School Library Journal
Gr 5-8 This third entry in the series continues the adventures of Zach Jennings, who has the uncanny ability to see and talk with ghosts. His entrance into sixth grade is complicated by the brain-eating zombie that sleeps under the school guarding a Confederate treasure trove for a voodoo-practicing ghost waiting to take over the body of an unsuspecting child. With a maze of tunnels under it, a cemetery behind it, and guardian ghosts wandering through it, this middle school is far worse than most. Murders are committed in the quest for the treasure, but the creepiness tends to be so over-the-top, and there is so much humor in the book, that the evil is mitigated. Zach is a likable character, resigned to his ghost-seeing abilities and often trying to connect with his inner superhero. He&9;s also nervous about the new school, realistic about his status there, and wants to make friends and avoid the school bully. With its short chapters, Smoky Corridor might appeal to some reluctant readers, but there are a lot of characters, including ghosts, to keep track of, and the plot is full of twists and turns that could be confusing. Grabenstein is a riveting storyteller; most kids won&9;t be able to put this book down. Its appeal will be wide, as it is a mystery, a thriller, a ghost story, a school story, an action adventure, and a humorous book. It can stand alone, although reading the earlier titles does provide some pertinent background information. Connie Tyrrell Burns, Mahoney Middle School, South Portland, ME
Horn Book
Ghost-seer Zack Jennings (The Crossroads, The Hanging Hill) gets to start over at Horace P. Pettimore Middle School, but he doesn't get to leave spirits behind. The school's long-dead namesake has plans to possess a student and settle an old score. This multifaceted mystery has enough likable--and pleasurably unlikable--characters to keep readers following its many threads.
Kirkus Reviews
First day in a new school is never easy, but when your school was founded by a Civil War captainturnedvoodoo hougan and the corridors are full of ghosts only you can see and hear, it's particularly problematic. In his third funny and spooky mystery adventure, 11-year-old "ghost seer" Zack Jennings finds himself and his new friends, Malik and Azalea, entangled in a search for Confederate gold and a quest for voodoo revenge—all while trying to thwart a dead man's desire to rise from the grave, fend off his zombie slave and avoid a major swirly from the school's worst bully. Agatha winner Grabenstein's third Haunted Places Mystery is as fizzy and fast paced, especially at its end, as previous outings. Plenty of well-constructed twists and turns, realistic (rather than slapstick) humor, nifty puzzles and a refreshingly positive relationship between Zack and his stepmother make this a standout series for fans of John Bellairs and those who have outgrown the repetitiveness of R.L. Stine. This stands alone, but those who haven't read the others will definitely want to seek them out. (Adventure. 9-12)
ALA Booklist
The latest in the Haunted Places Mystery series (the first, The Crossroads, 2008, won both the Anthony and Agatha awards) once again stars middle-schooler Zack Jennings, who is beset by ghostly visitations. He is starting a new school ll, actually, a really old one, sort of an antebellum Hogwarts built by an eccentric Civil War steamboat captain lled with crazy corridors, the ghosts of two boys who died in a fire, and zombies. This has all the mordant wit, rollicking action, and grossness any middle-schooler could want. Fans will want to check out Grabenstein's other frightfests.