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The Smoky Corridor: A Haunted Mystery
 
 

The Smoky Corridor: A Haunted Mystery [Hardcover]

Chris Grabenstein
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Zack is about to start at his new school, and his dad, who went there years before, tells Zack the stories of the haunted janitor’s closet, the specter of a dead crossing guard, and the Donnelly brothers, who perished in a suspicious fire. Dad doesn’t know that Zack has already met the Donnellys’ ghosts, who have warned Zack that there is an evil zombie under the school. Zack also learns that while zombies are usually content eating corpses, if they happen to bite someone who isn’t dead, that person also becomes a zombie.

Before midterms, Zack is dealing with two zombies, while trying to protect a friend whose curiosity has put him on the zombies’ menu. 

Once again Chris Grabenstein proves his mastery of frightening and funny tales. Young readers, especially reluctant ones, have found inspiration in his quirky characters and deadly situations.

About the Author

Chris Grabenstein is the Anthony award-winning author of Tilt a Whirl, Mad Mouse, and Whack a Mole. Apparently, he spends far too much time at amusement parks. Tip learned the hard way: never eat six hot dogs prior to riding a roller coaster. He also written the thrillers: Slay Ride and Hell for the Holidays. He used to write TV and radio commercials and has written for the Muppets.

Chris was born in Buffalo, New York and moved to Chattanooga, Tennessee when he was ten. After college, he moved to New York City with six suitcases and a typewriter to become an actor and writer. For five years, he did improvisational comedy in a Greenwich Village theatre with some of  the city's funniest performers, including this one guy named Bruce Willis.

Currently, Chris and his wife JJ live in New York City with three cats and a dog named Fred who starred in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang on Broadway. You can visit Chris (and Fred) at www.ChrisGrabenstein.com

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5.0 out of 5 stars Best of the Series, Dec 5 2010
By 
Nicola Manning (Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME)    (TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Smoky Corridor: A Haunted Mystery (Hardcover)
Reason for Reading: Next in the series.

Ahh, it was such a blast sitting down with this next book about Zack Jennings, the boy who sees ghosts. Summer is over and Zack is finally starting at his new school. This Middle School has been around since the end of the Civil War when the mansion was donated as such and over the years parts have been added onto it making it a maze of hallways and classrooms. As soon as Zack arrives, he's visited by a ghost from book one who tells him something major is going down at the school; a zombie in the depths of the basement below has reawakened and Zack needs to deal with it and the evil spirit that controls it before he takes over the body of an unknown student in the school.

This has all the ingredients for a great horror story! Two ghost children from 1910 who died in a fire in the school under mysterious circumstances and are out for revenge, a zombie (or two), ghost stories, a few gruesome deaths and children's souls in peril. Zack has been warned that adults cannot be involved so he can't tell his stepmother, Judy, who also sees ghosts, and has been his supernatural sleuthing partner for the first two books. Instead Zack makes friends with two loner/outcast-type kids and they are pulled into the events with Zack. But not only does Zack have to deal with the supernatural, he also has two very alive people on his trail and trying to get into the basements as well, for the original owner of the mansion is said to have stolen a sizable treasure of Confederate gold during the war and hidden it somewhere on the property. These two baddies are related to a soldier buried in the nearby Civil War Cemetery and they know all about people who can communicate with the dead.

I really enjoyed Zack and Judy working together in the first books, so I did miss her presence in this book, but happily she does remain as a minor character. Zack's new friends are both very interesting characters and will make a welcome addition to the cast in future books. Malik is black with a recently out of work dad and an ailing mother who needs a kidney transplant but is currently confined to a wheelchair because they have no insurance and can't afford dialysis at the moment; Azalea appears to be your typical Goth girl on the outside with a morbid interest in death but she and her mom are living with an aunt because her army father is in Afghanistan (I think?) again and she knows once he's back they'll pick up and move again like always.

This is my favourite of the first three books! A great story with interesting ghosts who have creepy backgrounds, and an evil spirit trained in the arts of voodoo and of course the zombie (or two) to make things a little more gruesome. The new characters add elements to the book that is making Zack's personal world more real over the course of the three books. I rarely make definite age suggestions but I think this series will be most appreciated by 10-14's. Older teens will find it too tame and younger than ten may find it too gruesome (unless they are used to that sort of thing). A great horror read for MGs. Highly recommended.

While the books are independent of each other; there is not a continuing story line. Each consecutive book does contain ghostly characters met in previous books, so while not necessary, it does make it more fun to read them in order.
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Amazon.com: 4.9 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing author Amazing book, Feb 16 2011
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
I had the pleasure of meeting this wonderful author when he came to my school. He introduced me to this series and I thought it was amazing. I have never read a horror book before in my life but this book made me fall in love with this new genre. I couldnt put this book down. I would give it ten stars but unfortunately they only allow five.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars will leave readers more than satisfied and eager for the next installment., Oct 4 2010
By KidsReads - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Smoky Corridor: A Haunted Mystery (Hardcover)
When Zack notices a portrait in his new school watching him, he knows this academic year will feature a few ghosts. In this third Haunted Places mystery, Zack is getting used to being able to communicate with spirits, but is still finding himself in the middle of puzzles caused by living humans as well. Chris Grabenstein keeps the humor and mystery going at high levels in this fun series with plenty of surprises.

Zack's father had attended Horace P. Pettimore Middle School years ago, and now the Principal does not like Zack. The ghosts of the Donnelly brothers, who were burned to death in a corridor, want Zack to play campfire. A janitor then disappears, and Zack's old ghost friend Davy reappears. No one really wants to eat lunch with Zack, who has a lot to sort out here.

In his previous two novels, THE CROSSROADS and THE HANGING HILL, Zack's mystery-solving skills resulted in his house burning down, near-escapes from death for himself and others, saved lives, and more. He's wary of getting too involved in this mess, but it's clear that some evil is at work in the school. "Guardian" ghosts for each student come to warn him about danger and advise him not to tell any adults. Readers will be clued in on the evil plot to find a descendant of the school's founder who will help bring dead people back to life and locate a rumored treasure underneath the school. Could Zack be that descendant?

As he starts talking to spirits and humans to uncover what is going on, more misfits at the middle school begin banding together at lunch and throughout the rest of the day to help each other navigate the already stressful life of classes and homework. Add bullies, ghosts, zombies and treasure hunters, and soon they have to rely on each other just to stay alive.

Zack's cool stepmom Judy can also see spirits, so she and the local librarian try to research the history of the school to help Zack find his answers. He learns that another student is the descendant and tries to warn her when she disappears. A few adults students trusted show their true colors, and a race through secret tunnels underneath the school leads to an exciting climax.

One strength of these titles is the colorful cast of supporting characters, both humans and ghosts. While Zack himself is a layered yet strong hero, he and his friends are realistic even amid paranormal activity. THE SMOKY CORRIDOR is another strong story in this award-winning series that will leave readers more than satisfied and eager for the next installment.

--- Reviewed by Amy Alessio

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderfully original, funny, and scary, Sep 15 2010
By Middle Grade Ninja - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Smoky Corridor: A Haunted Mystery (Hardcover)
The Smoky Corridor is actually the third book in The Haunted Places Series. Though references are made to events that obviously occurred in previous books, The Smoky Corridor is a standalone tale and I had no problem jumping in without having read the first two books. Nor do I feel that the first two books have been ruined by my reading the third first, so I can go back and read them as well, which I plan to. The upside is that some of the major exposition is streamlined going into this third tale. For example, here is an excerpt from page 3:

Zack knew a thing or two about haunted places, because he had a special gift: He could see all sorts of dearly departed souls (even the ones who popped into paintings) whom other people, especially adults like his dad, could not. He always figured it was the kind of gift that should've come with a gift receipt so he could take it back for something better, like athletic ability or super-powers.

The fact that our main character has a sixth sense is sort of a big deal plotwise and if this were the first book in the series I would expect Grabenstein to take some time and really establish Zack Jennings' ability to chat with the dead. There are certain obligatory scenes that go along with discovering a gift/curse like this one: Zack's first chat with a dead person, the scene where Zack freaks out and is convinced he's losing his mind, the scene where Zack accepts his ability and heads out to the graveyard to do some chatting the way Bruce Willis walks around bumping people in the crowded train station at the end of Unbreakable (a Ninja favorite). Having not yet read the first book in the series, I can't be sure what variation Grabenstein took on these obligatory scenes, but I'm sure some version of them was employed.

That business is all good and well, but it's a little bit like a superhero origin story, which are my least favorite superhero stories. It's kind of fun to watch Spider-man learn to wall crawl and websling, but I prefer to watch him when he's already figured all that out and is headed into a serious battle with Doc Ock. Once the obligatory origin is taken care of, a writer can really open up a story and show us what his protagonist can do with his powers.

Good thing too. The Smoky Corridor goes to some crazy places it probably wouldn't have time for if Grabenstein had to spend a great deal of time establishing Zack's ability. Instead, that one little paragraph from page 3 is pretty much all we get and then Zach is off and chatting with dead people he meets. Sweet.

The Smoky Corridor is a wholly original work. I honestly can't recall reading anything just like it. There are familiar story elements throughout (zombies are more or less zombie regardless of the tale at hand), but I've never seen them arranged in quite this way. I know I should provide some sort of plot summary, but I'm afraid I can't do Grabenstein's far-reaching plot much justice in a few lines. Even so, I'll give it a go: Zack Jennings has just started at a new middle school he believes to be haunted. As Zack's specialty is ghosts, there wouldn't be much of a story if it weren't.

The school's founder was Horace P. Pettimore, once a Captain in the confederate army--are any former confederate army members ever the good guys? Before he died, Pettimore stole a whole bunch of money from the confederate army and stashed it at the school. He was also a voodoo master with a particular skill in creating zombies (of course he was). Pettimore is still hanging around in ghost form, naturally, and he's got himself a zombie hidden within the school to protect his treasure (awesome). It turns out Pettimore's grand scheme is to come back to life so he can finally spend his gold. Thank goodness he kept it hidden at the school rather than investing it in the stock market or he might be stuck waiting for an economic recovery before resurrecting:)

Upon his death, Pettimore donated his estate to the community as a school. Why would such a dastartdly fellow do this? So that every year a crop of fresh children will come near enough that he can inspect them until he finds the one blood relative suitable for him to take over and return from the grave. He's even set up voodoo charms to attract such a child:

All he needed was one very special child.

The one he had been seeking for more than a century. The one he had used a voodoo charm of magic powder, herbs, dove feathers, and a pint of his own blood to attract to this place.

A blood relative.

Just one!

Could this blood relative Pettimore so desires be our Zack? Maybe yes, maybe no. But wait! There is even more plot I haven't touched on. And as I see we're running out of room I suppose I'll have to leave most of the plot for you to discover on your own. But there are two ghosts, the Donnely boys, who died in a smoky corridor (wink, wink) because they were playing with matches. Even in death they long to burn the school down and I had a good long laugh when plot elements (I won't spoil them) conspired to give these boys their own zombie to do their bidding.

Okay, I'm signing off. Check out The Smoky Corridor. I guarantee you'll have a few good laughs and you might just get a little scared. I'm going to leave you with a passage of dialogue from The Smoky Corridor that made me grin from ear to ear:

"...a voodoo zombie has recently awoken in his nearby hidey-hole. I know this because, well, mine was the first corpse he feasted upon when waking."

Zack Urped. Almost tossed his cookies.

"Sorry," said Mr. Willoughby.

"I'm okay."

"Me too! Fortunately, being dead has one benefit: I didn't feel a thing while the beast ripped me apart
and gobbled down my brain."

This time when he urped, Zack had to put his hand over his mouth.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 7 reviews  4.9 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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