The night gardener

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Average Rating
Publisher
Varies, see individual formats and editions
Publication Date
2014.
Language
English

Description

A New York Times bestseller, Jonathan Auxier’s The Night Gardener is a Victorian ghost story with shades of Washington Irving and Henry James. More than just a spooky tale, it’s also a moral fable about human greed and the power of storytelling.  The Night Gardener follows two abandoned Irish siblings who travel to work as servants at a creepy, crumbling English manor house. But the house and its family are not quite what they seem. Soon the children are confronted by a mysterious spectre and an ancient curse that threatens their very lives.   With Auxier’s exquisite command of language, The Night Gardener is a mesmerizing read and a classic in the making.  Named A Best Book of the 21st Century (So Far) by Kirkus“Storytelling and the secret desires of the heart wind together in this atmospheric novel that doubles as a ghost tale.” —School Library Journal, starred review “Lots of creepiness, memorable characters, a worthy message, Auxier’s atmospheric drawings and touches of humor amid the horror make this cautionary tale one readers will not soon forget.” —Kirkus, starred review  Don't Miss These Other Books by Jonathan Auxier:

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Contributors
ISBN
9781419711442
9781613126608
141971144

Table of Contents

From the Book

pt. 1. Arrivals. Storyteller at the crossroads
The silent trees
Miss Penny
The help
Portrait of a lady
The figure in the fog
Pit and pockets
Master of the house
The room at the top of the stairs
Footsteps
Chamber pots
The stationery box
A visit from Fig and Stubbs
Catch as catch can
The other thing
The garden in the woods
The night man
A rude awakening
Roots
Behind the door
pt. 2. Pursuits. Special delivery
Sweets
Doctor Crouch
Cold hands, warm heart
The pallor
Horse apples
Ichor
Asleep
To market
A story bought, a story sold
The legend of the Night Gardener
Fruit
Collapse
Leeches and lizards
A spirited debate
Traps
Camera obscura
Shears
The broken bough
pt. 3. Departures. The last story
Alone in the dark
Return to the Sourwoods
Body of evidence
Flight
Unwelcome guests
Trust
Comeuppance
Hide-and-go-seek
Lamp oil
Moonlight
The hero and the damsel
Courage
The conflagration
Ashes
What happened next
Storyteller at the crossroads.

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Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Curious young readers with a taste for creepiness can explore the chilling, unintended consequences of a wish fulfilled in each of these gripping and atmospheric horror stories. -- Rebecca Honeycutt
Young fans of ghost stories will be delightfully spooked by these scary and atmospheric tales in which children face cursed places guarded by a creepy, ghostly man. -- Angela Davis
Haunting and complex, these historical fantasy books will reward readers looking for richly-drawn confrontations between good and evil. The Boneshaker takes place in 1913 America, while The Night Gardener is set in Victorian England; both share an eerie, gothic tone. -- Rebecca Honeycutt
With touches of humor and connections to nature, courageous girls in dilapidated houses, which are cursed with life-stealing inhabitants, propel these atmospheric, plot-driven horror stories. Delving into the past, Carrefour Curse has a contemporary setting while Night Gardener's is Victorian. -- NoveList Advisor
Each of these scary, atmospheric historical novels features a girl of Irish ancestry transplanted to a haunted estate as she copes with death. Dialect-filled, Gardener's courageous Molly is an oral storyteller while Essie puts her fears down in writing. -- NoveList Advisor
Orphaned siblings land in haunted houses in these fast-paced, attention-grabbing Gothic mysteries, which are limned with death. While The Night Gardener is lyrical and literary, The Monsters of Rookhaven is richly descriptive and complex. -- NoveList Advisor
Although The Screaming Staircase has a more adventurous tone than the atmospheric, allusion-filled Night Gardener, readers looking for scary, fast-paced stories of brave children and haunted houses may enjoy both. -- Autumn Winters
Although Emily is adopted (The Haunting) while Molly becomes a servant (The Night Gardener), both orphans find something ominous about their new homes and the people who live in them in each of these atmospheric and scary historical horror stories. -- Angela Davis
City's Cass and Night's Molly are targeted by malevolent ghosts in these spooky reads set in the countryside of the UK. Both stories feature atmospheric scares and fast-paced adventure. -- Stephen Ashley
From strange footprints to books with changing words, both Molly (Gardener) and Elizabeth know something is amiss in their new manor homes in these scary tales. Elizabeth searches for a long-missing aunt, while Molly faces off with an evil spirit. -- Stephen Ashley
Creepy old houses harbor supernatural soul-stealers in these tantalizingly terrifying fantasy books. Though both stories are lightened by moments of humor, they're best suited for readers who like a good scare. -- Rebecca Honeycutt
Children take jobs at spooky old mansions and deal with wealthy supernatural bad guys in these creepy, atmospheric novels that will please young horror fans. -- NoveList Contributor

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Both authors write absorbing fantasy adventures featuring exaggerated characters and plucky orphans in grim situations that are often tempered by humor in the writing. Lemony Snicket's middle grade novels are consistently darkly humorous adventures while Jonathan Auxier writes in a range of genres from adventure to horror. -- NoveList Contributor
Fantasy authors Jonathan Auxier and Cornelia Funke craft imaginative, magical worlds and pit their gutsy characters against larger-than-life villains and grim situations. -- NoveList Contributor
Both Jonathan Auxier and Brandon Mull craft imaginative magical worlds and send courageous, relatable characters on fast-paced adventures in their atmospheric fantasy adventure stories. Both authors use witty humor and well-crafted dialogue in their suspenseful novels. -- NoveList Contributor
Although both Jonathan Auxier and Ronald Smith write in multiple genres, readers who enjoy scary stories will delight in both authors' eerie horror offerings. Both authors' detailed settings (whether historic or modern) and dialect-filled writing contribute to the creepy mood of their stories -- NoveList Contributor
These authors' works have the appeal factors scary, and they have the subjects "imaginary creatures," "storytelling," and "rescues."
These authors' works have the appeal factors scary, and they have the genre "horror"; the subjects "imaginary creatures," "mythical creatures," and "siblings"; and characters that are "sympathetic characters" and "authentic characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors plot-driven and lyrical, and they have the genre "fantasy fiction"; and the subjects "orphans," "imaginary creatures," and "magic."
These authors' works have the genre "historical fantasy"; and the subjects "imaginary creatures," "mythical creatures," and "adventure."
These authors' works have the appeal factors scary, action-packed, and whimsical, and they have the genre "fantasy fiction"; the subjects "imaginary creatures," "mythical creatures," and "friendship"; and characters that are "sympathetic characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors scary, whimsical, and wordplay-filled, and they have the genre "horror"; the subjects "orphans," "imaginary creatures," and "mythical creatures"; and characters that are "sympathetic characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors scary and action-packed, and they have the genres "fantasy fiction" and "gateway fantasy"; and the subjects "imaginary creatures," "mythical creatures," and "magic."
These authors' works have the genre "fantasy fiction"; and the subjects "imaginary creatures," "mythical creatures," and "adventure."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Auxier's second novel is part morality play, part ghost story, and all enthralling. Molly and Kip are Irish orphans seeking employment in England after their parents die in a shipwreck. Brave, quick-thinking Molly is solicitous of her younger disabled brother, and she feels guilty because she has managed to hide the truth about their parents' death from him, spinning yarns about their travels and promising they will all be together soon. Molly finds them work as servants in a distinctly creepy, isolated country manor where a huge tree growing into the house is casting a spell over the inhabitants, among other mysterious goings-on. Auxier, like Molly, is a born storyteller, and he weaves a tale that will keep readers glued to the page. The outcomes may be expected, but the journeys are riveting, while the predictability conjures the comfort and satisfaction of a classic fairy tale.--Carton, Debbie Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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School Library Journal Review

Gr 4-6-Storytelling and the secret desires of the heart wind together in this atmospheric novel that doubles as a ghost tale. Irish immigrants to England, Molly and Kip make their way to the Windsor house in search of employment. The great house stands in the shadow of a menacing tree, which locals speak of only in fearful whispers. Despite her young age and the warnings of a local storyteller, Molly uses the power of her own words to secure work, but soon realizes that all is not right in the house. Constance, Bertrand, Penny, and Alistair Windsor each struggle with personal demons, and strange footprints appear at night. A malevolent spirit, the Night Gardener, haunts the estate, dooming its inhabitants with foul dreams while the tree grants wishes to entrap the recipients. Molly and Kip must face their own dark secrets to release the Gardener's hold and end his evil enchantments. Auxier gives readers a spooky story with depth and dimension. Molly's whimsical tales illustrate life's essential lessons even as they entertain. As the characters face the unhealthy pull of the tree's allurements, they grow and change, revealing unexpected personality traits. Storytelling as a force to cope with life's challenges is subtly expressed and adds complexity to the fast-paced plot. Readers of Mary Downing Hahn or Peg Kehret's ghost novels will connect with the supernatural elements and the independent child protagonists of Auxier's tale of things that go bump in the night.-Caitlin Augusta, Stratford Library Association, CT (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Horn Book Review

"Riding atop the [cart's] bench were two children, a girl and a boy, both with striking red hair. The girl was named Molly, and the boy, her brother, was Kip. And they were riding to their deaths." Or so it seems. The siblings have landed in England during the midst of the Irish Potato Famine. Waiting for their parents to rejoin them, they have found work at the once-proud Windsor family's stately but decrepit mansion in the countryside. The house appears to exert a malevolent force on its inhabitants, and the children gradually become aware of this evil and its increasing danger, most especially the Night Gardener, who saps the living of their life force to feed the wish-granting tree. All proper scary stories require a spooky, menacing atmosphere, and Auxier (Peter Nimble and His Fantastic Eyes) delivers the goods with his precise descriptions of the gothic setting and teasing hints of mystery and suspense. While the book partakes of many familiar tropes and themes -- orphans and their cruel taskmasters, bullies transformed by kindness, the slippery slope of greed and wantonness, the power of storytelling -- there's enough of a fresh spin on them that readers should be captivated. jonathan hunt (c) Copyright 2014. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

Replete with engaging figurative language and literary allusions to works ranging from the Bible to Paradise Lost, Auxier's creepy Victorian ghost story is an allegory on greed and the power of stories. Fourteen-year-old Molly and her younger brother, Kip, orphans fleeing the Irish famine, seek work in England. The destitute siblings become servants at the Windsor estate, at the center of which is a decrepit house entwined with a huge and sinister tree. Although warned that this place contains something ominous that changes people, they are unprepared for the evil they encounter. The master, mistress and their two children grow pale and thin; their eyes and hair blacken. Entering the forbidden room at the top of the stairs, Molly finds a knothole in the treea knothole that produces whatever one wishes for (money, jewels, sweets). The price is a piece of the petitioner's soul. Muddy footprints and dead leaves in the house attest to an evil nocturnal visitor, the titular Night Gardener, who wipes the sweat of fear from their nightmare-ridden brows to water the tree. In a heart-stopping climax, Molly and Kip attempt to stop this specter and the ancient curse. Lots of creepiness, memorable characters, a worthy message, Arrasmith's atmospheric drawings and touches of humor amid the horror make this cautionary tale one readers will not soon forget. (Fantasy. 10-14)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

Auxier's second novel is part morality play, part ghost story, and all enthralling. Molly and Kip are Irish orphans seeking employment in England after their parents die in a shipwreck. Brave, quick-thinking Molly is solicitous of her younger disabled brother, and she feels guilty because she has managed to hide the truth about their parents' death from him, spinning yarns about their travels and promising they will all be together soon. Molly finds them work as servants in a distinctly creepy, isolated country manor where a huge tree growing into the house is casting a spell over the inhabitants, among other mysterious goings-on. Auxier, like Molly, is a born storyteller, and he weaves a tale that will keep readers glued to the page. The outcomes may be expected, but the journeys are riveting, while the predictability conjures the comfort and satisfaction of a classic fairy tale. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
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School Library Journal Reviews

Gr 4–6—Storytelling and the secret desires of the heart wind together in this atmospheric novel that doubles as a ghost tale. Irish immigrants to England, Molly and Kip make their way to the Windsor house in search of employment. The great house stands in the shadow of a menacing tree, which locals speak of only in fearful whispers. Despite her young age and the warnings of a local storyteller, Molly uses the power of her own words to secure work, but soon realizes that all is not right in the house. Constance, Bertrand, Penny, and Alistair Windsor each struggle with personal demons, and strange footprints appear at night. A malevolent spirit, the Night Gardener, haunts the estate, dooming its inhabitants with foul dreams while the tree grants wishes to entrap the recipients. Molly and Kip must face their own dark secrets to release the Gardener's hold and end his evil enchantments. Auxier gives readers a spooky story with depth and dimension. Molly's whimsical tales illustrate life's essential lessons even as they entertain. As the characters face the unhealthy pull of the tree's allurements, they grow and change, revealing unexpected personality traits. Storytelling as a force to cope with life's challenges is subtly expressed and adds complexity to the fast-paced plot. Readers of Mary Downing Hahn or Peg Kehret's ghost novels will connect with the supernatural elements and the independent child protagonists of Auxier's tale of things that go bump in the night.—Caitlin Augusta, Stratford Library Association, CT

[Page 138]. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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