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The Haunting

Front Cover
23 Reviews
Atheneum, Oct 1, 1982 - Juvenile Fiction - 135 pages
After a shy and rather withdrawn eight-year-old begins receiving frightening supernatural images and messages, he learns about a family legacy which could be considered a curse or a rare gift.

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I was thoroughly charmed by Mahy's storytelling. - Goodreads
She's a wonderful writer - I love her sentences. - Goodreads
In particular the young writer character of Tabitha. - Goodreads
User Review - Flag as inappropriate

The Haunting was a book that I was forced to read for English. When I looked at the back before I started it I noticed it had received a Carnegie Prize. Perhaps it was a better book than I thought.
I thought it would be some spooky novel, horror perhaps like Lois Duncan's I Know What You Did Last Summer but I was mistaken.
I summed it up as a book that gave the feeling of something daunting and haunting but meant for eight year old and younger.
I didn't think it should be a book meant for high schoolers.
I didn't find the story particularly interesting, the ending was rather hasty, unfinished, not what you expected.
It's not all bad though, the build up is okay and the storyline isn't out of the blue.
 

Review: The Haunting

User Review  - Aileen - Goodreads

Nice little story of Barney who thinks he's being haunted. Reminds me a little of Harry Potter, but only 135 pages. Read full review

All 22 reviews »

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Contents

r 1 Barnabys Dead
1
The Lost GreatUncle
7
In the Shadows
16
Copyright

9 other sections not shown

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About the author (1982)

Margaret Mahy was born on March 21, 1936 in Whakatane, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand. She received a B.A. degree from the University of New Zealand. She worked as a nurse, an assistant librarian, and a children's librarian in England and New Zealand. Her first book, A Lion in the Meadow, was published in 1969. She became a full-time author in 1980. During her lifetime, she wrote more than 120 children's books including The Haunting, The Changeover, Memory, A Lion in the Meadow, The Seven Chinese Brothers, and The Man Whose Mother Was a Pirate. She won the Esther Glen Award five times, the Carnegie Medal of the British Library Association three times, the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award, Hans Christian Andersen Award, and in 1999, she won the New Zealand Post Children's Book Award in two categories, Picture Book and Supreme Award. She died after a brief illness on July 23, 2012 at the age of 76.

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