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I love spooky stories...especially tales about haunted houses. I read just about every ghost story I come across, even children's books! The Scary Places series takes spooky locations like Haunted Houses, old Cemeteries and other scary places and turns them into great only-slightly-spooky stories for kids! There are 32 books in the series.

Haunted Houses by Dinah Williams gathers 12 ghost stories about spooky dwellings. Each story is illustrated with full-color photos and artwork. The stories are age appropriate for elementary or middle grade kids. The photos are eye-catching so this series might be a way to entice a reluctant reader to read. The series could be used in a classroom as supplementary reading or to read out loud to the class before assigning a spooky writing assignment. :) The stories are popular, well-known ghostly tales about places like the Winchester House, Lizzie Borden's House and other well known haunted locations. The back of the book has a glossary, Bibliography, a suggested reading list and a web link for more information.

All in all, a fun spooky book for kids (and adults who love ghost stories!)
 
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JuliW | otra reseña | Nov 22, 2020 |
It was cool to read about a bunch of haunting's that happened around the world, but this book wasn't as "Dark" as i thought it would be. It just kept talking about the haunting's and not really the information on how they became ghosts. But other than that i really liked the book because there was still some scary information and pretty cool history behind the houses and how they were all built. My favorite mansion/haunting was definitely "Ax murder at an Architect's home" because it actually made me feel bad for Frank Lloyd Wright sense he lost his wife and children. But i also don't know why it was called "Ax murder at an Architect's home" because there was no ax murder.
 
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CDrumm.ELA7 | Oct 29, 2019 |
great book about the secrets of Walt Disney world! some puzzles and quizzes are included in this book just so you know.
 
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Abrahamray | otra reseña | May 13, 2019 |
Ever since Disneyland opened in Anaheim, California in 1955, Disney's Imagineers have worked nonstop to make sure every family enjoys a magical experience. Secrets of Disneyland reveals tons of behind-the-scenes tidbits about the theme park, along with fascinating facts that make it the Happiest Place on Earth. Filled with bright photos, fun quizzes, and information on everything from Main Street, U.S.A. to Mickey's Toontown and Frontierland, it's the perfect guide for planning the perfect visit!
Where else can you:
- Visit a haunted mansion that's home to 999 spooks?
- Plummet five stories in a log flume?
- Fly over London in a pirate ship?
- See 1,000 fountains that can shoot water up to 200 feet into the air?
 
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LynneQuan | Sep 15, 2017 |
This is a non-fiction book about Abandoned Amusement Parks.
To Tokyo,New Jersey, Louisiana.
Rumor has it, that ghosts are still on the ride that they had died on.
Some rides had been taken down but some are still there, rotting.
Some have died from technical difficulties, but sometimes it is uncertain.

This book is a interesting book to me.
Some might think this is scary ,but it is not.
Real facts of people dying on rides for a uncertain reason.
I give this book 5 stars.
And that is my opinion on this book.
 
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amariyanna.tb1 | Sep 26, 2016 |
Very entertaining and I even learned a couple things, though I worked at Disneyland for years and have been backstage at WDW on many occasions.½
 
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KatKealy | otra reseña | Feb 2, 2016 |
These are great books for the young adult reader in your library who loves scary books!
 
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cinnamonowl | otra reseña | Jul 7, 2011 |
"Imagine being all alone in a spooky graveyard at night..." Middle grade readers who are fascinated with the supernatural will enjoy the chilly thrills provided by this entry in the "Scary Places" series from Bearport Publishing. Author Dinah Williams introduces intrepid readers to the "creepy creatures of the night" whose remains are to be found in "11 spooky cemeteries." Each entry focuses on a single site, and its attendant spirit or legend. Staples of the supernatural, such as vampires and ghosts, are included here, as are lesser-known phantoms like the Pontianak of southeast Asia.

Williams tells her brief tales in simple language, which keeps the tone of each story from becoming too creepy. Questions within the text reach out to jolt the reader's imagination ("Could Mercy have become a vampire? Was she sucking the life out of Edwin?") into further engagement with the story. Like a good storyteller, she also warns readers under the spell of a story ("Don't let her get close!" ) but uses such exclamations sparingly.

This entertaining "travelogue" of ghastly sites employs good elements of design as well as engaging story-telling to keep the tone of this volume cheerfully spooky. Stock photos and photos from horror movies lend the work a feeling of "reality," although a few may be a little too scary for elementary students below fourth grade. The no-nonsense fonts are easy to read and appropriately sized. Blood-red chapter titles and accompanying introductory text are framed in a Victorian-looking gravestone motif featuring a winged skull. Sidebars are placed in a similar, more subdued, skull-and-bones frame. Brief identifications appear next to photos in a patch of hazy mist. The eye is drawn across each page by a subtle background of leafless trees.

Lending academic credence to Williams' efforts is the title-page reference to Troy Taylor, president of the American Ghost Society, whom Williams consulted for this work. Also included are a map of "Spooky Cemeteries Around the World," a glossary, bibliography, a brief list of books for further reading, and a recommendation to view the publisher's web site for online exploration of Scary Places. Highly recommended for middle-upper elementary libraries.
 
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karmah | otra reseña | Dec 28, 2009 |
According to its opening pages, "in this book, you'll meet a voodoo queen, ghosts who won't rest in peace, an ancient mummy, and other creepy creatures of the night."

Spooky Cemeteries is a compilation of short pieces on 11 of the world's most famously creepy burial grounds, including the Catacombs of France (home to 6 million skeletons and featured in the 39 Clues mystery, Maze of Bones), Tutankhamun's Tomb in Egypt, and Westminster Burying Grounds in Baltimore, Maryland, the final resting place of Edgar Allan Poe (whose 200th anniversary we celebrate this year).

More factual than fantastic, most entries contains the local legend or lore,

"She then turns into an ugly monster with long teeth and red eyes before killing them. She hides in the tall trees and flies through the air. Don't let her get close! ... Some people think that a Pontianak is nothing more than a large owl. The faces of these birds can look human when they swoop out of the darkness,"

actual photographs of the location, dramatized photos or artwork depicting the ghost or relevant artifacts, and a text box containing interesting facts,

"Most cemeteries in New Orleans have tombs where the dead can be buried above ground. Why? About half of the city is below sea level. If coffins were buried in the soggy ground, they would float up out of their graves."

A table of contents, map, glossary, bibliography, index, and suggested reading round out this scholarly look at an unscholarly topic. Spooky Cemeteries is part of the Scary Places series.

Spooky Cemeteries was the 2009 winner of the Children's Choice Book Awards 3rd and 4th Grade Book of the Year. A real kid-pleaser! Not too gory, but just spooky enough!
 
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shelf-employed | otra reseña | Jun 30, 2009 |
 
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pammayfield | Oct 29, 2022 |
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