Unearthly Asylum (The Joy of Spooking Series #2)

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Overview

Joy Wells is fascinated by the strange noises coming from the old Spooking Asylum. She knows all about the famous legends that surround the place, and is certain that she is hearing the guns of long-dead soldiers. But what if something more contemporary—and truly ghastly—is going on?

When Joy’s pet frog, Fizz, gets away, Joy travels through the town’s old sewers looking for him, only to emerge above ground—inside the locked gates of the asylum. There, she uncovers a trail of ...

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Unearthly Asylum (The Joy of Spooking Series #2)

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Overview

Joy Wells is fascinated by the strange noises coming from the old Spooking Asylum. She knows all about the famous legends that surround the place, and is certain that she is hearing the guns of long-dead soldiers. But what if something more contemporary—and truly ghastly—is going on?

When Joy’s pet frog, Fizz, gets away, Joy travels through the town’s old sewers looking for him, only to emerge above ground—inside the locked gates of the asylum. There, she uncovers a trail of greed and madness guaranteed to thrill her horror-loving heart!

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Editorial Reviews

Children's Literature - Sarah Maury Swan
Readers of Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events will get a kick out of this series, even with one of the protagonists being over the age of thirty. The heroine, twelve-year-old Joy Wells, was bequeathed The Compleat and Collected Works of E. A. Peugeot by one of her lawyer father's clients. Joy comes to the conclusion that E. A. Peugeot wrote his story about her forsaken home town of Spooking, and sets out to prove her premise. She and her younger brother Byron get themselves into one scrape after another, eventually sneaking into the grounds of an insane asylum to rescue Joy's pet frog. But weird things occur in the asylum and there do not seem to be many patients. Turns out there is a fountain of youth in the swimming pool which the people who run the asylum want to keep secret. Joy and Byron rescue her frog—much invigorated by his swim in the pool—but manage to cause the whole asylum to implode and disappear into a sink hole. The author has very wry sense of humor and a very adult tone for a middle grade book, but still it was an amusing read. Reviewer: Sarah Maury Swan
School Library Journal
Gr 4–7—The tension between the residents of eccentric, dilapidated Spooking and those of upscale, soulless Darlington continues in this sequel to Fiendish Deeds (S & S, 2008). Joy Wells, having halted one attempt at Spooking's gentrification in her first adventure, hopes to have the town preserved as a historical site by proving that it was the residence of her favorite author, E. A. Peugeot. Meanwhile Mr. Phipps, the cynical, ambitious aide to the mayor of Darlington, pursues his aim of getting Spooking wiped off the map by trying to convert the town's mysterious, almost-deserted insane asylum into a modern spa and cosmetic-surgery clinic. The themes of confronting mortality and seeking eternal youth appear consistently (if, on occasion, obviously) through the book's numerous entwining threads, which include the secret behind the asylum's reclusive inhabitants, a legend of an undead army, a Gypsy curse, and a mysterious girl. Bracegirdle manages to weave these seemingly disparate ideas into a gripping climax while leaving a few compelling mysteries for the trilogy's conclusion. Joy's nonconformist attitude and bouts of self-doubt will speak to many readers, and Phipps makes for a complex antagonist. Give this series to fans of Alvin Schwartz's Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark (HarperCollins, 2010) or Neil Gaiman's Coraline (HarperCollins, 2002) read-alikes.—Christi Esterle, Parker Library, CO
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781416934189
  • Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry Books
  • Publication date: 8/10/2010
  • Series: Joy of Spooking Series , #2
  • Pages: 298
  • Age range: 8 - 12 Years
  • Lexile: 940L (what's this?)
  • Product dimensions: 5.70 (w) x 8.30 (h) x 1.10 (d)

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  • Posted October 18, 2010

    Another infusion of Joy!

    Sequels are tricky things, what with the balancing act of preserving what made the first book good while creating a fresh story. The more I enjoyed the first book in a series, the more anxious/hopeful I feel as I approach the second. A good first book could be a fluke, after all. I loved the first book in the Joy of Spooking trilogy, FIENDISH DEEDS. I will not keep you in suspense: the second book more than realizes the potential of the first to kick off a fantastic trilogy. Now I'm conflicted, because I can't wait for the third book, SINISTER SCENES, in Summer 2011, yet that will be the end of the series!

    In FIENDISH DEEDS, we met Joy, a morbid yet likable young denizen of Spooking, her decaying hometown perched on a hill outside the perfect, cookie-cutter suburb of Darlington, where she attends school with the insufferable Darlings. Joy adores everything about Spooking and is convinced that her favorite horror writer, E.A. Peugeot, was writing about Spooking in his chilling tales. When the presumed bog of his stories is threatened by the ambition of the mayor's assistant, Octavio Phipps, she springs into action. In UNEARTHLY ASYLUM, Joy is out of sorts because her little brother/sidekick is occupied with a new friend and her mission to prove that Spooking was the home of Peugeot runs into a major obstacle. Meanwhile, Phipps has a new plan to destroy Spooking, involving the creepy old asylum (the possible setting for Peugeot's story, "The Asylum"). When her beloved pet frog turns up on the wrong side of the asylum wall, Joy mounts a rescue operation. Will she make it out in one piece? Will she find proof of Peugeot's presence in Spooking? Will she uncover the secrets of the strange asylum? Good heavens, you don't really think I'd answer these questions, do you? Go read the book.

    The snappy dialogue and clever wit of FIENDISH DEEDS continue in the second book. I was delighted to find that Joy was not only as delightful as she was in the first book, but Bracegirdle has added new dimension to her character. In the first book, her loyalty to Spooking was unwavering; in the second, she begins to see that decay may also have a downside. She also considers the possibility that she might be mistaken about Peugeot having lived in Spooking. Phipps, Joy's nemesis, is also fleshed out further. We learn more about his past and the source of his hatred for Spooking. His interaction with Joy is a delight. As Joy's mother decides to send her to a psychiatrist, attitudes toward mental illness are touched on.

    A sample of Bracegirdle's witty phrasing: "Her already excitable character had become impossibly effervescent, and like a shaken pop bottle, she seemed about ready to explode." (p. 158)

    Source disclosure: I received a review copy of this book.

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