Book Descriptions
for The Ghosts of Ashbury High by Jaclyn Moriarty
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
This ambitious novel returns to the same school that was the setting for Jacqueline Moriarity’s The Year of Secret Assignments (U.S. edition: 2004) and The Murder of Bindy Mackenzie (U.S. edition: 2006), both published by Scholastic. At first only Em is intrigued by Riley and Amelia, two new scholarship students who arrive her senior year, but soon everyone wants to be around the multitalented, mysterious pair. It turns out there is more to their backgrounds than anyone—including the scholarship committee—knows. Events of the school year unfold through multiple voices and formats—from essays for a gothic fiction exam (with students writing in the gothic style), to blog entries for English, to minutes of the faculty scholarship committee meetings—in narratives that ranges from hilarious (Em shows uwitting mastery of malapropisms and unbridled enthusiasm for exclamation points) to spare and haunting (Amelia’s “Shadowgirl” blog). Moriarty does an excellent job of giving each of the many characters strong and distinctive voices. She also deftly blends humor with serious revelations about the lives of teens teetering on the brink of adulthood. All of the characters have so much more beneath the surface than is apparent at first, and these discoveries are not only a pleasure, but much of the point in this riff on Gothic fiction that isn’t afraid to be playful while still holding fast to deep emotional core. (Age 14 and older)
CCBC Choices 2011. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2011. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
Bestselling author Jaclyn Moriarty returns to Ashbury High for a story of romance, mysterious new classmates, and the terrors of making it through your final year of high school.This is the story of Amelia and Riley, bad kids from bad Brookfield High who have transferred to Ashbury High for their final year. They've been in love since they were fourteen, they go out dancing every night, and sleep through school all day. And Ashbury can't get enough of them.Everyone's trying to get their attention; even teachers are dressing differently, trying to make their classes more interesting. Everyone wants to be cooler, tougher, funnier, hoping to be invited into their cool, self-contained world.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.