There's a ghost in this house

Oliver Jeffers

Book - 2021

"A young girl lives in a haunted house, but she has never seen a ghost. Are they white with holes for eyes? Are they hard to see? Step inside and help the girl as she searches under the stairs, behind the sofa, and in the attic for the ghost." -- Amazon.

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Children's Room Show me where

jE/Jeffers
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jE/Jeffers
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Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Jeffers Due Nov 22, 2024
Children's Room jE/Jeffers Due Dec 7, 2024
Children's Room jE/Jeffers Checked In
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Subjects
Genres
Ghost stories
Picture books
Published
[New York, NY] : Philomel Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Oliver Jeffers (author)
Item Description
"*A fraid of ghosts** **The collective noun for a group of ghosts."--Title page.
"First published in Great Britain by HarperCollins Children's Books, 2021."
"Includes tracing paper pages that make the silly ghost appear on each page." -- Publisher.
Physical Description
1 volume (unnumbered) : color illustrations ; 34 cm
ISBN
9780593466186
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Decidedly unscary ghosts--the kind that look like sheets with holes for eyes--lurk in a house being searched by a green-skinned, pigtailed child in this novelty-leaning picture book. Welcoming the reader, the child begins, "I have heard... there's a GHOST in this house!" Peering over a porcelain bathroom sink, the figure continues, "Have you ever seen a ghost?" With the help of translucent pages that have ghostly images printed on them, readers can conjure the apparitions; on the bathroom spread, for example, one appears right behind the child, making a face in the mirror. Jeffers adds loose line drawings to found black-and-white photographs of an 18th-century mansion that has plenty of dark corners--the narrator climbs a library ladder, lingers in hallways, and peers in cupboards and under a bed. Since readers decide when the ghosts appear, anxiety-inducing suspense isn't an issue in this conceptually comic treat that puts the reader in control. Ages 4--8. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Horn Book Review

A child with numerous questions welcomes readers at the door of a stately, many-chimneyed mansion: will we help find the rumored ghosts in the house? Have we ever seen any? Do we know where to look? Viewers explore the house with the narrator, who peeks into rooms and closets; searches the library, a chimney, and the attic; and more. Jeffers features monochromatic images of rooms from architectural reference books and furniture catalogs, onto which he draws the narrator, who pops off the page with jade-colored skin and hair and in a dress with vivid chartreuse stripes. Readers turn translucent pages adorned with paintings of ghosts that reveal, on the next spread's verso, the location of the ghosts the narrator asks us to find: cue excited giggles as viewers spot specters near, but always hiding from, the narrator. The ghosts, depicted as white sheets with holes for eyes, are endearing and playful (gleefully jumping on the bed while the child looks under it), never too frightening or threatening to children, who are in control of the page-turns -- and, therefore, of the ghost-sightings. Delightfully, we're also told that a collective noun for this group is "a fraid of ghosts." Julie Danielson January/February 2022 p.88(c) Copyright 2022. 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.