The ghosts behind the door

Jen Wilde

Book - 2026

Maggie doesn't mind moving in the middle of the school year. It's not as though she had any friends to say goodbye to. And when she arrives at Oak Grove, she's not at all surprised to find that the town has been whispering about her family for hundreds of years. The Havercroft women have always had a reputation for being "different". Only maybe the town is right. Her family and their house are haunted. The walls breathe, the floorboards whisper, and the ghosts of her ancestors are trying to break free. They're trapped, and Maggie is the only person who can free them.

Saved in:
1 being processed
Coming Soon
Subjects
Genres
ghost stories
Ghost stories
Histoires de fantômes
Published
New York, NY : Scholastic Inc [2026]
Language
English
Main Author
Jen Wilde (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
249 pages ; 20 cm
ISBN
9781546152385
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A tween learns the truth about her family's magick. After relocating with her family from Brooklyn to small-town Oak Grove to help care for her Nana, 12-year-old white girl Maggie Havercroft has a chance to start fresh at a new middle school. But, as it turns out, being a Havercroft in Oak Grove means having a target on your back because everyone thinks you're a witch. The rumors start immediately, and school bullies lock onto Maggie and her new friend, Ivy, a bleached-blond Wednesday Addams. Meanwhile, something creepy is going on at Nana's house. The walls seem to breathe. Lights flicker on and off, revealing dark figures. Nightmares that feel like actual memories make Maggie wonder if it's the house that's haunted--or her. It turns out her family is just cursed. It's up to Maggie and Ivy to find a way to break the curse for good. Wilde's atmospheric writing combined with Maggie's tight first-person narration makes for deliciously slow reveals and goosebump-inducing scenes. The overall plot may feel familiar, yet the queer and feminist overtones and inclusive cast make this a fresh, witchy brew. Maggie's autism, ADHD, and anxiety are thoughtfully depicted, with the notable inclusion of details like noise-canceling headphones. Ivy is trans, and one of Maggie's parents is nonbinary. The story contains some transphobia, homophobia, and ableism, but the central prejudice explored in the book is "witchphobia." Toil and trouble with a satisfying dash of just deserts.(Paranormal. 9-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.