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Johnny Dixon #3

The Spell of the Sorcerer's Skull

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The disappearance of Professor Childermass prompts Johnny Dixon to search for clues--a tiny skull among them--which unleash demonic forces and lead Johnny to a confrontation with terror on a deserted Maine island

170 pages, Hardcover

First published June 3, 1984

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579 people want to read

About the author

John Bellairs

63 books561 followers
John Bellairs (1938–1991) was an American novelist. He is best known for the children's classic The House with a Clock in its Walls (1973) and the fantasy novel The Face in the Frost (1969). Bellairs held a bachelor's degree from Notre Dame University and a master's in English from the University of Chicago. He later lived and wrote in Massachusetts.

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5 stars
489 (34%)
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572 (40%)
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322 (22%)
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32 (2%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 81 reviews
Profile Image for ✦BookishlyRichie✦.
642 reviews1,007 followers
February 7, 2017
5 STARS!!

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Re-read for #JohnBellairsMonth!!

This is one of my favorites from John's books, scary, fantastical, and thrilling as hell. If you still haven't picked up a John Bellairs book, do-it-now!!! His books are scary, thrilling, full of mystery, and will have you not wanting to put them down. :)
Profile Image for Calista.
5,432 reviews31.3k followers
January 7, 2018
This was my favorite of the Johnny Dixon Series so far. I love John Bellairs clear dialogue and quirky characters. I also like the setting of New England. John explores all over the area and I want to visit some of those islands now.

Johnny and Prof. Childermass are staying at a hotel where there is a clock with a room inside it that is made by Childermass's father. A skull falls out of it and Johnny takes it home. Then Prof. Childermass disappears and no one knows what happened.

Johnny gets the help of a catholic priest to help him find the professor and figure out the clues as to what's going on. this is a fun book with gothic dark tones to it. It never is too scary for middle grade and it still gets the job done with a nice conclusion.

Another thing I like about these books for middle grade is they are under 200 pages and you can read them quickly and get a good story. Most middle grade books are now 300 pages and I like those too, but it's nice to have a quick book that does a superb job.

Better than my memory.
Profile Image for Dave.
13 reviews14 followers
July 20, 2019
I'm severely nostalgic about John Bellairs, discovering Bellairs and wanting to read as many of his books as possible is what turned me from a kid that read occasionally to someone that, to this day, reads daily.

This one gets 5 stars for being one of my childhood favorites and because it still managed to creep me out, even after all these years. Bellairs, in my opinion, is the master of middle-grade macabre, magic, and mystery.
Profile Image for Becky.
763 reviews126 followers
July 26, 2009
The bar exam is causing my brain to regress to second-grade level. I used to love John Bellairs' scary books when I was a kid, and this one (discovered in a used bookstore for $2) comforted me through the unpleasantness of studying. There are many delights to be had in it, not least of which being the fact that there is a lot of smoking and drinking for a kids' book. I mean, it takes place in the 50s, but still. Love the Edward Gorey illustrations. More religious stuff than I remember from reading it many years ago, but it's kind of lumped in with all the other magic -- it's just good magic. Wonderfully spooky, and everything's explained nicely at the end. Hooray!
Profile Image for Tricia Harrild.
10 reviews
March 3, 2017
I like that the characters in John Bellairs' books are a bit nerdy and unpopular. They like to read and eat cookies and relax at home. I like the evil wizards that cast spells of doom and murder and the ghosts they have become. Plus there is artwork by Edward Gorey!!
Profile Image for D.M. Dutcher .
Author 1 book50 followers
May 15, 2012
A book that could no longer be written today, sadly. Johnny Dixon is a friend of the eccentric Professor Childermass. One day when his car breaks down, the two lodge at an inn, and they discover an ornate clock made by one of the Professor's ancestors. It's reputed to be haunted, and on impulse, Johnny takes a tiny skull from it. That triggers a lot of events leading into the abduction of the Professor and an ancient mystery.

Like I said, this book could never be written today. A few reasons are:

1. Catholic priests are trusted enough that parents would let their children go off with them on a long vacation. The abuse scandals make this unthinkable now, even though the majority of priests are innocent.

2. It's not explained away. Without detailed spoilers, many modern books would try to explain away things like a curse through solely material means. This doesn't at all, and is wholly supernatural.

3. It's very dated. I have the old hardcover published in 1984, before the idea of revising children's books to be current was widespread. Whether dialogue, situations, or stereotypes, it feels like a book of its time.

4. It predates the culture wars. In other words, there is something for everyone to dislike. Moderns will not like how much of a role a genial form of Catholicism plays in the book, while Traditionalists will not like the magical form that Catholicism seems to take.

It has some creepy moments for a children's book though. By focusing solely on supernatural horror of the old school type rather than the modern gross-out type, it can have some pretty chilling scenes. It's also good to have a book where children and adults coexist without one set upon the other. A decent read, but more for nostalgia's sake, I would think.
Profile Image for Qt.
542 reviews
April 11, 2018
Nicely spooky! I think I'm really getting to like the Johnny Dixon books :-)

I really liked the story and the characters are good, so I went with 4 stars.
Profile Image for WhatShouldIRead.
1,550 reviews23 followers
April 18, 2020
Another fun entry and I like how the author keeps introducing different characters into the dream team and them getting to the bottom of the weird things that happen to Johnny and the Professor.
Profile Image for Carrie.
105 reviews35 followers
January 16, 2009
Another Bellairs. This one involves a mysterious clock with a miniature room in it. In the room is a miniature skull, which, if you touch it INFECTS you will EVIL! Wow! What a story! And, they go to Vinalhaven, so, you know, yay Maine.* Another fast, creepy story – this one has a good priest working to save old Professor Childermass from the evil with a piece of the true cross. Lucky that they had some around, no?

I was thinking when I was reading these books that they would make a pretty awesome juvenile tv series. Nice and creepy, not too expensive with the special effects. Someone should start making tv shows of classing young adult series and show them on, like Disney or whatever. Like they used to do Wonderworks when we were younger. It would be great – free ideas, ready for adaptation, keep the young starlets in action, and reduce the amount of crap on television. Famous Hollywood executive who reads the review (as they do), you can have that idea for free.


CONFIDENTIAL TO MY HAVERHILL PEEPS: Don't worry about all the evil getting you. I am an expert now, and will have your back should the need arise. If, however, you find a creepy magical object, I would suggest you leave it be. If necessary, chant Latin. E Pluribus Unim should work in a pinch.

*Although, seriously, what is with filling all the places of my life with the Evil? Can’t they put some of that in the Midwest! Stay out of my ‘hood!!

Profile Image for Alison Diem.
Author 4 books17 followers
September 27, 2009
This was a re-read. I originally read this in the fifth grade and I have to admit that it was a lot scarier then.

I was surprised at the level of Catholicism in this book. It's not a problem in any way but I didn't remember that level of religion being a part of these books.

I like father Higgins much more than the Professor, I must admit. There should have been either more Fergie or none at all- the amount that we were given felt very tacked on and pointless.

I'm still debating re-reading any of the other books in this series, as I found it difficult to get through the middle of the book. It seemed slow and dragged somewhat.

132 reviews11 followers
October 3, 2014
This was my favorite book as a kid! The rainy night on the ferry where Johnny goes outside to throw the tiny skull from the dollhouse overboard still scares me. Something about the geographical scope of this book also made me love it. Almost every New England state except Rhode Island gets at least a mention, if not a whole scene, and the bulk of the book is set in Vinalhaven off the coast of Maine.

This is quite possibly Bellairs' best book. If you can, get an old copy with the cover art by Edward Gorey. Why they put new and crappy art on there is beyond me. Surely it cost something to hire someone to make that new artwork?
Profile Image for Y..
Author 1 book21 followers
May 3, 2018
Got a bit boring to read in the middle, but in general, its a good story. However, the parts where religion was invloved would've been better left out.
Profile Image for Paula.
197 reviews4 followers
October 24, 2017
Pretty darn spooky for a kid's book!!
Profile Image for Cynthia Egbert.
2,676 reviews39 followers
October 30, 2019
Definitely one of my favourite Bellairs offerings. I love the Shakespeare connection to the mystery and the true good vs evil battle with a savvy priest finding the right words to break the evil curse. I am coming to be really connected to these characters, despite the lack of parents that always drives me nuts in books for young people.
Profile Image for EA Solinas.
671 reviews38 followers
April 29, 2015
John Bellairs books have a certain style that you come to expect -- it's got to have lots of humor, a cheesy title that sounds like a B-movie, dark visions, weird dreams, and a shapeless supernatural evil that can destroy us all. One outstanding example would be "Spell of the Sorcerer's Skull," a genuinely creepy little horror story tinged with clever humor.

Professor Childermass's car breaks down in a small town. While he waits for it to be repaired, he and his young friend Johnny Dixon are shown a dollhouse connected to the professor's grandfather, who died under mysterious circumstances. Johnny finds a tiny skull, which he finds he can't speak to anyone else about -- then he has a vision of a ghostly figure killing the old man. Soon afterwards, Professor Childermass vanishes under mysterious circumstances.

Johnny finally approaches the priest Father Higgins, who promises to help if he can. A petition to Saint Andrew provides sudden answers, in the form of a cryptic rhyme that leads Johnny, Fergie and Father Higgins to a remote island in Maine. But even if they can find the professor, how can they defeat the evil forces that center on the sorcerer's skull?

John Bellairs had a very clever knack for spooking people, scattering creepy elements through "Spell of the Sorcerer's Skull" like a farmer strewing seeds. He has creepy caretakers, Victorian mansions, an enchanted skull and visions of evil skeleton scarecrows -- and while these things just sound a little cheesy, he imbues them with a dark, eerie feeling that seems to cling to even the innocent scenes.

But as usual, he also injects plenty of quirky humor into the story, such as Father Higgins whipping out a guitar and singing a folk song (much to Johnny's bewilderment). It's a good balance to the darker elements of the story. The only problem is that some of the plot twists seem rather contrived, but the story is a fairly decent one despite that flaw.

He also uses this book to introduce the character of Father Higgins, a gruff but kindly priest who serves as the adult authority figure in this book since the professor is, obviously, nowhere to be seen. He's not quite as knowledgeable as the professor, but he serves as a good temporary replacement, and he works well with the complementary buddies Johnny and Fergie.

"Spell of the Sorcerer's Skull" is a genuinely spine-tingling nugget of kiddie horror, and despite no longer being a kid, I still feel a chill at some of the darker moments. Funny, eerie and weird.
Profile Image for Scott.
616 reviews
August 29, 2016
Travel back to 1952, when an older man could befriend an adolescent boy and there wasn't anything untoward about it. Johnny Dixon and Professor Childermass are waylaid in an inn by a snowstorm when they discover a clock with an elaborate and unsettling vignette display. Soon afterwards, the professor magically vanishes and Johnny must enlist the aid of his friend Byron "Fergie" Ferguson and an Irish Catholic priest named Father Higgins to help track him down.

As with his Lewis Barnavelt trilogy, Bellairs seems to have felt the third book was the time to shake things up and remove one of the main characters for most of the story. It's fine, I guess, but I liked the professor much better than Father Higgins and would have preferred to have had him around. I was also a little uncomfortable with the role of religion in this book. Earlier in the story, even Father Higgins appears to be something of a skeptic, but by the end a crucifix (that contains pieces of the "true cross") is burning evil books to ash. Yeah, I know it's all just magic but the fact that it's based on a "real" (as in widely believed today) religion made it feel a bit different. A little like proselytizing, though not as bad as Madeleine L'Engle's books. If I was giving this book to a child, I'd make sure to explain to him or her that it was all equally made up.

All that said, I still think highly of Bellairs' writing. He excels at creating an atmosphere that is spooky even to an adult, and shows a high level of literacy--both linguistic and cultural--for a book aimed at grade schoolers.
Profile Image for Kate.
1,198 reviews23 followers
August 24, 2010
You know how dollhouses are simultaneously awesome and a little creepy? Just creepy enough to make The Dollhouse Murders somehow believable? Bellairs feeds into that creepy in this Johnny Dixon mystery.

Johnny and Professor Childermass are stuck in a snowy town and discover a clock that actually belonged to the Prof's family. Instead of a pendulum it has a perfect little room showing the Prof's uncle on the night of his death. The only anomaly is the weird little skull that seems to zot you when you touch it. Childermass is soon in trouble and only John and Fergie are sensible enough to see it.

Although this book suffers from Fergie's new critical stance and a complete cheat of an ending, it is still downright creepy, and that's what our little darlings are reading Bellairs for, right? And there's a creepy SKULL and creepy GUY and creepy SWITCH TO ANOTHER DIMENSION and all sorts of good creepy. Add Johnny's usual neuroticism and a friendly priest and this one rings all the Bellairs bells. Fourth graders, start reading!
Profile Image for Joanna.
2,144 reviews31 followers
March 8, 2013
I feel like I have been reading this book for months. Wait! I have been reading it for months! I started reading it aloud to my son Cameron sometime a bit before Halloween. As we agreed between us many times since then, it is a SPOOKY book. Our attention span for the chapter book read aloud experience has proved a bit short, so we have really ambled through this. We enjoyed it. I was especially pleased by the narrative voice and ear for dialogue- the conversations scanned well read aloud, even if some of the phrasing was a bit dated. Nice descriptive detail throughout, and the New England scenery was fun.
Profile Image for Stephanie Pennington.
15 reviews2 followers
September 28, 2012
This book is so intriguing... even now as an adult, I find myself thinking about it. It was a different type of read for me as a child, and I believe one of the first books to take my mind to that "dark" side, so to speak... I believe this book is why I became interested in the dark things there are in the world. Granted, the first time I read it, I was a little spooked and weirded out and I think it was quite a while before I picked it up for another go. I loved it as a child, and as a teen and have read it too many times to count. I may just be picking it up again, as I've never had the heart to get rid of it.
Profile Image for Justin  K. Rivers.
247 reviews6 followers
July 28, 2009
One of Bellairs' best. The stakes are high, and so is the amount of scare. Johnny is deprived of his best friend and closest ally, Prof. Childermass, and the personal, invasive nature of the enchanted skull really hits home.

Once again, Bellairs' resolution of the climax is a bit dodgy, relying as usual on some Catholic mumbo jumbo. But the weirdness factor of the strange Childermass clock, plus the tiny skull, and the abduction of the Prof make for a crackin' good story.
Profile Image for Liaken.
1,501 reviews
August 11, 2011
I love Bellairs' scary mysteries. I loved them as a child, too. They were just scary enough so I would make a running leap for the bed in the darkened room, but not scary enough to keep me awake. I also feel like he takes his young characters seriously. That even when the young mind is passionately irrational, it is still real.

I read the copy with Edward Gorey's perfect illustrations. Really, he's the perfect choice.
Profile Image for Amy.
391 reviews53 followers
October 31, 2015
This book scared me a lot as a kid. And while it isn't nearly as frightening reading it as an adult, there are still some disturbing events. A few years ago, I bought several more John Bellairs books at a used bookstore (I wanted the original 80s cover art) and those might be fun to read this summer!
Profile Image for Mir.
4,976 reviews5,332 followers
January 6, 2018
In this installment, it is the curmudgeonly professor Childermass himself who is the victim of a supernatural evil. He disappears and Johnny must find him, with the help of of his best friend Fergie and parish priest Fr Higgins.
Profile Image for Michael.
168 reviews1 follower
April 25, 2011
I read this in middle school as a part of a series of the same characters. I remember really liking them. They were intense and scary for an innocent 10 year old.I am going to read some of this series again to see if they might be something my 10 year old will like.
Profile Image for Kris (My Novelesque Life).
4,693 reviews209 followers
November 21, 2014
3 STARS


"When Johnny Dixon takes a tiny skull from a haunted dollhouse, demonic forces are released, capturing Professor Childermass and leading Johnny on a harrowing chase to a deserted island off the coast of Maine." (From Amazon)

A great mystery paranormal children's novel.
Profile Image for Heather Jackson.
22 reviews
February 9, 2016
Spellbound

I don't remember this one as well as I do the first two Johnny Dixon books, so it lost a star for its lack of staying power. It was still an enjoyable story, and I'm reminded why I loved these books as much as I did.
Profile Image for Rachel.
947 reviews37 followers
Read
November 7, 2016
FATHER HIGGINS!!!! I have always had a weird affection for Father Higgins. I'm not Catholic, but I appreciate the chanting and incense and witchy bits.

Also, hats off to Mr. Bellairs for ditching one of his main characters in the third book in the series - a pretty brave move for any author.
Profile Image for Owen Curtsinger.
203 reviews11 followers
November 8, 2017
I absolutely loved all of the John Bellairs books that I could get my hands on as a kid. Horrifyingly creepy and macabre, made all the more creepy by the Gorey illustrations in previous editions. These are still pretty fun reading them twenty years later.
Profile Image for Marjanne.
583 reviews4 followers
November 25, 2007
Another fun Bellair's mystery with Johnny Dixion. Nothing too exciting, though I still wish I had discovered this series when I was 8 or 9 years old.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 81 reviews

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