The Old Willis Place

The Old Willis Place

by Mary Downing Hahn
The Old Willis Place

The Old Willis Place

by Mary Downing Hahn

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Overview

Diana and her little brother Georgie have been living in the woods behind the old Willis place, a decaying Victorian mansion, for what already seems like forever. They aren’t allowed to leave the property or show themselves to anyone. But when a new caretaker comes to live there with his young daughter, Lissa, Diana is tempted to break the mysterious rules they live by and reveal herself so she can finally have a friend. Somehow, Diana must get Lissa’s help if she and Georgie ever hope to release themselves from the secret that has bound them to the old Willis place for so long.
   Mary Downing Hahn has written a chilling ghost story in the tradition of her most successful spine-tingling novels. The intriguing characters, frightening secrets, and plot twists will delight her many fans.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780547488745
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Publication date: 08/20/2007
Sold by: HARPERCOLLINS
Format: eBook
Pages: 216
Sales rank: 215,946
Lexile: 630L (what's this?)
File size: 10 MB
Age Range: 10 - 12 Years

About the Author

Mary Downing Hahn’s many acclaimed novels include such beloved ghost stories as Wait Till Helen Comes, Deep and Dark and Dangerous, and Took. A former librarian, she has received more than fifty child-voted state awards for her work. She lives in Columbia, Maryland, with a cat named Nixi.

Read an Excerpt

The Old Willis Place

A Ghost Story
By Hahn, Mary Downing

Clarion Books

Hahn, Mary Downing
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0618430180


Excerpt

The Diary of Lissa Morrison

Dear Diary,
Is this how you start? I never kept a diary before, so I"m not sure.
Up till now I thought my life was too boring to think about, let alone write
about, but that"s changing. This is the second day Dad and I have spent
here, and already strange things are happening.
First of all, the old Willis House is the creepiest place you ever
saw. It"s got to be haunted. Dad says the old lady who owned it was really
eccentric, maybe even crazy. Anyway, she died in the house—in the front
parlor where she slept because she got too old to climb the steps to her
bedroom. She lay there dead for a week before anyone found her. Ugh.
It seems like the perfect setup for a ghost, don"t you think? She
died there—all alone. Think about it. I can almost see her, can"t you? A weird
old lady, white hair, a scary face, roaming around from room to room, up and
down the steps, watching, waiting—oooh, I"m scaring myself.
Do you believe in ghosts, Dear Diary? Dad definitely doesn"t. I
talked to him after dinner about Miss Willis—that"s the old lady"s name—and
I asked him if he thought she haunted the house. He laughed. I hate it when
he laughs at me. Like he thinks I"m silly. Or dumb maybe.
If my mother was here, I know she wouldn"t laugh—but she died
when I was so little I can hardly remember her. Someday I"ll write more about
how much I miss her, but I don"t want to make myself feel sad. So I will just
say I wish she was here right now and we were sitting close together reading something.
I know this sounds odd, Dear Diary, so don"t tell anyone, but I"d
love to see a ghost—just to know for sure they exist. I wouldn"t be scared. At
least, I don"t think I"d be. How could a ghost actually hurt you? They"re just
ectoplasm or something, not solid.
Maybe it"s because of my mother; maybe that"s why I wonder so
much about what happens when you die and where you go and if you can
stay on earth for a while. I"d really like to know.
Now here"s something else to tell you, something different. Not
supernatural but scarier in a way because it"s real. The first day we came to
the farm, there was someone in the woods spying on us. Kids maybe. I"m
sure of it. I could feel them watching me. I swear my scalp prickled. I had the
same feeling while we were eating dinner last night—they were back, spying
again.
I told Dad, but he says it"s my imagination. I"m in a new place, I"m
not used to woods all around, I hear birds and squirrels and think they"re
people. The way he talks, you"d think I didn"t have an ounce of sense.
Maybe I should give Dad some of my spare imagination. It might
help him finish that book so he can get a better job and we can live in a
house with a yard and neighbors and I can go to school and have friends—
instead of spies in the woods.
But that"s not all—someone stole my bike last night. Dad can"t
blame that on birds or squirrels! We searched all over, but there"s not a sign
of it. My beautiful new blue bike is really and truly gone. < the police and they came out and talked to us. They
said teenagers sometimes sneak onto the property and most likely that"s
who took my bike. When I told them I thought someone was spying on us,
one of the policemen said it must have been the same kids who stole my
bike. They live in a development just across the highway from the farm. The
police have had trouble with them trespassing before.
The other policeman shook his head. "Funny things happen out
here," he said. "None of the caretakers stay long. Place gives them the
jitters, they say. Some of them claim it"s haunted by the old lady who used
to live here. Her and the poor—"
The first policeman coughed and said, "We"d better get going,
Novak. We"ve got other business."
I had the funniest feeling he didn"t want us to hear what Officer
Novak was about to say. In case you haven"t noticed, that"s how it always is
with adults—just when someone starts telling the interesting stuff, someone
else shuts him up. I glanced at Dad, hoping he"d ask Jim what he was talking
about, but he was watching MacDuff chase a squirrel.
Officer Novak jingled his keys and looked at me. "Don"t go too far
from the trailer," he said. "There"s no telling who might be hanging out in the
woods. And stay away from the old house."
"I hear there"s a bunch of snakes in the cellar," the first policeman
said. "And the floorboards are rotten in some of the rooms."
The two of them got in the police car. "Keep your eye out," th Dad. "If you see anything suspicious, give us a call."
Officer Novak looked at me as if something was worrying him, but
all he said was, "That"s a real nice dog you"ve got."
We watched them drive away. I was hoping they"d turn their lights
and the siren on, but they didn"t. I guess they only do that in movies.
So now Dad thinks I might have been right about kids hiding in the
woods, spying and stealing stuff. Three hundred acres—there must be a ton
of hiding places on this farm.
I"m going to look for them. If I find them, I"ll tell them to give my
bike back—or else they"ll end up in jail or juvenile detention. They can"t scare
me. And neither can Miss Willis.
Well, I"ve written so much my hand hurts, so I think I"ll stop and
read in bed for a while. It sure is dark outside. Not a streetlight. Not a house
light. Not even a headlight going past.

Your Friend, Lissa

Copyright © 2004 by Mary Downing Hahn. Reprinted by permission of Clarion
Books / Houghton Mifflin Company. Please verify quotations against the
bound book.(Continues...)



Excerpted from The Old Willis Place by Hahn, Mary Downing Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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