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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best Horror books ever
I read this book in the 70s or early 80s. I was so frightened by it that I stored it under my sister's bed at night just to keep it out of my room and away from me. It scared me that much - It's very vivid. To this day, the smell of wet ashes reminds me of the book. I mean this all in the best way, of course. I was, perhaps, a little unprepared for the depth of...
Published on July 27, 2000 by malicia

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not as Thrilling as its Predecessor, but Interesting Nonetheless.
"The House With a Clock in Its Walls" has been my all-time favorite read since third grade, so i figured i might go beyond my little comfortable nest and try another book by Bellairs. This one claims to the the sequel to "Clock" but unfortunately fails to raise the stakes as high as those in "Clock" and suffers from the doldrums because of it. The exposition is so plain...
Published on December 30, 2007 by A. Droussiotis


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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best Horror books ever, July 27, 2000
I read this book in the 70s or early 80s. I was so frightened by it that I stored it under my sister's bed at night just to keep it out of my room and away from me. It scared me that much - It's very vivid. To this day, the smell of wet ashes reminds me of the book. I mean this all in the best way, of course. I was, perhaps, a little unprepared for the depth of spookiness found in this book, but now I realize that while it frightened the living daylights out of me, it also thrilled me. I credit this book and MacBeth (also read when far too young and impressionable) for my love of "unseen" psychological horror fiction today. Definitely talk with your child after they read this, though. You don't want them spooking at every imagined figure in the shadows.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good fun, June 24, 2004
Lewis Barnavelt (introduced in THE HOUSE WITH A CLOCK IN ITS WALLS) is having problems. He's picked on by bullies and he's afraid his best friend, Rose Rita, doesn't respect him because he's not rough-and-tough. When he finds his great-grandfather's lucky coin, he starts wearing it, hoping it will bring him luck...only to discover that it's actually a powerful talisman and a sinister hooded figure is watching over him.

This isn't quite up to the level that HOUSE was, but it's still a grand entertainment. We feel Lewis' pain and rage at being a target and at his inability to intervene when Rose Rita is attacked by bullies. Lewis' love/hate relationship with the talisman can also been seen as a symbol of drug addiction.

It all ends well, with a good message about loyalty and a caution against using outside props (talismans or drugs). Next in the series: THE LETTER, THE WITCH AND THE RING.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wow!, July 21, 2001
By A Customer
This was a great book! It was a spine chiling tale that I read in one day. It was almost as good as The House with a Clock in its walls. The Figure in the Shadows is a story of a boy who finds a magical amulet and says a spell that raises the powerful spells on the coin. It allows him to have good luck, but that all changes when he starts getting followed by a shadowy creature. I reccommend this book to other kids. And I will be willing to give more than 5 stars.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 2nd book in the 'Lewis Barnavelt' series, January 24, 2007
John Bellairs is best known as the author of sixteen gothic mystery novels for young adults comprising the Lewis Barnavelt, Anthony Monday, and Johnny Dixon series. "The Figure in the Shadows" (1975) is the second book in the Lewis Barnavelt series and is preceded by "The House with a Clock in Its Walls" (1973).

So far from what I've read of this author, his characters tend to be elderly eccentrics, or ordinary children (no superkids, here). Lewis is resourceful, but with a child's fears and limitations. Most especially, he is afraid that his uncle Jonathan might send him off to reform school if he discovers that his nephew has been dabbling in magic.

Lewis is a newly orphaned, plump, pre-adolescent boy who wears "purple corduroy trousers, the kind that go `whip-whip' when you walk." He went to live with his Uncle Jonathan (who is also a wizard) in New Zebedee, Michigan after his parents were killed in an automobile accident. It is the late 1940s, and New Zebedee bears a strong resemblance to Marshall, Michigan, where the author was born--- The Cronin House and the GAR (Grand Army of the Republic) Hall still stand in Marshall, just as their counterparts do in New Zebedee.

Lewis wants desperately to believe that an old coin belonging to his Great-Grampa Barnavelt has magical powers. He and his best friend, Rose Rita sneak a book out of Uncle Jonathan's occult library and perform a ceremony to `activate' the coin or `magical amulet' as Lewis likes to think of it. He is being bullied at school by a nasty character who stole his new Sherlock Holmes hat, so Lewis starts to wear the old Civil War coin around his neck for protection. Finally he turns on the bully and beats him up, but soon learns that the coin has other, even darker powers.

Late one night, Lewis hears the mail slot on the front door clang. When he picks up the postcard addressed to him, a line of writing appears on the back: "Venio" which means "I come" in Latin.

Lewis picks up a crumpled piece of notebook paper on the sidewalk with the same Latin message, and soon he begins to see a shadowy figure in a long coat. One night as he is walking home from the library, Lewis spots the figure standing under a street lamp. He goes up to it and "the figure walked forward out of the circle of lamplight. Now it was standing before Lewis. Lewis smelled something. He smelled cold ashes. Cold wet ashes."

After he manages to escape, Lewis is so frightened that he asks his friend, Rose Rita to take the coin and throw it away. She wrestles the coin away from him, but instead of throwing it into the storm drain, she hides it.

The bully starts in on Lewis again, and he decides he'll do anything to get the coin back again, even steal it from Rose Rita.

By the time we figure out who the shadowy figure is and why it smells like wet ashes, this story has taken a very frightening turn. Lewis has disappeared and it is up to his Uncle Jonathan, his neighbor, Mrs. Zimmerman, and his friend, Rose Rita to rescue him from a particularly unpleasant fate.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Thriller, July 13, 2000
By 
This is definitely a gripping thriller for kids, and Mayer's illustrations add to the general creepiness. The mixture of an ordinary life of friends, bullies, and school and the menacing world of dark magic is expertly handled. Who is sending Lewis strange postcards in the middle of the night? Who is the tall figure he sees under a street lamp? The story carries itself forward with excellent pacing, moral dilemmas, and mystery. I think the magical objects used at the climax ought to have been introduced beforehand; here they seem to function more like a god from the machine, as the saying goes. Still, few young readers will mind, they will just want to know how it all comes out.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Children's Fiction? So What?, July 14, 1998
By A Customer
Okay so maybe I did first read this book when I was eight, but I loved it. It is a creepy story of a regular boy named Lewis who finds in a steamer trunk, owned by his eccentric neighbor and friend of his uncle, a silver coin. Wearing this coin around his neck he finds that he has summoned an evil presence that seems to be stalking him, and getting closer and closer. A good story, and the characters are very normal, yet in a very eccentric surrounding of wizards, witches, other strange people and objects. While it can get quite creepy in parts, it still is very humorous. I am so sad to find that it is out of print. If anyone out there has children who happen to be lucky enough to own this book, or happen to bring it home from the library, sneak it off their nightstand while they are sleeping and give it a look. Best read on a dark windy winter night, and don't feel ashamed to look behind you from time to time.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This story will stay with you., July 9, 2001
By A Customer
I read this book 25 years ago, when I was 9. Since then, I have read thousands of books, but I remember this story, almost by heart. I did not know it was a series. I am going to buy everything by Bellairs, to read myself, and for my son, who will soon be old enough for this. I recommend this book heartily. Bellairs is quite the equal of Rowling. If Stephen King wrote youth horror, his charactorization and style would be close to this.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A very well written little thriller!, December 8, 2004
By 
Karen Pantoja (Los Angeles, CA) - See all my reviews
I bought this book for my 11 year old son and he has read it several times, he says he enjoyes this book more than the Harry Potter series and that is talking. The first time he read it he needed help with many of the words so I got to know the story pretty well, after lurking where he is not supposed to, Lewis Barnavelt awakens a terrifying demon who will take control over him and put his life in terrible danger. The books is extremely well written with a lot of details and very good characters, my son liked Rose Rita the best. I recommend this book to any parent who would like to reward their child with a good kid's thriller, my son Alex has it on his favorites list.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book full of magic and mysteries., December 10, 1998
By A Customer
When first I started reading this book I thought it was kind of sad how everybody made fun of Lewis. I thought how could somebody be so rude. It got interesting however how Lewis was so sensitive yet he could stand so strong. I thought when I read that the person who was writing "Veno" was the man who once owned the amulet. Later I realized that it was not him because he would have gone after the amulet rather than write "Vino" . Over all I thought that this was a great book that would pull you into the text and make you feel like you were part of the story. A clever mix of horror, humor, magic, and mystery by John Bellairs. I would recommend this story to all kids.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not as Thrilling as its Predecessor, but Interesting Nonetheless., December 30, 2007
"The House With a Clock in Its Walls" has been my all-time favorite read since third grade, so i figured i might go beyond my little comfortable nest and try another book by Bellairs. This one claims to the the sequel to "Clock" but unfortunately fails to raise the stakes as high as those in "Clock" and suffers from the doldrums because of it. The exposition is so plain and the ending so pulled from the air and devoid of mystery that it can barely fill the shoes of its predecessor.

The writing at times seems stilted and awkward. I suppose I can describe the writing in this book as an experience similar to struggling to put on a twisted sweater: A bit of a struggle, but with moments of clarity- yes, there are really great images to be had in this book, but you have to rummage through the jumbled stuff first.
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The Figure in the Shadows
The Figure in the Shadows by John Bellairs (Hardcover - June 1999)
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