The Creakers

Tom Fletcher, 1985-

Book - 2019

Searching for answers after all the adults in her town disappear, eleven-year-old Lucy goes through a passage under her bed into an upside-down world inhabited by sticky, smelly Creakers.

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Published
New York : Random House [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Tom Fletcher, 1985- (author)
Other Authors
Shane Devries (illustrator)
Edition
First American edition
Item Description
"Originally published in hardcover by Penguin Random House UK, London, in 2017."
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9781524773342
9781524773359
Contents unavailable.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 3--5--When all of the adults disappear from the town of Whiffington, Lucy Dungston makes it her mission to find them and bring them back. She learns that the Creakers, garbage-eating monsters who live beneath the floorboards under children's beds, are responsible. To get the adults back, Lucy must go into the Woleb, the Creakers' world. With help from a few other children in the town, she discovers a way in--but can she get the adults out? The frequent authorial interjections ("OK, so things are about to get a little scary. Don't say I didn't warn you.") indicate that the story is supposed to be frightening, but most readers will find the bumbling Creakers more funny than scary, and Lucy and her friends never appear to be in any real danger. There's plenty of humor, some of it mildly scatological, but nothing too gross. Plentiful illustrations add to the book's wacky charm, and the narrative ends with Lucy and the townspeople finding a way to live in harmony with the Creakers, rather than in a pitched battle. VERDICT An additional purchase for libraries in need of funny, not very scary horror.--Misti Tidman, Mansfield/Richland County Public Library, OH

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

Where have all the grown-ups gone, and why? Lucy finds the answers under her bed.Suddenly left to their own devices, the children of Whiffington Town quickly devolve into a bewildered mobexcept for 11-year-old Lucy Dungston. Unwillingly finding herself cast in the role of "the girl who knows what to do," she determines to find out "what the jiggins is going on." As it turns out, the garbage-loving, under-the-bed Creakers have bundled the adults off to the mysterious realm of Woleb to stop them from sending their lovely rubbish away to distant landfills. True to the spirit of his Dinosaur That Pooped a Planet (2017) and its sequels, Fletcher goes for the grotty, sending his doughty protagonist through slimy tunnels bearing an uncomfortable resemblance to alimentary tubes, past shops offering such delicacies as earwax ice cream, to a tavern where favored patrons get "extra snot drops" in their slops. From there the tale takes a distasteful white-savior turn: Lucy realizes that despite their nonstandard English and slovenly habits, Creakers have needs and children too, so she arranges to give them the moldering contents of the town dump. Devries' playful illustrations feature wide-eyed humans (all white except for one 6-year-old brown-skinned diva with "bouncy hair" and her father) in expressive poses and stubby, comically ugly monsters. Begins with a premise that doesn't bear examination and goes badly off the rails toward the end: skip. (map) (Farce. 9-11) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The sun disappeared behind the pointed silhouettes of the rooftops of Whiffington Town, like a hungry black dog swallowing a ball of flames. A thick, eerie darkness fell like no other night Whiffington had ever known. The moon itself barely had enough courage to peek around the clouds, as though it knew that tonight something strange was going to happen. Mothers and fathers throughout Whiffington tucked their children into bed, unaware that this would be the last bedtime story, the last good-night kiss, the last time they'd switch off the light. Midnight. One o'clock. Two o'clock. Three o'clock. CREAK . . . A strange noise broke the silence. It came from inside one of the houses. With the whole town fast asleep, who could possibly have made that sound? Or perhaps not who but WHAT? . . . CREAK! There it was again. This time from another house. Creak! Creeaak! CREEEAAAAAK! The sound of creaky wooden floorboards echoed around the hallways of every home in Whiffington. Something was inside. Something was creaking about. Something not human. There were no screams. There were no nightmares. The children slept peacefully, wonderfully unaware that the world around them had changed. It had all happened silently, as if by some strange sort of dark magic, and they wouldn't know anything about it until they woke up the next morning, on the day it all began . . . Let's start on the day it all began. On the day it all began, Lucy Dungston woke up. Right. Well, that's a start, but it's not very exciting, is it? Let's try again. On the day it all began, Lucy Dungston woke up to a rather unusual sound . . . OK, that's a little better. Let's see what happens next . . . It was the sound of the alarm clock ringing in her mom's bedroom. Well, it's got a bit boring again, hasn't it? Let's try that bit one more time . . . It was the sound of the alarm clock ringing in her mom's bedroom, because Lucy's mom wasn't there to switch it off. You see, Lucy was about to find out that while she was asleep in the night her mom had disappeared . . . OH. MY. GOSH! Imagine waking up to find that your mom has disappeared in the night! It gives me the creepy tingles every time I tell this story. I bet you're thinking, This is going to be the best scary story ever. I can't wait to read it and tell all my friends that I'm really brave because I wasn't even one bit scared. Even though you were totally scared all the way through. Well, this is only just the beginning. Wait until you read what happens later when the Creakers come out. Let me know if you get scared . . . because I am! Back on the day it all began, Lucy climbed out of bed, slipped on her fluffy blue bathrobe, and walked across her creaky floorboards, which were warm from the morning sunlight creeping in through the curtains. Would you like to know what Lucy looked like? Of course you would! Here's a picture . . . As you can see, she had shorter hair than most girls', and it was as brown as mud, or chocolate, and even though Lucy liked it to be short, her mom insisted she wear bangs. "It stops you looking like a boy!" her mom would say (this was before she disappeared, of course). This really wound Lucy up, as her bangs always seemed to flop into her eyes, meaning she constantly had to lick her hand and slick them over to one side just so she could see. Her eyes, once the bangs were out of the way, were greeny-brown . . . or perhaps browny-green. Either way, they were a bit green and a bit brown. You could say there was nothing particularly remarkable about Lucy at all, and it's true; she was no different from any other child in Whiffington, which is another way of saying she was quite remarkable indeed. Anyway, more about that later.  "Mom?" Lucy called, padding across the landing toward her mom's bedroom. But of course you already know there was no reply because her mom was gone! Lucy's heart started beating faster in her chest as she gently opened the bedroom door and stuck her head inside. Mrs. Dungston's book was still on the bedside table, a bookmark poking out, with her reading glasses perched on top. Her empty cocoa cup with the yellow polkadot pattern sat beside it. Her slippers were neatly positioned on the floor. It was all as it usually was. Except for the piercing ringing of the alarm clock and the spooky empty bed. Lucy stopped the alarm clock and ran to check the bathroom. Empty bath. Empty shower. Empty toilet (although Lucy would have been very surprised to find her mom hiding there). She ran downstairs. Empty kitchen. Empty living room. Empty everywhere. "Mom? MOM? " she called, a note of panic rising in her voice, and her heart leaping like a frog in her chest. She was beginning to get an awful feeling that something terrible might have happened .  .  . Excerpted from The Creakers by Tom Fletcher 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.