cover image The Red-Eared Ghosts

The Red-Eared Ghosts

Vivien Alcock. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (HMH), $15.95 (272pp) ISBN 978-0-395-81660-8

Alcock's (Singer to the Sea God) flight of fancy about a preadolescent with ""special"" vision has plenty of memorable moments--beginning with Mary Frewin's shocking proclamation that, since her days in a pram, she has been visited by red-eared ghosts: ""Some of 'em look like they've worn away in patches, just leaving bits of 'em floating in space."" Through a circuitous (and highly entertaining) chain of events involving an antique book, a misplaced wig, a rakish art teacher and a gang of ruffians, Mary learns she has inherited her supernatural powers from her great-great-grandmother Mary Crumb, who mysteriously disappeared over a century ago. Retracing her ancestor's steps through London, Mary falls through a time warp and lands in a parallel universe where she finally learns the identities of her ghosts. At this point, the novel's plot becomes somewhat convoluted with vague explanations of paranormal phenomena. Readers may well share the heroine's befuddlement as she struggles to understand her relationship to a clan of displaced aliens while trying to find a way home. The author's earthbound characters, including Mary's overly anxious teacher, her beautician mother and her proud-to-be-a-doorman father, prove to be more alluring than the ghosts, who even Mary admits ""don't do nothing exciting."" On the other hand, Mary's death-defying reentry home is spectacular enough to beguile most fantasy buffs. Ages 10-14. (Apr.)