Thirteen Chairs
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
May 1, 2015
Summoning the courage to open a creaky door inside a spooky old house, Jack finds himself in a candlelit room with 12 strangers sitting around a table. Someone brings him a chair, and thus begins an evening of storytelling as, one by one, Jack's companions share haunting tales, each extinguishing a candle when done. Thirteen tales-Jack's is the last-are framed by brief introductions from the storytellers, characters in their own rights, lending depth to this lightly illustrated collection of stories within a story. In "Let Me Sleep," a man is haunted by the voice of someone he's robbed and killed until he returns to the burial site. "The Wrong Side of the Road" features a taxi ride that ends with terrifying similarity to a crash the passenger caused a year before. A character with a "craggy face" tells a tale of "darkness inside darkness" in "The Patchwork Sailor." A man writes himself to death in "Unputdownable," and in "Snowstorms," one Antarctic explorer after another mysteriously disappears. The tales become increasingly eerie as the candles are blown out and Jack realizes what his own role is. An enjoyable collection of ghost stories, perfect for reading by flashlight. (Short stories. 9-13)
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Starred review from April 1, 2015
Gr 7 Up-In this spine-tingling short-story collection, a young man named Jack finds himself part of a most unusual storytelling circle. When Jack opens a door to find 12 strangers sitting around a table, a lit candle in front of each of them, his natural curiosity gets the best of him and he joins the group, which is presided over by the proper Mr. Osterly, it becomes clear to Jack that whoever they are, the strangers have gathered to exchange tales. The set-up may remind adult readers of Neil Gaiman's short story "October in the Chair"-published in Fragile Things (William Morrow, 2006)-but the execution is wholly unique. Over the course of the evening, each person at the table tells a frightening story, and Jack comes to a gradual realization about his new acquaintances that will strike terror into readers' hearts. The breadth and scope of various stories is impressive-readers are treated to traditional jump tales, malevolent cats, folk tales, and vengeful ghost stories; new spine-chillers are revealed with each turn of the page. VERDICT Fans of chills and things that go bump in the night will want to read this uniformly excellent work-with the lights on.-Elisabeth Gattullo Marrocolla, Darien Library, CT
Copyright 2015 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
May 15, 2015
Grades 7-10 Shelton begins this collection of 13 tales with the phrase, Jack is a curious boy, and in the strange, spooky house with 13 mismatched chairs, his curiosity will surely be sated. Perhaps by an irredeemable thief who is haunted by the dead. Maybe in the story of a drunk driver and the life he took on one horrific rainy night. One storyteller spins a tale of her time at school, where she was feared by other children, though she was never certain why. Other stories touch on evil cats, bloody murders, and dead relatives, as well as devious writers and darkly menacing pirates. Jack's story, and his fate, is held until the very end, as is the legend of the house with the 13 chairs. Though these interconnected stories have some predictable foreshadowing and occasionally veer more toward mystery than straight horror, the old-fashioned writing style and relatively light scares make this a great fit for tweens who have graduated from Goosebumps but haven't quite mustered up the courage to dive into gritty YA horror.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)
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