Dead voices

Katherine Arden

Book - 2019

"Trapped at a haunted ski resort, Ollie, Coco, and Brian must rely on their friendship and sharp minds if they want to escape"--

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Children's Room jFICTION/Arden Katherin Due May 5, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Action and adventure fiction
Paranormal fiction
Published
New York : G.P. Putnam's Sons, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC, New York [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Katherine Arden (author)
Item Description
Sequel to: Small spaces.
Physical Description
236, 9 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780525515050
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Ollie, Coco, and Brian formed a deep bond after the events of Small Spaces (2018), and now the trio of friends, along with Coco's mom and Ollie's dad, are headed to a newly opened ski lodge after Ollie's dad won a contest. If this sounds like the set-up for a classic haunted house story, you're right on the money: there's an ominous ghostly figure on the road leading to the lodge; they arrive amid a terrible blizzard; the power goes out in the already dark building; both Ollie and Coco are beset by vivid nightmares; a ghost hunter arrives at the last minute; and, of course, there's terrifying taxidermy everywhere. But Arden is skilled in the art of misdirection ­this is more than just a riff on a classic trope. It would spoil too much to give away much more detail, but Arden handily transforms the haunted house story into something much richer, scarier, and more sinister, tricky and challenging for the trio to puzzle out. Arden is fantastic at cultivating atmosphere, and she uses that to great effect in this novel, particularly when it comes to describing the sensory experience of the lodge and the appearance of the many ghastly ghosts and creatures. Middle-graders who thrill to spooks and scares will find plenty (maybe even more than they bargained for!) here.--Sarah Hunter Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In a spooky sequel to Small Spaces, Arden alternates between the perspectives of friends Ollie, Coco, and Brian as they travel with Ollie's father and Coco's mother to a Vermont mountain cabin, where Ollie's dad has won a stay. The three friends have been inseparable since autumn, when they encountered an alternate world populated by living scarecrows and governed by a terrifying figure called the Smiling Man, and they are eager to put the experience behind them. Soon, though, snowed in at the foreboding Mount Hemlock Resort, which once served as an orphanage, the friends find themselves trapped within a paranormal labyrinth haunted by the ghosts of Gretel, a child who died after becoming locked in a closet, and of the frightening woman who locked her there. With the assistance of a reporter investigating the resort's hauntings, Ollie, Coco, and Brian set out to communicate with the restless spirits. Arden excels at creating an atmosphere of claustrophobic tension with memorably menacing details. Readers will again be invested in the ghoulish surprises in store for the resourceful, likably flawed protagonists. Ages 10--up. (Aug.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Horn Book Review

This chilling sequel to Small Spaces (rev. 11/18) finds Ollie, Coco, and Brian trapped in a ski lodge full of ghosts, peril, and betrayal. The three friends and their parents are the only guests at Hemlock Lodge, until the arrival of mysterious Mr. Voland, who claims that the hotel is haunted. The children begin ghost-hunting with Mr. Voland, looking for answers about the haunted hotel and about Ollie's watch, which helps her communicate with her dead mother and which in the first book saved them from the "smiling man." Hemlock Lodge's creepy history gives this tale the necessary trappings of a classic ghost story (a ghost girl hides from the malicious Mother Hemlock; a dead skier appears at unexpected moments to deliver a silent warning to the kids). The second half of the novel takes the danger one step further by re-introducing old villains and raising the stakes. We get a closer look at Coco's point of view in this installment, and readers will hope for another entry-maybe one from Brian's perspective-by the time the friends finish their harrowing adventure. Sarah Berman November/December 2019 p.83(c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A winter vacation takes a terrifying turn. Two months after their encounter with "the smiling man" in Small Spaces (2018), sixth graders Coco, Ollie, and Brian go on a ski trip. Though money has been tight, Ollie's dad won a week at Vermont's newest ski resort, Mount Hemlock, as an incentive for his job selling solar panels. Unfortunately, the lucky trip doesn't turn out so lucky. On the way there, Coco dreams of a gray-faced, frozen girl who's looking for her lost bones. When Ollie starts having similar dreams, it becomes clear that there's a reason Mount Hemlock has never before been open to the public. The surprising arrival of a paranormal investigator named Mr. Voland offers the kids a chance to get to the bottom of things. But do they really want to know the truth about what lurks at Hemlock Lodge? With warnings like "Don't listen to the voices," the plot initially reads similarly to its predecessor. However, Arden creates far more than just a carbon copy in a different setting. Those who had secondary roles in the first book get deeper characterization, especially white Coco and black, bookish jock Brian. (Ollie is also white) Arden's high scare factor, richly drawn mountain setting, relevant themes of loss and belonging, and vividly eerie descriptions evoke the very best of horror for this age set. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Coco opened her mouth to scream, and woke up with a gasp.   She was in the car, in the snowstorm, driving to Mount Hemlock, and her mother was talking to Mr. Adler in the front seat. It was cold in the back seat; her toes in their winter boots were numb. Coco sat still for a second, breathing fast with fright. Just a dream , she told herself. She'd had a lot of scarecrow dreams in the last few months. So had Ollie and Brian. Just a dream .   "How much farther, Roger?" Coco's mom asked.   "Should be pretty close now," said Mr. Adler.   Coco, a little dazed from her nightmare, stared out the front windshield. It was snowing even harder. The road was a thin yellowish-white strip, piled thick with snow. More snow bowed the trees on either side.   The Subaru was moving slowly. The thick snow groaned under the wheels, and Mr. Adler seemed to be struggling to keep the car going straight on the slippery road. "What a night, huh?" he said.   "Want me to drive?" asked Coco's mom.   This time the usual cheer was gone from Mr. Adler's reply. "It's okay. I know the car better." Lower, he added, "Just pray we don't get stuck."   Now the car was coming down into a gully, the road turning slightly.   But the road wasn't empty. For a stomach-clenching second, Coco thought she was still dreaming. Right in front of them, in the middle of the road, stood a tall figure in a ragged blue ski jacket. It looked like a scarecrow. The figure was perfectly still. One palm was raised and turned out as though to beg. As though to say, STOP . The face was hidden by a ski mask.   Coco felt a jolt of terror. But then she realized that the person had real hands. Not garden tools. She wasn't dreaming; this wasn't a scarecrow.   Mr. Adler wasn't slowing down. "Stop!" yelled Coco, yanking herself upright. "Look! Look! "   Mr. Adler slammed on the brakes. The car skidded, turning sideways, swinging them toward the thick black ranks of trees. Coco braced, waiting to hear the thump of someone slamming into the side of the car. The person had been so close  . . .   Nothing.   The car shuddered to a stop, only a couple feet from the nearest tree trunk.   All of them sat stunned for a second.   "I didn't feel us hit anything." Mr. Adler sounded like he was taking deep breaths, trying to be calm. "What did you see, Coco?"   Coco was startled. "You didn't see it? There was a person in the road! We must have hit him!" Her voice sounded squeaky. She hated when her voice sounded squeaky. Had they hurt someone? Had they killed  . . .   Ollie's dad put on the emergency brake and turned on the car's hazard lights. "Kids, I need you to stay--" he began, but Ollie had already unlocked her door and scrambled out into the snow. It came up to her knees. Brian was right behind her on his side, and Coco, although her hands were shaking, hurried after them.   "Coco!" cried her mom as she and Mr. Adler followed. "Coco, don't look, get back, be careful--"   Coco pretended not to hear. She grabbed her phone, went around the car, and shined the light at the snow. Brian was doing the same. Ollie had pulled a headlamp from the pocket on her car door. The three of them stood shoulder to shoulder, shining their flashlights all around the car. The snow was falling so thickly that they couldn't see anything outside the circle of their lights. Faintly, Coco heard the whisper of wind in the pine needles overhead.   Mr. Adler had a flashlight from the glove compartment. Coco's mom stood next to him, squinting into the snowstorm. Four beams of light shone on the snow. The road was utterly empty. Coco saw the tracks where the car had come down, saw the huge sideways mark of the car's skid. But nothing else.   "I don't see anyone. Any tracks, even," said her mom. "Thank god."   "But I saw someone," protested Coco. "In the road. A person. They had their hand out." She raised her own arm, palm out, to demonstrate. "They were wearing a blue ski jacket, but no gloves. Ollie, did you see?"   "I thought I might have seen something," said Ollie. She sounded doubtful. "Like a shadow. But I wasn't sure. There's so much snow. Brian?"   Brian shook his head. "But," he said loyally, "Ollie and I couldn't see out the windshield as well as Coco, since she was in the middle."   Coco's mom gestured at the snow, which was unmarked except for the car's tracks and their own footprints. "I don't think there was anyone here." She started to shiver.   They'd all taken off their heavy coats for driving, and now the snow was piling up on their shoulders.   "I saw someone," Coco insisted, but the others, eager to get back into the warm car, weren't listening anymore. She hurried after them. "I definitely saw someone."   "It might have just been a shadow, Tiny," said Brian reasonably. "Or a deer. Or maybe you were just dreaming and you mixed up being asleep and being awake."   "I wasn't imagining things!" cried Coco, wishing so hard that her voice wouldn't squeak. "And don't call me Tiny!"   "But there's obviously no one--" Brian began.   "Hey," said Ollie's dad, cutting them off. "Easy now, both of you. Just be glad we didn't hit anyone. Let's get back in the car. It's not safe here."   Coco climbed unhappily back into the car. She felt like everyone was just a little bit mad at her for yelling stop so that Mr. Adler had to slam on his brakes and send them skidding dangerously across the road. She was sure she'd seen someone.   But she had been half asleep. Maybe she did dream it. As they drove away, Coco turned around and looked out the back window.   Just for a second, she thought she saw a dark figure lit red by the car's rear lights. It stood facing them in the middle of the road. One bare hand was still upraised.   Like a plea.   Like a warning.   "Guys," she whispered. "It's there. It's right back there ." Ollie and Brian turned around.   There was a small silence.   "I don't see anything," said Ollie.   Coco looked again.   The figure was gone. Excerpted from Dead Voices by Katherine Arden All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.