Out to Get You: 13 Tales of Weirdness and Woe
Out to Get You: 13 Tales of Weirdness and Woe
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Holiday House
Annotation: A collection of thirteen short stories that reveals frightening secrets lurking in everyday objects.
 
Reviews: 3
Catalog Number: #303636
Format: Perma-Bound Edition
Publisher: Holiday House
Copyright Date: 2021
Edition Date: 2021 Release Date: 09/07/21
Illustrator: Coleman, Sarah
Pages: 169 pages
ISBN: Publisher: 0-8234-4748-0 Perma-Bound: 0-8000-0505-8
ISBN 13: Publisher: 978-0-8234-4748-0 Perma-Bound: 978-0-8000-0505-4
Dewey: Fic
Dimensions: 21 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Starred Review ALA Booklist

Starred Review Dive deep into a nightmarish wonderland where everything and nothing is as it seems in this collection of short stories complete with creepy illustrations. This haunting anthology will plunge young horror enthusiasts into their darkest dreams, from evading the demands of a malicious genie to hoping not to be consumed by a hungry house to sympathizing with a shadow sick and tired of serving every whim of his human. Allen expertly weaves intricate, relatable details from the tween experience with elements of the supernatural to present readers with a baker's dozen of chilling tales, some of which impart contemporary life lessons such as being kind to animals, treating others how you'd like to be treated, and behaving well in school and at home, all with a spooky twist in time for Halloween. Selfishness, bullying, and cruelty have no place in this nevertheless scary world, which often changes in a blink. Adults nostalgic for The Twilight Zone or Alvin Schwartz's Scary Stories trilogy might enjoy sharing this book with the next generation of horror fans. Kids who can't get enough Goosebumps will revel in the anticipated but memorable twists of each story, as signposts shift, biology class becomes voodoo chaos, and devils and witches are revealed to reside among us.

Kirkus Reviews

A collection of curious incidents—13, naturally—for unsuspecting readers.A friend mysteriously vanishes. A kid runs into the devil on the way to school. The figures on a street sign change places. A stain on the school cafeteria's floor is more than just a stain—it has a mouth. A straight-laced teacher gets a creative form of discipline for her "problematic" classroom-management style. Paper-towel dispensers produce ominous messages. Someone's missing marker is used to make art that brings to life a new invasive species. Even the shadows get bad ideas. For everything, there's a price or a consequence. Which kids can beat the odds and figure out a way for their lives to go back to normal? Or, is normal the real myth in this wondrously eerie world? Allen's debut is mostly plot-focused, a quick (but not too quick) relay race from story to story—the longest of which spans 15 pages. Mostly creepy instead of bone-chillingly terrifying, the collection's overall tone is more Twilight Zone than Scary Stories To Tell in the Dark. It's also a textbook example of how horror contextualizes social anxieties, particularly those relevant to school-aged youth. Coleman mixes hand lettering with scratchy, sketchy linework to create single- or double-page black-and-white illustrations that accentuate each story. With a lack of racial descriptors, the cast presumes a white default.Tasty, bite-sized bizarreness for brave preteens. (Horror. 9-12)

School Library Journal

Gr 3-8 -Move over "Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark," you've got a new neighbor. These chill-worthy, macabre tales are sure to keep many a young reader awake at night. Take, for instance, the tale of Ivy, who found a greenish-black marker on the floor in her class one day. No one claimed it, so she took it for herself; the marker was ideal for drawing a tiny little vine with just three leaves on her hand. Imagine her horror the next day when she discovers the imaginary vine has begun crawling up her arm. Too late, she realizes that taking a shower "waters" the vine and causes it to grow. Desperately, she refuses to showerfor a long, long time. All her friends desert her in her smelly state but she doesn't care, she just wants the vine to stop growing. Horror and tongue-in-cheek humor meld seamlessly in these unique tales. The settings and charactersincluding preteens, parents, and principalswill make a lasting impression on readers. In the same vein as Stephen Gammell's illustrations for Alvin Schwartz's "Scary Stories," black-and-white drawings enhance the authenticity of the dark, shady, and grotesque. VERDICT A top-notch thrill-ride of creepy, crunchy horror. This collection belongs on every young horror shelf.-Julie Shatterly, W. A. Bess Elementary School, Gastonia, NC

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
Starred Review ALA Booklist
Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal
Word Count: 33,223
Reading Level: 4.5
Interest Level: 3-6
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 4.5 / points: 5.0 / quiz: 505238 / grade: Middle Grades
Lexile: 660L

Thirteen ordinary kids. Thirteen ordinary towns. Danger lurks around every corner!

"Wonderful and weird, compelling and unsettling." - Gary Schmidt, two-time Newbery Honor author

Get ready for a collection of thirteen short stories that will chill your bones, tingle your spine, and scare your pants off. Debut author Josh Allen masterfully concocts horror in the most innocent places, like R.L. Stine meets a modern Edgar Allan Poe. A stray kitten turns into a threatening follower. The street sign down the block starts taunting you. Even your own shadow is out to get you! Spooky things love hiding in plain sight.

The everyday world is full of sinister secrets and these page-turning stories show that there's darkness even where you least expect it. Readers will sleep with one eye open. . . .

A glow-in-the-dark cover and thirteen eerie full-page illustrations by award-winning artist Sarah J. Coleman accompany the tales in this frightful mashup that reads like a contemporary Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark.

Don't miss the author and illustrator's other creepy collections: Once They See You and Only If You Dare.

A Junior Library Guild Selection
An ILA-CBC Children's Choice!

Vanishers
Nine lives
The stain on the cafeteria floor
When Daunte vanished, they said he moved to Ohio
The color of Ivy
Neat-o burrito
Crossing
The voice
Goodbye, Ridgecrest Middle School
Mighty comfy
Sorry, froggy
Staring contest
The shadow curse.

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