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The House of Months and Years

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A girl must stop the Boogeyman living in her home from stealing her family's warmest memories in this "eerie and enchanting story" (Publishers Weekly) from the author of Flights and Chimes and Mysterious Times and The Accidental Afterlife of Thomas Marsden.
When her distant aunt and uncle die, Amelia Howling is forced to move into their home when they leave her parents in charge of their children. Her parents assure her that it will be like having a grand adventure with three new siblings, but Amelia is not convinced. Luckily, the house is large, filled with nooks and crannies perfect for hiding from her cousins.

But even with all the nooks and crannies, the rumbling and crumbling rooms are more sinister than they seem. The house was built years ago by a creature named Horatio, and he's been waiting for the perfect human inhabitant: Amelia. Horatio has the power to travel through time and memories, and lures Amelia into his world. The memories of children, he told her, were the best, and Amelia agreed—her cousins were full of good memories. Until she noticed that once she and Horatio visited a memory, it was gone forever. And she had been stealing the good memories of her cousins and their parents without even noticing!

Horrified and scared, Amelia lets her cousins in on her secret, and asks them for help. Together, they must race through time to recover their minds and break the perfect clockwork of the evil Calendar House.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 21, 2016
      Amelia Howling, 10, resents her family’s move into a curious old house in order to care for her recently orphaned cousins. Beyond feeling ignored and angry, Amelia can’t shake the sensation that she’s being watched, or that the house almost seems sentient. After Amelia learns that the house is an architectural oddity known as a calendar house—with rooms, floors, windows, and other elements that correspond to months, days, seasons, etc.—the mysterious presence manifests as Horatio, the house’s builder. Horatio explains that the house can transport her through time, whisks Amelia away on adventures to medieval periods and pirate ships, then invites her to build her own calendar house and live forever, traveling through time. In a clever twist, the very magic that fuels Amelia’s adventures is drawn from memory and emotion, tethering Amelia to her family and highlighting the importance of empathy amid difficult situations. Trevayne (The Accidental Afterlife of Thomas Marsden) creates an eerie and enchanting story in which an unhappy girl’s discontentment nearly blinds her to the dangerous forces that surround her. Ages 8–12. Agent: Brooks Sherman, Bent Agency.

    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2016
      An awkward protagonist takes on an unconventional "haunted" house in this dark middle-grade fantasy from England. Of course 10-year-old Amelia felt very sorry for her cousins after their parents died. But it was still completely unfair that she would have to say goodbye to her own best friend, leave her own perfect home, even share her own parents, and come to live in this horrid old house with 12 rooms and four stories. However, she soon discovers that the house is special, and once she meets not-a-ghost Horatio, who takes her on the most amazing adventures across space and time...why, that makes Amelia special too. But is the price of magic worth it? Amelia's voice--prickly, vain, selfish, book-loving, desperately lonely, and almost as clever as she thinks she is--dominates the narrative. While ethnicity is never mentioned, every character appears to be white and professional class. As clues to the house's real nature and Horatio's secret agenda slowly accumulate behind the exciting (if historically inaccurate) time-traveling set pieces, a sense of menacing dread develops subtly through sinister metaphors and gruesome imagery until it is almost too late. If Amelia's change of heart feels abrupt and her cousins' sudden cooperation unbelievable, her solution to their dire peril is both quick-witted and satisfying. A just-scary-enough adventure that might send readers to investigate more about real-life "calendar houses" like Amelia's new one. (Horror. 8-12)

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      January 1, 2017

      Gr 4-6-Ten-year-old Amelia Howling's life changes forever when her uncle and aunt are killed in a car accident and her parents take custody of her three cousins. Despite Amelia's protestations, the Howlings move into the cousins' home, and though Amelia doesn't want to be there, she can't help but notice something strange about the house. Horatio, a man who appears from the shadows, tells Amelia the secrets of this special home: it's a Calendar House with 12 rooms, 365 trees, a floor for each season, and many more symbolic elements related to time. The immortal Horatio can travel to any place and time through the door in the attic, and he wants to share this ability with Amelia as his apprentice. At first Amelia is thrilled at the attention, the adventures, and the secret, but she soon learns that all is not as wonderful as it first appears. This engaging, well-written fantasy highlights the importance of memories and relationships. At its heart is Amelia, whose feelings of frustration and loneliness are palpable, and discerning readers will see that it is these very feelings that allow Horatio to convince her to join him. The change in tone when Amelia realizes the truth is stark, and the tension builds to an exciting climax; an epilogue hints that readers may not have seen the last of the Calendar House. VERDICT A solid middle grade fantasy with an intriguing setting and a relatable protagonist.-Amanda Raklovits, Champaign Public Library, IL

      Copyright 2017 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2017
      After the tragic deaths of her aunt and uncle, Amelia and her parents move out of their own home and in with Amelia's orphaned cousins. Nudiustertian House (nudiustertian meaning "relating to the day before yesterday") is old and peculiar, and it gives Amelia the sensation of being watched. Her new room is always too hot, the basement is freezing, and the house seems to be stealing her dreams. Clever Amelia begins to study the house, but she doesn't begin to learn its secrets until its true owner, Horatio, reveals himself. Nudiustertian House appears to be a "calendar house": four floors (one for each season), twelve rooms, seven fireplaces, fifty-two windows, and twenty-four doors, the last one opening onto a blank brick wall--but through that door, Horatio explains, he can travel to the past and future, and he wants Amelia to become his apprentice. Trevayne (The Accidental Afterlife of Thomas Marsden, rev. 7/15) makes her disclosures with tantalizing slowness; the opening chapters have the feel of a first-class ghost story, and even after Horatio's appearance, many of Amelia's questions continue to go unanswered. Contrasted with the otherworldly goings-on behind the twenty-fourth door, Amelia's interactions with her parents and bereaved cousins are purely human and relatable. Exploring the ties between memory, grief, and time, Trevayne does finally reveal what Horatio is and what he actually wants from Amelia and her family--but at that point it just might be too late. anita l. burkam

      (Copyright 2017 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • Booklist

      December 1, 2016
      Grades 4-7 The mystery house gets a makeover in Trevayne's finespun account of a girl finding her feet after being uprooted from her happy life. The unexpected deaths of 10-year-old Amelia's aunt and uncle result in an unwanted move to her orphaned cousins' bizarre old houseone with a freezing basement, sweltering bedrooms, and a door that opens onto a brick wall. Angry at having to leave her home and friends behind, and at having to share her parents with three other kids, Amelia retreats into books and the seclusion of her bedroom. One day a lurking shadow reveals itself to be a man named Horatio, who explains that they are living in a Calendar House, which has the power to transport her anywhere in time. Amelia's spirits are lifted by her time-traveling adventures with Horatio, but eventually it becomes clear that such excursions come at a terrible cost. What could have been a breezy fantasy gains heft from Amelia's personal struggles. Her dilemmas will resonate with readers, while the house's Narnialike appeal will capture their imaginations.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

Formats

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.4
  • Lexile® Measure:790
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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