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The Ministry of Ghosts

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
When they ring the bell at the house with the dusty windows and tarnished nameplate to inquire about the advertised “Saturday Person," Thruppence and Tim don't know what they're getting themselves into. A Saturday job sounds ideal! But had that nameplate been properly cleaned, Thruppence and Tim might not have been so keen to enter . . .
Pressured by the stern Minister Beeston from the Department of Economies, the Ministry of Ghosts has been given three months to prove the existence or nonexistence of ghosts, or else it will be shut down! As it seems that children are particularly magnetic to ghosts and supernatural beings, Thruppence and Tim are hired to join the ministry's ghost-catching team. And although neither of them is scared by talk of ghosts or monsters, they are unprepared for what they're about discover!
Filled with fun, humor, and twists and turns, this is the perfect book for anyone who loved Harry Potter and who is looking for something similar to Neil Gaiman's The Graveyard Book—just not quite as scary.
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    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2016
      The threat of imminent shutdown prompts a small government agency to hire a pair of young independent contractors to capture a ghost in this British import. On the way to a pleasantly tidy ending, Shearer delivers some comical chills and twists, but he takes too long to set them up. Driven by a blustering government cost-cutter's ultimatum, the four (or five, counting the cat) remaining members of the antique Ministry of Ghosts--originally founded in 1792 to determine whether spirits are bunkum or real--decide a fresh approach is needed. The "help wanted" card they place in the dusty window of their ramshackle building draws two students from the local school: strong-minded Thruppence Coddley, daughter of a fishmonger, and timorous but game classmate Tim Legge, both white. The author salts his tale liberally with subtle clues and oddly quaint characters, and he eventually arrives at some startling (for unobservant readers, at least) revelations. But aside from brief mentions in a prologue, the two young people don't even show up to get the ghost hunting under way until seven wordy introductory chapters have trundled slowly by, filled with eye-glazing exchanges and daily routines in an office where nothing much has changed in decades. Ghost-story fans won't be disappointed in the end, if they can slog that far through all the low-wattage civil-service satire. (Fantasy. 10-12)

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      May 1, 2016

      Gr 4-6-Curious minds throughout history have questioned, examined, and flirted with the idea of the paranormal. Mr. Copperstone, Miss Rolly, Mrs. Scant, and Mr. Gibbings work at the Ministry of Ghosts to research, record, and find proof of the existence of ghosts. The British government believes the organization is a "relic from another age" and eventually gives the group an ultimatum; the Ministry of Ghosts must in three months' time capture a ghost as evidence of their usefulness or be disbanded. After much discussion, the group decides to hire two children to help with the quest: a headstrong girl who smells of strawberries, and a boy who is not afraid of anything. Author Shearer employs an antiquated British writing style along with descriptive, elevated vocabulary to establish the authentic feel of a classic English mystery. Using detailed description, humorous conversations between ministry employees, and details of everyday events, Shearer reveals the abnormal hidden among the normal. While the plot is slow at times, readers will delight in the ghost-hunting adventures. The omniscient narrator deliberately drops strong hints to develop character and setting as well as offer clues to the surprise ending.

      Copyright 2016 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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