
A parent would reach for this book when their child is struggling with the overwhelming fear and helplessness that accompanies a parent's serious medical crisis or hospitalization. Set in the 1950s, this gothic mystery follows Johnny Dixon as he discovers that his father's sudden coma is actually the work of a malevolent spirit. Alongside his loyal friends and the eccentric Professor Childermass, Johnny must journey into a terrifying unearthly realm to reclaim his father's life. This story masterfully uses the horror genre to externalize the internal monsters of grief and anxiety, providing a brave roadmap for middle-grade readers. While the spooky elements are intense, they serve a greater purpose: showing that love and friendship can provide the strength to face even the most daunting shadows. It is an excellent choice for 9 to 12 year olds who enjoy goosebumps but also need a safe space to process heavy family emotions.
Focuses on a parent in a coma and the child's fear of loss.
Atmospheric gothic horror, creepy ghosts, and a dark, unearthly shadow realm.
The book deals directly with the fear of parental death and the sterile, frightening atmosphere of hospitals. The approach is metaphorical, using a ghost as a stand-in for the 'theft' of a parent's presence by illness. The resolution is hopeful and restorative, though it acknowledges the trauma of the experience.
A middle-schooler who feels like their world is falling apart because of a family illness. This child likely enjoys ghost stories or 'Stranger Things' vibes but needs a story where the child hero actually succeeds in fixing the family crisis.
Read the scenes involving the 'shadow realm' (near the end) to ensure the horror level is appropriate for your child. It can be read cold, but discussing the 'what if' of the ghost vs. real medicine is helpful. A parent might choose this after hearing their child express feelings of guilt about a parent's illness or seeing the child withdraw into fearful silence during a hospital stay.
Younger readers (9) will focus on the scary monster and the cool gadgets/magic. Older readers (12) will better grasp the subtext of Johnny's deep-seated anxiety and his fear of being orphaned.
Unlike many books about illness that are strictly realistic and sad, this uses classic gothic horror to give the child a sense of power over a situation that normally leaves them powerless.
In the 1950s, Major Dixon (Johnny's father) collapses into a coma that doctors cannot explain. Johnny, sensing a supernatural cause, discovers a 'grinning ghost' is responsible. With the help of the curmudgeonly but brilliant Professor Childermass and his best friend Fergie, Johnny enters a shadow world to confront the entity and pull his father back to the land of the living.
This overview was generated by AI based on the book's content and reviews, and may not capture every nuance.
Your experience helps other parents find the right book.
Sign in to write a review










