cover image Not Quite a Ghost

Not Quite a Ghost

Anne Ursu. Walden Pond, $19.99 (288p) ISBN 978-0-062275-15-8

Sandwiched between moody older sister Mia and three-year-old half brother Owen, Minneapolis sixth grader and middle child Violet Hart feels as if she’s the one who’s supposed to “make things easy” on her mother and stepfather, resulting in her reluctantly agreeing to take the disconcerting, wallpapered attic bedroom in the family’s new home. At school, Violet’s besties Paige and Ally are determined to expand their friend group now that they’re in middle school, but a sleepover with potential new recruits goes disastrously awry, leading to a mysterious sickness that Violet can’t shake. While enduring unrelenting exhaustion, the 11-year-old struggles to balance schoolwork and shifting friendship dynamics, as well as nightmares brought on by her bedroom’s disturbingly illogical wallpaper. Upon Violet discovering a haven in the school library with Will, a bespectacled boy researching ghosts, she wonders if there’s something sinister in her home. Inspired by Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper,” as addressed in an author’s note, Ursu (The Troubled Girls of Dragomir Academy) perceptively incorporates middle school drama into a page-turning tale about the difficulties of managing an invisible illness and any accompanying skepticism from friends and healthcare providers. Violet is white; there is racial diversity among the supporting cast. Ages 8–12. Agent: Tina Dubois, CAA. (Jan.)