First read in 2013, reread in 2016.
This was an interesting book, bringing Kendall and her friends back together in the South, and dragging her boyfriend into Georgia as well. I liked the way that the author used the story to tie into the Underground Railroad, a historical pathway to freedom that is both mythical and real.
One of the things I don’t like about the story is that the characters, while realistic, do not reflect the historical background of the community. There were black slaves, Indians (or as the word warriors would have us say, Native Americans), rich people, poor people, good people, bad people. For the most part, we only see the white, uppercrust, misfits. The preppy types are for the most part bad, and the poor people ignored. When other races are brought in they are mainly stereotyped (a black guy who has rhythm, a Native American who is a shaman) or with Alfred Hitchcock style appearances.
This book did explore a different twist, in that the hauntings were tied back to the Underground Railroad, and the fact that slavery was a horrible episode in the USA. It was marvelous the way that the author used Kendall’s findings in the end to make a special point (read the book, you will see what I mean).
These books are written for teens, so part of the issues I have can be attributed to the author making a lighter story, with a serious side, for those younger readers. However – and again I say However! – the stories appear to be romance novels, as each character now is part of a boy-girl set. That was not high school as I remember it – at least half of my friends never dated in high school, and very few had a single special person.
Still, overall, this is a really good book, with a little revealing in each story in the series of the darkness that exists beneath the surface of any old city. Just a suggestion though – let’s have a fun ghost – more Farah, less Phillip. I rate this a 5 for history, a 3 for spook treatment, and a 3.5 for characters.