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MIDNIGHT HAGS by C.P. Hoff

MIDNIGHT HAGS

From the The Happy Valley Chronicles series, volume 3

by C.P. Hoff ; illustrated by Michelle Froese

Pub Date: Jan. 1st, 2023
Publisher: Black Crow Books

In the third installment of the Happy Valley Chronicles, second grader Celia Canterberry faces the seemingly impossible task of making new friends while dealing with human and imaginary enemies.

Seven-year-old Celia is distraught when her best friend, Archibald Quigley, abandons her for Eugenia Whitford—the niece of Enid Whitford, her grandmother’s employer whom Celia calls her “number one nemesis.” Celia’s teacher, Miss Dobbs, shamelessly favors Eugenia, hoping to win the heart of the youngster’s recently widowed father. Celia turns to her neighbor Old Lady Griggs for advice on how to make friends. Griggs is invested in helping Celia connect with others, drawing on tips from Dale Carnegie’s self-help classic How to Win Friends and Influence People. However, most of these strategies—sometimes due to Celia’s mistaken interpretations—don’t quite turn out as they’d hoped. Celia has impatience beyond her years that effectively furnishes the story with a tone of comedic grumpiness; for example, when Miss Dobbs has the class celebrate a Halloween “Spooktacular,” featuring presentations on notable Happy Valleyans, the girl is utterly annoyed: “As if a seven-year-old could scrounge up a useful and brand-new nugget of information. I mean, I could, but not the rest of these numbskulls.” Nan, her grandmother, instills in her a love for literature; they have a book club in which they read Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility, from which excerpts are quoted. Indeed, there are countless references to 19th- and 20th-century European and American literature and popular culture, which some readers will find delightful. Celia’s boundless imagination produces her “storybook” friends with whom she either interacts or whom she embodies during make-believe play. Readers may want to brush up on Moby-Dick, Jane Eyre, and The Scarlet Pimpernel before reading to avoid missing out on the nuances that these tales provide to this story. Overall, some will find this work to be reminiscent of Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events, although it’s aimed at an adult readership. Froese’s simple black-and-white line drawings depict various people and events in the text.

A nostalgia-filled, often engaging small-town story of a girl who overcomes adversity with wit.