The Ghost of Poplar Point

$16.00

SKU: 9780374325404

Description

Allie Nichols, “Ghost Magnet,” has only just finished sixth grade, but already she’s grappled with her fair share of adventure: three ghosts have sought her help in less than two months. Now that summer has finally arrived, Allie is ready for a break. Too bad ghosts don’t know about summer vacation. When a new spirit causes Allie to babble incomprehensibly at rehearsals for her town’s first pageant, she and her best friend, Dub, know they have another ghostly mystery to solve. But why does the ghost seem so interested in the pageant, which portrays the relationship between the area’s early European settlers and the local Seneca Indians? And could its manifestation have anything to do with the rich girl who just came to town with her family?
 
In the fourth fascinating ghost book by Cynthia DeFelice, Allie and Dub uncover a centuries-old secret–the destruction of a Seneca village at Poplar Point–and come up with a plan to share it.

Cynthia DeFelice is the author of many bestselling books for young readers, including The Ghost of Fossil Glen, The Ghost and Mrs. Hobbs, The Ghost of Cutler Creek, Wild Life, Signal, The Missing Manatee, and Weasel. Her books have been nominated for an Edgar Allen Poe Award and listed as American Library Association Notable Children’s Books and Bank Street Best Children’s Book of the Year, among numerous other honors. She lives in upstate New York.
“Allie and Dub are likable, well-drawn characters, and kids will cheer when they are able to thwart the plans of an adult bully.”School Library Journal 
“Moves quickly and has several interesting adult and juvenile characters.” —IRA
GHOST OF POPLAR POINTOneAllie Nichols sat in the third row of the old opera house, waiting her turn to audition for the starring role in the town’s summer pageant. She had practiced her lines so often she almost knew them by heart, and knew just how she wanted to say them. But the longer she had to wait, the more nervous she became.

She watched as her friend Pam Wright stuttered and stammered her way through a bad case of stage fright. Next, another classmate of Allie’s, Julie Horwitz, mumbled her lines quickly and in such a low voice that Allie doubted anyone in the auditorium could hear her.

Then a girl named Janelle Kavanaugh took the stage. From the whispers of the other kids, Allie learned that Janelle had moved to town just that year and that she went to a private school.

“Her mother’s the one who wrote the script,”Julie said in a low voice. “And I heard her dad gave all the money for it.”

“Wow,” said Pam. “He must be kind of a big shot, huh?”

Miss Lunsford, the pretty young director of the pageant, shot them a glance, and they stopped whispering as Janelle took a deep breath and cleared her throat. To their surprise, before she uttered one word, Janelle’s face flushed an extraordinary shade of red and she fled from the stage in tears.

Next to try out was Karen Laver, a classmate who was well known to all the kids for her nasty remarks and mocking tongue. She read the entire speech loudly and, in Allie’s opinion, rather overdramatically. But Karen received a polite round of applause for her performance.