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THE MONSTERS OF ROOKHAVEN by Pádraig Kenny

THE MONSTERS OF ROOKHAVEN

by Pádraig Kenny ; illustrated by Edward Bettison

Pub Date: Sept. 21st, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-250-62394-2
Publisher: Henry Holt

Stranded runaways end up at a house where a family of monsters live.

Mirabelle has always lived at the House of Rookhaven, a magical place with passages from another world. When the Glamour that protects the house and its inhuman residents falls, orphaned siblings Tom and Jem arrive in need of help. Mirabelle, a misfit among misfits, champions helping the two and quickly befriends Jem. Beauty is found through the horror, from carnivorous flowers to a beautiful lady who transforms into a swarm of spiders and other gothic monsters in residence. The mood is set through exquisite black-and-white illustrations, featuring both silhouettes and delicate linework, and through the collective fog of grief—the story is set in England shortly after World War II. Mystery comes in the form of the oldest member of the Rookhaven family—Piglet, declared dangerous and locked away but who knows that change is coming; it’s only a matter of time until Piglet is freed. Themes of grief, empathy, and the nature of monsters play out as danger arrives from an unexpected source. While the ending concludes the imminent dangers and storylines, enough mysteries remain for the fictional world to be revisited. Third-person viewpoints shift among Mirabelle, Jem, a boy from Rookhaven village named Freddie, and occasionally Piglet. Characters default to White.

A dreamy, imaginative premise gives way to pensive catharsis.

(Fantasy. 8-14)