone.       No, not gone. More like never there to begin with. It was just a spare room Mr. Fogle had been planning to fill with a pool table.       And the family portrait hanging in the hall? Oh, that was there. It showed Mr. and Mrs. Fogle holding hands and smiling. No Cindy between them. Why should there be a Cindy? The Fogles did not have a daughter.       And the school didn't call when Cindy failed to show. Why should they? There was no Cindy Fogle in their records.        Cindy?       Cindy who? Excerpted from No Place for Monsters by Kory Merritt All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.