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In this first book in the Ghost Squad series, Danny Green has come to grips with the fact he's dead. His siblings, Jilly and Mike, at 8 and 10 are working their way through childhood problems without him. Then he meets Joe, Karen and Carlos....other ghosts who want desperately to talk to someone alive. The four ghosts figure out how to talk to Danny's friends from school -- Wacko and Buzz -- by using a word processor. They become.....(da dah daaaaaa!) The Ghost Squad! Joining together to solve crimes and mysteries, the ghosts and live nerdy kids work together to foil bullies, robbers and other nefarious sorts.

This story read like an old ABC After School Special. I loved it!

Published in 1984, this book is cute, but dated. I happened across a copy purely by accident and just had to read it. :) I'm a sucker for old OOP kids books. :) The story is a quick read and enjoyable. The group of friends are like an 80s version of the Scooby Doo Gang sans dog. Fun story. This is actually the first book in a series of six. I'm going to try to weasel up the other books online. I enjoyed this first one enough to want to read the rest. The outdated computer jargon alone made it worth it. I remember the first klunky word processors....nothing more than a glorified typewriter with those lovely glow in the dark green or street light orange letters glowing....and the accompanying loud, shaking, slowwwww dot matrix printers. The mental picture of two living boys leaning into their word processor to talk to four ghost kids while plotting how to foil some bullies and robbers made me smile. Just too fun a story to pass up!

E.W. Hildick wrote many other middle-grade books including the McGurk Mystery series and The Top-Flight Fully-Automated Junior High School Girl Detective (I absolutely have to find a copy of this book just for the title!). This series is a bit dated, but since 80s nostalgia is popular right now, the books would be a fun read for computer-loving middle grade students and adults. :) Updated a bit, this would make a cute premise for a kids' show on Disney Channel or Nickelodeon.

I looked around online a bit....there are plenty of used copies of this old OOP series floating around online for cheap. Definitely worth a read. Well-written, cute and enjoyable!
 
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JuliW | Nov 22, 2020 |
Retrieved a record: Bibliographic match uncertain.
 
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glsottawa | Apr 4, 2018 |
Alison McNair dreams of being an actress and a detective. In this story she gets a chance at a bit of both.

She and her sister Jeannie and her best friend Emmaline work together to solve the mystery that has involved Emmaline's father and may cost him his job. Was the crime pulled off by an organization or a lone perpatrator? Can their informant come through with the key clue to solve the mystery?

The girls take themselves seriously and seriously work to solve the mystery while unravelling the many clues and dead ends.
 
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ChazziFrazz | Jun 23, 2016 |
There is a short list of books that defines any person who is a reader. It varies from person to person but every list has its own story and each book on it will evoke a memory and a time period in that person's life.

On my list is The Active-Enzyme Lemon-Freshened Junior High School Witch by E.W. Hildick. It, for it's title alone, is the reason I've been keeping a lit of every book I've read since 1987. See, in elementary school, this book was one of the last ones I read, just as I was becoming an enthusiastic pleasure reader. I read it initially for the cover art and to a lesser degree, the goofy title. And while I tore through the book in about two days — because I was in the mood for a book about a girl my age being home sick (I had chicken pox, she had measles) and becoming a witch (no luck on my part).

By seventh grade, not six months after finishing the book, I realized I wanted to re-read it. Except there was a problem — a big one. I wasn't at my old school any more, and I couldn't remember the title of the book (except that it was long). I could remember that it was published by Dell Yearling (horse logo). What I could have done (and didn't) was ask the librarian at the new school if she could help me based on what I could remember. In the meantime, I decided I shouldn't run the risk of forgetting a title again. So I started a list (which after the advent of the world wide web, evolved into this book blog).

In my second year of junior high, fortune went my way in the form of a readers advisory display at the library. There among a bunch of other upper elementary school books (for the "Read it again!" display), was The Active-Enzyme Lemon-Freshened Junior High School Witch by E.W. Hildick. I immediately checked it out so I could add it to my list and never forget the title again.

That second reading was as fun as first time, though this time I hone in on the relationship between the two sisters — the older one who actually found the book and wanted to be a witch, and the younger one who despite her flippancy, seemed to have the natural talent for it. As an older sister, now watching my brother start to excel at things that I'd never dream of trying, I understood the sentiment.

Then as part of turning 40 I decided to purchase a copy for myself and re-read an old favorite, one I still think of, all these years later. The book and I were both turning 40 so it seemed appropriate.

In this last reading, I have to admit that the magic wasn't there as much. The whole measles plot seems quaint and contrived. The magic that both girls believe they are accomplishing, also doesn't seem there. Though it's hinted that the neighbor might be a witch (as evidenced by all his awesome old brooms), this time it seemed to be more a case rationalizing on the part of the sisters, than of actual magic.

Perhaps the first couple times I skimmed and read into the book the story I wanted to read. Maybe most of the enjoyment stemmed from my own misunderstanding and misinterpretation of Hildick's words. Or maybe I've just matured and because I'm now relating more to the adults in the book (the parents and neighbors).

I think I'll revisit this book in a few more years to see what I get out of it then.
 
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pussreboots | 2 autres critiques | Sep 29, 2014 |
I loved this book immoderately as a kid. I haven't read it since.
 
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satyridae | 2 autres critiques | Apr 5, 2013 |
Juvenile solve a mystery about a phantom frog.
 
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austinwood | 1 autre critique | Sep 19, 2009 |
"O what a tangled web we weave..." The winning of a lottery ticket is a no-no in this house. Aunt Bridget doesn't believe in gambling. So Uncle James begins to scheme as to how to get and use the money. Humorous book aimed at youngsters. Set in America, it does contain a few Britishisms.
 
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jeaneva | Sep 25, 2008 |
I stole this book from my older sister (who 'acquired' it from - according to the stamp on the book - Ms. P. Hess: Reading Dept.) and read it until the cover fell off and had to be taped back on. It was one of my favorite books, and one that I clearly remember enjoying. In fact, when I found it in a box of old books in the garage last year, I exclaimed happily and hugged it to my chest. And did not tell my sister I'd found it. :)

I'm very happy to find that it's just as enjoyable as an adult as it was when I was a kid. It's a shame that it's out of print and that kids today can't read and enjoy it.

From the book jacket:
"I first discovered I was aWitch with Powers to Conjure Up the Dead when I was but twelve that time (last month) on vacation up in West Salem. It was not THE Salem up in Massachusetts; it was one of the Salems up near the New York-Connecticut border. But borders are powerfully Magic Places and the Witchcraft was real enough..."

So writes Alison McNair - alias Ariadne - in her Witch's Workbook. From the moment Alison, a redheaded, incorrigible, exasperating, yet somehow lovable fury, opens the pages of HOW TO BE A WITCH and reads of the unusual powers of red-haired witches, she knows that sorcery is her natural calling. And with her sister Jeannie, alias Jezebel, as a sorceress's apprentice they begin in earnest to dabble in the occult, producing some strange and unforeseen results.
 
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bluehwys | 2 autres critiques | Jun 27, 2007 |
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