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The 13th Floor: A Ghost Story
The 13th Floor A Ghost Story
Author: Sid Fleischman, Peter Sis (Illustrator)
There's never a dull moment in the lives of twelve year old, newly orphaned Buddy and his lawyer sister, Liz. Their wild adventures begin when they receive a message on an answering machine from an ancestor named Abigail who has been dead three hundred years. She's being tried for witchcraft! Buddy and Liz find themselves on the thirteen...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780440412434
ISBN-10: 0440412439
Publication Date: 4/7/1997
Pages: 131
Reading Level: Ages 9-12
Rating:
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
 7

3.5 stars, based on 7 ratings
Publisher: Yearling
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Audio Cassette
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marika avatar reviewed The 13th Floor: A Ghost Story on + 20 more book reviews
Buddy Stebbins lives alone with his 23-year-old lawyer sister Liz after their parents are killed in a small plane crash. In an outlandish attempt to acquire money in order to pay back their father's debts, Liz and Buddy follow directions that are left on their answering machine by a mysterious ancestor, and inadvertently stumble back in time to the year 1692. Buddy is transported to a pirate ship captained by another of their ancestors, John Crackstone.

Liz and Buddy are entangled in a story that has everything- orphans, time travel, witchcraft, pirate ships, magic, and even ghosts. And, yet, even with all that hubbub woven throughout this story, it somehow fails to deliver. So much was squeezed into this chapter book, it felt as though all the parts were spread a little thin. Not that this was a terrible book, I just had a hard time feeling attached to the characters or invested in the action and I found myself comparing this book to others that were not so lacking. If you want a good book about orphans, check out The Thief Lord. If you'd like to read a fabulous kids' book about time travel, try A Wrinkle in Time. If it's witchcraft or magic you're looking for, any of the Harry Potter books will do nicely! Or Ella Enchanted (review coming), if you're looking for something a little dreamier. And, of course, ship drama can be found in The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle, which was the book that came to mind most often while reading The 13th Floor.

A note to Mr. Fleischman: Maybe a little less pirate ship and a little more magic next time. Or a little less orphans and a little more ghosts. Either way.


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