From Publishers Weekly:
Wright (A Ghost in the Family) spins a suspenseful modern-day gothic but leaves a few threads of the frame story dangling. Shortly after 15-year-old narrator Jenny Joslin and her family moves to Crescent Lane, she experiences a series of supernatural occurrences. Photographs appearing and disappearing from the wall, loud sobbing noises emerging from neighbor April's house and a sequence of household disasters next door all seem to be connected to a "moonlight man," an apparition both Jenny and her younger sister have seen wandering in the woods surrounding their street. In an attempt to find out the cause of these mysterious goings-on, Jenny researches the histories of former residents and interrogates her crotchety neighbors, the Carpeks, who have lived in the same house for more than 50 years. While many clues lead nowhere, the protagonist fits together enough pieces to reconstruct a tragic tale of ill-fated love. Readers anxious to reach the final unraveling of events may overlook a few narrative shortcomings: two-dimensional minor characters, contrived plot details and the undeveloped subplots of Jenny's tenuous friendship with self-centered April and the heroine's grief over her mother's death. Though the mystery may be solved by book's end, the narrative raises at least as many uncertainties for Jenny's future on Crescent Lane as it clears for her neighborhood's past. Ages 8-12. (Feb.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews:
As in some of the author's previous books, this one involves a capable young woman pitted against an angry ghost that has unresolved issues. Jenny, 15, her widower father, and younger sister have moved for the fifth time in seven years to a quaint, creepy little clearing where theirs is one of only five homes. Almost at once the haunting begins when shadowy specters (a man and a little dog) hover in the dusk on their front porch. Other eerie incidents occur every day and as Jenny deciphers the mystery, she discovers a dark secret about her crabby elderly neighbors who are getting the worst of the ghost's wrath. Afraid it will lead to another move, Jenny tells her father nothing of her discovery; instead she tries to befriend the new neighbor, a talented violin player in whose basement are heard disconsolate sobs. As the story heads for the gripping climax, Jenny learns she has some talent of her own, including bravery and intelligence. This absorbing novel has truly frightening moments, but readers will feel safe in the hands of its skillful author. A spooky read for a rainy night. (Fiction. 8-12) -- Copyright ©2000, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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