Also In This Series

The Bargaining

The fact that neither of her parents wants to deal with her is nothing new to Penny. She’s used to being discussed like a problem, a problem her mother has finally passed on to her father. What she hasn’t gotten used to is her stepmother…especially when she finds out that she’ll have to spend the summer with April in the remote woods of Washington to restore a broken-down old house.

Set deep in a dense forest, the old Carver House is filled with abandoned antique furniture, rich architectural details, and its own chilling past. The only respite Penny can find away from April’s renovations is in Miller, the young guy who runs the local general store. He’s her only chance at a normal, and enjoyable, summer.But Miller has his own connection to the Carver House, and it’s one that goes beyond the mysterious tapping Penny hears at her window, the handprints she finds smudging the glass panes, and the visions of children who beckon Penny to follow them into the dark woods. Miller’s past just might threaten to become the terror of Penny’s future….

Praise

[The Bargaining] rewards patient readers with both frightening action and emotional insight.

—Kirkus Reviews

The scary parts are truly terrifying, akin to old school Stephen King novels, not to be read before bedtime. Give to teens who claim they aren’t afraid of things that go bump in the night.

—School Library Journal

Teen horror aficionados will be happy to find a book that delivers on the chills they’re after.

—Booklist

Readers should be prepared to sleep with the light on after finishing this one.

—The Bulletin

Readers who enjoy spine-tingling horror with a twist of magical realism will enjoy this novel. The mystery of the Carver House is seldom predictable, keeping readers guessing what is behind the horrors of the North Woods far into the story line.

—VOYA