Spirit Hunters. By Ellen Oh.
Harper. $16.99.
The Supernormal Sleuthing Service
No. 1: The Lost Legacy. By Gwenda Bond & Christopher Rowe. Illustrations
by Glenn Thomas. Harper. $16.99.
Supernatural series starters
for preteens inevitably have certain things in common, including the
establishment of a team, the discovery of a mystery, and the explanation of why
the inevitably feckless adults cannot solve a problem that must be and eventually
is solved by the plucky young protagonists. But authors have to decide which of
two directions is better for the first book and planned later ones: the highly
serious and danger-filled one or the lighter and more-humorous type. Once that
decision is made, the first novels in supernaturally focused series proceed in
much the same way, with something bad happening, the supernatural nature of
that something gradually becoming clear, the necessity of overcoming the bad
thing by delving into its background developing, and the young team’s eventual
triumph against all apparent odds providing a suitable climax and entry point
for the next book.
Ellen Oh’s Spirit Hunters takes the serious path.
Harper Raine and her family move to a new house – actually an old house – that
immediately gives Harper the creeps. Her parents feel nothing, and her
hyper-logical Korean mother, Yuna, cannot even admit the possibility of
anything outrĂ©. Then Harper’s younger brother, Michael, starts behaving more
and more strangely, in ways so obvious that the obliviousness of the adults
becomes increasingly hard to swallow. Harper, sensitive and increasingly
worried, becomes more and more alarmed. But Harper herself has a history that
leads her parents to disbelieve her when she tries to tell them what she thinks
is going on: she had a mental breakdown of some sort (she does not really
remember what happened), was institutionalized for a time (she remembers little
of that), and she is accused of eventually starting a fire (she is pretty sure
she did not). Slowly but surely, Harper recalls bits and pieces of her earlier
life, including the existence of her longtime friend, Rose, who happens to be a
ghost living in a mirror. Harper and Rose are two members of the
supernatural-perceiving team here; the third is Dayo, a new (and living) friend
whom Harper has met in Washington, D.C., where the book takes place. Oh’s story
becomes rather convoluted: there is a revelation about an evil ghost of a
child, and that is the ghost causing problems for Michael; but there is a
puppet master, an even-more-evil ghost, manipulating the evil child ghost, and
it turns out that Harper must get rid of both of them to save her brother. How
can she do that? Her Grandma Lee – from whom Yuna is deeply and apparently
permanently estranged – turns out to be a mudang,
a spirit hunter, and Harper has inherited the ability to be one as well (hence
the plural title of the series). But, in a twist that is not fully believable
even for fantasy, Harper herself must handle the exorcism of both ghosts
afflicting Michael, and the puppet-master ghost, portrayed as super-powerful,
is beaten much too easily by Harper even though this ghost is able to prevent
Harper from getting help from yet another ghost who is a supposedly
super-strong spirit helper of Grandma Lee. Of course, the explanation of
Harper’s success is that she has such amazingly deep, if untrained, abilities
as a spirit hunter, and those will be explored in future series entries. There
is also a rather uneasy rapprochement between Yuna and Grandma Lee at the
book’s end. All of the currents, cross-currents and counter-currents get a bit
in each other’s way here, and the various ghostly manifestations are the
entirely usual stuff of spooky movies (unreal fire, oozing walls and all that).
Still, Harper is a character whom readers will be interested in meeting again,
and the way her serious past personal troubles turn out to be keys to her
future spirit-hunter success is an attractive element of the book – as is its
slightly exotic Korean background. What the book lacks, clearly intentionally,
is any sort of leavening humor at all: Spirit
Hunters is all tension and intensity.
Not so The Supernormal Sleuthing Service. This is a book that is not quite
sure whether it wants to be a lark or a sort-of-serious work; it ends up not
quite being either. Wife-and-husband coauthors Gwenda Bond and Christopher Rowe
start with an odd letter to central character Stephen Lawson from his
grandmother, Nanette, known as Chef Nana, about her work at a hotel in New York
that, at least according to the letter, has some very strange clientele. Then Bond and Rowe switch to Chef Nana’s
funeral, where weird things happen to Stephen because his father has never
bothered to tell him anything whatsoever about his mother (who has long been
missing) or the Lawson family or much of anything else. The father’s neglect
almost lands Stephen in supernatural hot water, because it turns out that his
mother is a fey and a ruling member of the supernatural realm (here called
“supernormal”; hence the series title). The specific fey Stephen encounters are
the bad guys here, trying to get him to join their ranks by hook or by crook;
when he refuses their initial clumsy overture, they steal a Lawson family
cookbook (yes, a cookbook) that is full of all sorts of magic and history and
whatnot. So Stephen has to form the “sleuthing service” of the title with “a
short boy about Stephen’s age” with “close-cropped red hair and glasses” (that
would be Ivan, son of two supernormal-world detectives) and “a girl with a
high, curly ponytail and a flouncy black dress” (that would be Sofia, daughter
of high-ranking supernormal-world diplomatic types). The assembled three-young-person
team proves strikingly inept, largely because the kids disobey pretty much
every rule the adults have set down at the hotel, which is a gathering place
for supernormals of all sorts and a location where a truce is permanently in
effect. The kids make wrong decision after wrong decision, and Bond and Rowe
are fairly clumsy about it: the team members think they are a lot smarter and
more-aware than they are, and their ineptness trips them up time and again; and
then Stephen (in particular) gets terribly distressed because he may cost his
father his newfound job and prestige (the fey who stole the Lawson cookbook did
so while disguised as Stephen). Misstep follows misstep until eventually, of
course, the kids succeed, but the authors so obviously and so frequently push
events in the direction in which they want them to go that the book feels
clumsily and forcibly crafted rather than carried through on the basis of
either plot or character. The humorous elements are actually the best ones
here: there is a highly self-conscious talking elevator that steals the scene
every time it appears, having more personality than the three team members put
together; there are croquet-playing and somewhat accident-prone gargoyles; and
there is a delightful dragon character who is obsessed with art and absolutely delighted
by Stephen, a budding artist who discovers accidentally that some figures in
his drawings actually move around (a fey ability that he apparently inherited
from his mother). On the whole, The
Supernormal Sleuthing Service is silly and light enough to be a pleasant
read for preteens who are not especially concerned with plot or
characterization niceties. Its very basic good (Lawsons) vs. evil (many fey)
plot will certainly be carried into later series entries, as will the
camaraderie of the three-person sleuthing group. And hopefully the elevator,
gargoyles and dragon will get bigger roles in future installments.
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