For Ages
8 to 12

Adelaide Foss, Maggie Borland, and Beatrice Alfred are known by their classmates at Widowsbury's Madame Gertrude's School for Girls as "scary children." Unfairly targeted because of their peculiarities—Adelaide has an uncanny resemblance to a werewolf, Maggie is abnormally strong, and Beatrice claims to be able to see ghosts—the girls spend a good deal of time isolated in the school's inhospitable library facing detention. But when a number of people mysteriously begin to disappear in Widowsbury, the girls work together, along with Steffen Weller, son of the cook at Rudyard School for Boys, to find out who is behind the abductions. Will they be able to save Widowsbury from a sinister 12-year-old curse?

An Excerpt fromSkary Childrin and the Carousel of Sorrow

Chapter One
New-Librarian Day
There was once, in the Pernicious Valley, a strange little town by the name of Widowsbury. It wasn’t marked on any map. No roads led in or out of it. Only by train could one reach this forgotten place, but few who knew of it ever dared. The engineers spoke of ghosts in the hills, and they called these hills the Devil’s Thimbles.
Just outside the Thimbles, at the point where the highway ended, was a sign that a vandal had altered to read if you lived here, you’d regret it by now. No one ever bothered to fix it. There wasn’t much point, and anyway, it was true. Widowsbury was dreadfully cursed.
But even the most dreadfully cursed places were not always so.
There was a time when Widowsbury was the Plum Pie Capital of the World. The skies were still blue in those days. Colorful gardens decorated each storybook house. Laughter and music drifted from the square. City folk would come for the famous springtime parades and say, “What a delightful little town. Perhaps…

Under the Cover