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Groosham Grange (1988)

Groosham Grange (1988)

Book Info

Genre
Rating
3.76 of 5 Votes: 2
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ISBN
0744583446 (ISBN13: 9780744583441)
Language
English
Publisher
walker books ltd

About book Groosham Grange (1988)

I thought this book was very captivating and intriguing as it was focused around David Eliot's disappointing schooling experiences that led him to a paranormal world. After getting expelled for poor conduct he is offered a place at Groosham Grange, however this proposal was not by coincidence. On route to his new school, he befriends Jill and Jeffrey and through their discussion it seems that they had each received a letter with differing information to portray this school ideally for their parents. The experience of getting to Groosham Grange was a terrifying and eye opening journey for each child. Upon arrival, they had a pact made to stick together in order to escape. Their fears increased rapidly when they met their teachers, none of which seemed ordinary and after different discoveries their alarm escalated that things were not normal in the school. Through several incidents, findings, ease droppings, Jill and David plotted their escape for help as they knew they were in a place where everything was abnormal. However, on all attempts they failed and on their 13th birthdays, they were converted to the magical side at Groosham Grange.This book would be best suited to children age nine and up.It uses simple and informative language which engages the reader and sets the finish of each chapter with the suspense of wanting to continue.It would be a very appropriate book to aid in creative writing as the story is very imaginative through unusual events and unique characters. It is based around a school which will allow children to relate to it easily, therefore engaging their attention. I find that portraying the main friendship of the book as male/female is excellent to focus in on gender dimensions as primary school children are often male versus female but this book challenges that idealogy.

I picked this for a read-aloud for Logan (10), J.B. (8) and Soren (6). Logan gave it 4 stars, J.B. 4 1/3, and Soren 4 1/4. You can tell that Horowitz is a screen writer; there were so many passages at the beginning that read like a movie. Whenever we'd tell someone else about this book they'd say, "Now what movie was this?" The first part was also quite funny. And the whole thing was a bit demented. David Eliot, after being kicked out of his private school is sent to a new private school, Groosham Grange. They only get one day of vacation a year, and he and his two friends immediately start to become suspicious about the staff and other strange events. I can't say whether we'll continue this series. I'm a little bothered that David, the main character hasn't decided whether he'll be practicing black magic or white magic. Quote from the book--this is Mr. Kilgraw, the vampire speaking to David to convince him to join them in their witch coven school: "All right, I admit it. We are, frankly, evil...Mr. Fitch and Mr. Teagle have won awards for being evil...But what's so bad about being evil? We've never dropped an atom bomb on anyone. We've never polluted the environment or experimented on animals or cut back on entitlement programs for the disadvantaged. Our evil is rather agreeable. Why do you think there are so many books and movies about us? It's because people like us. We are actually rather pleasantly evil."

Do You like book Groosham Grange (1988)?

I read this book years and years ago. I just thought of it again this afternoon, but couldn't remember what it was called, so I ran off to Goodreads and lo! after some rooting, found out what it was called.Anthony Horowitz is a great writer who really shouldn't be writing for kids. His books kept me busy all through late elementary and middle school, and every one I read just blew my mind. I mean... so dark and so violent!So, a troubled, British boy goes off to a private school in a Gothic castle on a remote island, and the teachers and students are all witches and wizards... and it's not a Harry Potter knockoff. It was actually written four years before Harry Potter, and Horowitz seems to have The Wicker Man on his mind more than anything else. I'm not joking.This is pure 80's kid's horror in the vein of R. L. Stein, with lots of gross-out and shock-scares and an ending that'll have you sleeping with the covers over your head that night (assuming you're somewhere under the age of 14). And it's somehow much scarier today... as a kid picking this up and expecting another Harry Potter clone, I got the kind of twist that neither me nor the author could ever have expected.The shock I got is probably similar to the way the audiences of 1960 must have felt when their heroine got knifed 40 minutes into Psycho.Dark stuff, man - nothing a kid should be reading. And Horowitz Horros is even more horrifying and I read that at about the same time. It's no wonder I turned out a little weird.
—Brady

I loved this book! David is trapped in an insane world, going to an insane public school and living with his even more insane father. I was laughing out loud throughout most of this book, especially when his parents are described. It's just a fun book. I had fun reading it, and it seems like Horowitz had fun writing it.It did contain a LOT of similarities to Harry Potter (I've heard that JK Rowling read this book when it first came out). There were moving portraits, a werewolf teacher, etc. But, this is much more of a horror version and it's way shorter than Harry Potter.What works for the story is that the reader has a very good idea about what's going on at Groosham Grange while the characters live in denial about what their school actually teaches. It is somewhat predictable, but that just adds to the irony of the situation David finds himself in, so it works out. The only problem I had with this story was that, for as short as it is, it did drag a bit in the middle. Not for long, but enough for me to want a little more action going on. However, the ending is extremely satisfying. I would most definitely recommend this.
—Alyssa Archambo

I read this book for our local K-5th grade school. The front cover is scarier than the story. Which was good for me. I don't like scary books. Yikes! It starts out with David getting expelled from a boarding school. His parents are embarrassed and furious. His dad, in his anger, keeps hurting his mom. It's kind of shocking and funny at the same time, but it is also disrespectful. (Since fourth graders will be reading this, it concerns me a bit.) David is immediately sent to another school called Groosham Grange where his parents are not allowed to visit him and he can only visit them one day a year. All the teachers including the assistant headmaster are very strange and David knows something is going on and it scares him. He has come to the school with two other students. They team up, try to figure things out while they try to escape. One person dies and another person's body is "hurt badly" - yuck. I don't think there were any swear words. To my surprise, I really liked the end. I recommend this book to 12 & up.
—Connie

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