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The Ghosts of Ashbury High

The Ghosts of Ashbury High by Jaclyn Moriarty High School Levine/Scholastic 486 pp. 6/10 978-0-545-06972-4 $18.99 g
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RedReviewStarMoriarty has found a winning formula for her thoroughly enjoyable, deceptively simple Ashbury High novels: she takes a clever, sophisticated epistolary format, adds sparkling, effervescent wit, and applies them to a mash-up of literary genres. Here she puts her eclectic cast of characters through the paces of gothic fiction and ghost story. Emily and Lydia (from The Year of Secret Assignments, rev. 3/04) return to narrate their senior year; their accounts are balanced by Toby, who is infatuated with—or possessed by—an Irish convict deported to Australia long ago, and Riley, a former Brookfield student with a dark past. In her endearingly inquisitive way, Emily becomes obsessed with Amelia and Riley, the mysterious new couple; the potential reunion of Lydia and Seb (following a premature break-up); and the ghost that has been haunting the music rooms. As Moriarty's inspired silliness begins to yield up the novel's mysteries, it becomes clear that there is some kind of relationship between the contemporary romances and the historical ones. There's a lot of plot to untangle here, but The Ghosts of Ashbury High should satisfy diehard fans and bring new ones into the fold. JONATHAN HUNT
Gr 8 Up—This Australian author adds another volume to her sequence of novels centered around a private high school. When two mysterious new scholarship students begin their senior year at Ashbury High, suspicions arise. Amelia and Riley are clearly a couple with an unknown past, and Emily Thompson is determined to find out their secrets. Em is also convinced that there is a ghost haunting Ashbury, and with the (sometimes) help of her friends Lydia and Cassie, she makes the new couple and the ghost her projects for the year. Told in multiple voices through essays written by the students for their senior exam on gothic literature, emails, blog entries, and scholarship-committee meeting notes, the plot moves slowly with numerous side stories woven throughout. They all add up to tell several interconnected stories from a variety of perspectives in an imaginative manner. There is an air of mystery as readers wonder if there really is a ghost and exactly what Riley's and Amelia's past secrets are, but, overall, the suspense doesn't carry the story. Inclusions of humorous gothic elements throughout are pluses along with the ideas of giving second chances and leaving one's past behind. Readers expecting a spine-tingling tale of ghosts and intrigue are likely to be disappointed; this is more of an examination of high school friendships and social life. Those willing to stick with the sometimes slow-moving narrative will be satisfied in the end.—Gina Bowling, South Gibson County High School, Medina, TN
As in The Year of Secret Assignments, Moriarty adds effervescent wit to a sophisticated epistolary format. Here Emily and Lydia narrate their senior year; their accounts are balanced by Toby, who is infatuated with--or possessed by--an Irish convict, and Riley, a former Brookfield student with a dark past. Moriarty has found a winning formula for her thoroughly enjoyable Ashbury High novels.

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