Very short and scary stories.
Twenty different entries, with atmospheric illustrations, create new yet classic-feeling tales for younger readers. Rissi uses a variety of storytelling elements to make a collection that combines a timeless quality with contemporary forms, from a young girl playing an eternal game of hide-and-seek in a cornfield to a deadly chain letter sent via text. While the majority of them are straightforward prose, one story is told through the format of the dialogue of a play pieced together from the memories of audience members after the cast and script disappeared. The attempts at rhyme are less successful. As in any collection, readers will have favorites and ones they skip upon rereading, but the cumulative effect here is successful and consistent. A few (especially one tale about crows and the privileges one gets from being part of a murder) seem to have more allegorical meanings. These are all a scare level appropriate for an upper-elementary audience, and the blunt writing means that the creepy factor is present more in the concepts themselves, which linger in the mind, than the actual telling, which is more matter-of-fact than spine-chilling. The full-page charcoal-style illustrations do provide a sense of ominous eeriness, however. There is a small amount of surface-level diversity among the cast.
Ideal for any younger reader looking for bite-sized horror.
(Horror. 7-11)