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Midwinter Lucie

A few days before his thirteenth birthday Martin James Lewis makes a frightening discovery when chased into the graveyard by Gary Harding, the school bully. One hundred years earlier to the day, another Martin James Lewis died on his thirteenth birthday. Martin is haunted by this and sets out to ascertain exactly what happened to the other Martin, only to discover there has been several other boys sharing his name and birthday, each born one hundred years apart, and not surviving past their thirteenth birthday. When Martin embarks on his quest he is shadowed by the verger, Archibald Snode, a man who frequently appears out of nowhere. He also has to avoid Gary, whose father used to bully Martin's father, thereby carrying on a feud between the families, the reasons for which had been lost in the mists of time. As the tale unfolds Martin attempts to enlist the help of his friend Ruth, who thinks he is mad and persuades him that the only way out of danger is not to be in the village on his birthday. Martin and Ruth join a school field trip, even though Gary is to be there too. Despite escaping from the village, where unaccountably, everyone else is falling ill, destiny follows Martin and draws him back to face his fate. With a skilful and exciting denouement Porter brings this superb ghost story to a satisfactory close.

2008-04-04

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Listing Information
Author: Alan Porter
Genre: Ghost Story
Age Range (see age categories): 9+
Theme/Subject: Fear, bullying, ghosts
Publisher: Fifth Column
ISBN: 978 1902528 731
Reviewer: Cheri Lloyd
Notes: A superb ghost story that is an ideal introduction to ghost stories for young readers.
Title: Midwinter Lucie
Hits: 984
Added: 2008-04-04 18:21:25
Last updated: 2008-04-04 18:21:16

Reviews (1)
A MAJOR NEW TALENT EMERGING?
Reviewed by Ferrington, 2008-08-03

This ghost thriller is a good story for older readers. It is subtly plotted and the pace is very well judged throughout: you are quite likely to find yourself reading it at a sitting, and then reading it again to savour how it was put together. The characters are real people - particularly the teenagers: it is hard to get children right, but Alan Porter succeeds convincingly. Also nicely judged is the question of whether all this is really happening or is the imagining of a (very scared) boy. And yes, my scalp crawled at moments - the horror is palpable: anyone who has been left alone in a dark church will recognise the feeling! The village, the church, the holiday camp are all truthfully described in few words. It is just possible that children's literature has found an important new talent: if Alan Porter can keep it up, I suspect he will be ranked in time with Mayne, Garner, Garfield to name but few.

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