shadow house

6 questions with Shadow House author Dan Poblocki

Halloween is almost here, and to help us celebrate, we sat down with Shadow House author, Dan Poblocki, to talk writing, scary stories, and more!

OOM: Welcome back to the OOM blog Dan! For those of our readers who are not familiar with the Shadow House series, can you tell us in 50 words or less what it’s all about?

Dan: Five kids from around the country receive invitations to visit an old estate called Larkspur in New York's Hudson Valley. When they arrive, they discover that their invitations don't match, so they head inside the mansion for help, only to find they can't get back out again. Then the ghosts show up . . .

OOM: What surprised you most about the characters you created across the three books in the Shadow House series? No spoilers please!

Dan: I guess I was most surprised by how much I grew to love each of them. Despite their differences, my main characters: Poppy, Azumi, Marcus, Dash, and Dylan, all manage—in certain ways—to take care of one another. While writing the end of the third book, I actually grew very emotional, realizing that I had to say goodbye to them.

OOM: Why do you think people, especially children are so drawn to scary stories? What is the appeal?

Dan: I think we all have different reasons. I like to believe it's a way to train our brains into becoming braver in real life. On the most basic level, I think scary stories appeal because they're often exciting, and take us away from what's ordinary. Some of us crave that rush, just like some of us like riding roller-coasters. The thrill is what keeps us asking for more.  

OOM: Can you tell us more about the audience you had in mind while writing the Shadow House books? What do you hope they take away from this series?

Dan: I basically always write for the reader I was when I was a kid—a reader who wants to be pulled into a story and who can't stop until they get to the last page. What I hope the audience takes away is that a "scary" book can also be filled with heart and warmth and messages of kindness and complex ideas—all the stuff we usually think exists in other genres. Scary stories are emotional experiences that often beg to be read again and again.

OOM: What would you like to say to any librarians and/or teachers who are just picking up the books now and who would be interested in sharing these with their students? What would you like them to know before they begin reading?

Dan: First, I would like to say: THANK YOU. Librarians and teachers are the absolute best, and I'm so pleased to hear from so many of them about how my stories have gotten reluctant readers to finish a book for the first time. I'd also say, for the Shadow House series in particular, to start with book #1 if you can, since there's an overarching plot to the series, filled with wild twists and surprises, and I wouldn't want you to miss any of it!

OOM: As a fun Halloween treat for our readers, can you set up the beginning of an original, scary story? Can you do it in only two sentences?

Dan: Only two sentences?! That's hard, but I'll try... 

For as long as I can remember, no one has ever lived in the crumbling cottage at the end of my street; however, as the sun set on Halloween and the skinny shadows of bare trees blended into evening gloom, my friends and I noticed a flickering, orange glow illuminating a broken window in the small house's second story. 

Shivering at the bottom of the long, dark driveway, I puffed up my chest and dared my small group of costumed friends: "Whoever is brave enough to knock on that rotting front door can have my whole bag of candy..."

Read an excerpt from Shadow House #3: No Way Out

Halloween is just weeks away, and we're getting ready by reading lots and lots of spooky stories! To help YOU get in the spirit, too, we're sharing an excerpt from some of our spookiest and witchiest books every week. Last week, we shared the first chapter of The Apprentice Witch by James Nicol (you can read that here!), so this week, it's time for something darker. 

In Shadow House #3, Poppy, Dash, Azumi, and Dylan may have made it out of Shadow House--but the grounds are a whole new nightmare. Someone they thought was a friend is hunting them, and there's no place that's safe now that they've woken the shadow creature. If they want to survive, they'll have to figure out once and for all what the house wants from them, and what-or who-they'll need to leave behind in order to escape . . . or risk being trapped within Shadow House forever.

Read the first two chapters RIGHT HERE, and then visit scholastic.com/shadowhouse for more scares on the forums and on the app!

Shadow House #3: No Way Out by Dan Poblocki

Copyright © by Scholastic Inc.

Chapter 1

On the edge of the starlit meadow, Azumi’s thoughts throbbed in her head in time with her footsteps. My fault Marcus is dead. My fault Moriko’s gone. My fault we trusted the monster, my fault, my fault, my fault my fault

Something snagged Azumi’s sneaker, and she tripped forward, the tall grass padding her fall.

Poppy and Dash continued on, unaware that Azumi was sprawled behind them. They marched quickly and quietly, parallel to the dark woods several yards to their right.

Wait! Please

She tried to call out, but her voice was stuck in her throat. Would calling them even help? Everything here was out to destroy them. What was the point?

My fault—

Larkspur House glared down at her from atop the hill to  her left, and Azumi shuddered. Something inside its dark windows wished to keep her there forever. If the hallways could change shape, the wallpaper turn into toxic tendrils, and the greenhouse contain acres of forest, what was stopping Larkspur from catapulting its bricks and glass and metal spikes far into the meadow and pounding her  flat?

No. She had to concentrate. She had to stick to the plan, do what Poppy and Dash said.

They were even farther away now—focused and determined to make it quickly back to the driveway and the safety of Hardscrabble Road. Dash limped a little, and Poppy tended to him every few steps. So why hadn’t she noticed that Azumi wasn’t with them?

Azumi pressed her lips together and was about to stand when something rustled the grass by her feet. Turning back,  she noticed the shadow of the thing that had tripped her only a few inches away. Instinct made her scramble aside. But when the breeze rustled the grass, showing Azumi what looked like matted and faded blue hair glistening in the starlight,  panic whooshed into her head like a harsh gust of wind, and she froze, wide-eyed, her chest heaving.

Blue hair . . .

Moriko? she tried to say, but her voice wouldn’t come past her lips.

You can’t be . . . You’re dead . . .

This . . . isn’t . . . real.

A trick . . . Just like how the creature had dressed as you, like a costume . . .

She forced herself to her feet. From up the hill, Larkspur House loomed. Azumi could feel it grinning at her—another version of that same creature that had pretended to be her sister.

But the house is only a costume too . . . , she thought.

Wood and brick and stone and . . . blood . . .

Azumi shook her head violently, scattering the cobwebs of anxiety that her brain kept constructing around her thoughts. She steeled herself, pushing her fear to the edges of her imagination, then peered at the dark mass that was hidden by the  long grass.

It’s happening again . . . You’re not really here . . .

Wake up, Azumi . . . Wake up . . . !

A harsh breeze parted the grass, finally revealing the thing that Azumi had tripped over. Her eyes grew wide with horror.  It was a body. Pieces of dirty clothing formed the shape of a torso, arms, legs. She knew these clothes. It was Moriko!

Not again . . . please! I don’t want to see . . .

The wind caught several pieces of blue hair and lifted them from her sister’s withered skull. They rose up like gossamer strands before rushing forward and clinging to Azumi’s face. Her vision swirled as she screamed, her voice shattering the quiet night. As she inhaled, the hairs seemed to creep into her throat and up her nostrils, choking her. She scratched at her face, grabbing at the sharp strands, but she was blinded by a stinging sensation in her eyes. She could hear something scrabbling through the grass near her feet, and she imagined her sister’s hand clawing its way toward her ankle, while some- where in the woods the monster heard her and came rushing back to finish its job.

Hands clasped her shoulders and spun her around. She was too shocked to cry out.

Poppy was standing behind her, Dash at her side.

“Azumi! What’s wrong?”

Azumi blinked, still gagging, but all of a sudden her face was clear, the hair gone. Carefully, she licked at her lips. The blue hair had only been another trick—the house, the shadow creature was still playing with her. Or maybe it was her own mind . . .

Azumi leapt forward and threw her arms around Poppy, pulling her away from the spot where her sister’s body was lying. “It’s M-Moriko,” Azumi sputtered. “She’s come back.” But when she pointed toward the grass, there was no body. Instead, she saw that the thing she’d tripped over was merely a long tree branch, bleached by the  sun.

Her skin flashed cold.

“This branch wasn’t here,” said Azumi. “It was my sister. She grabbed at my foot. I swear! She wanted to kill me—”

“It wasn’t real,” said Poppy.

“Shh,” said Dash. “Keep your voices down.” He glanced over Azumi’s shoulder toward the edge of woods. Marcus was back there somewhere, lying beneath the tree where the creature  had tossed him. “It could be following us.”

“I’m . . . I’m sorry . . .” Azumi covered her face, hiding tears. “It scared me.”

“I’m sure it did.” Poppy sighed. “But it was fake.” She rubbed Azumi’s back. “We’ve got to stay strong. Don’t let the house in your head.”

“Too late for that,” said Azumi. “I don’t know how to get it out of my head.”

“From now on,” said Dash, “we have to keep closer together. If anyone trips and falls, or even just sees something weird,  let everyone know. Immediately. We can’t let the house separate us.”

“Okay,” said Azumi, wiping at her nose.

Poppy stared into the woods, listening. “If it was still coming for us, we’d hear it, wouldn’t we? Crunching through the brush?”

“Unless it’s changed shape again,” said Dash, “and now it looks like someone else.”

Azumi’s skin prickled as the three glanced at one another, suddenly suspicious.

But she could trust them, couldn’t she? They’d been out of her sight for only a few seconds. Not enough time for anything to— “Let me see your eyes,” said Poppy, stepping in front of her.

“Me?” Azumi’s cheeks tingled with hurt. She scowled, then widened her eyes at the other girl. “Brown. Not gold.”

A howling cry rose up from the darkness back near where Marcus had fallen. Azumi slumped her shoulders, trying to shrink down inside herself. Poppy clasped Azumi’s hand, and Dash stepped closer. Their warmth erased some of Azumi’s chill, and she felt grateful that they trusted her, even after she’d fought them so hard about Moriko; that they understood her fear; that she wasn’t alone.

But you are alone . . .

Azumi squeezed her eyes shut again.

The howl echoed across the grounds, and then died away. The silence that followed was even more frightening. There was no way to tell where the monster was now.

“Come on,” said Dash, tugging at the girls’ arms. “We’ve got a long way to go around the house before we reach the driveway. And I don’t think that thing is giving up anytime soon.”

“Neither are we,” said Poppy, unable to control the quaver in her voice.

Chapter 2

They moved quickly, almost at a run. They needed to get away from the spot where Azumi had screamed. If the creature had heard her, it would know exactly where they were, as if they’d stuck a pin in a map. They formed a tight line, keeping one another in sight. Dash wondered if it was foolish to think that they could even try to hide. If this entire estate was  a thinking, scheming being, what were the chances that it didn’t know exactly where they were? Maybe the house was still toying with them, giving them a little bit of hope—Run! Go! Escape!—so that it could continue to feed off their fear. Wasn’t that how  it worked?

The silvery grass ahead began to lose its luster. Dash glanced up and noticed that heavy clouds were closing in, blocking the starlight. Now they’d have to stay closer to the woods, or else risk becoming lost in the gathering darkness. But getting closer to the trees might put them closer to the shadow creature, or the Specials and Dylan.

As he rushed through the darkening field, Dash shuddered, thinking of the clown mask Dylan had been wearing. The warm plastic had moved, as if it was part of Dylan, as if he belonged to the house now.

It was only one of the reasons he’d decided to leave his brother behind.

The house was controlling his brother—like a plant whose roots had twined around another’s. But he was different from the angry ghosts of the orphans who’d once lived here. Dash was sure of it. Poppy had solved the puzzle of how to free the others from the house. When they’d given Randolph a harmonica and Esme her notebook, they’d remembered themselves and faded away, released from the house’s grasp. Even Cyrus’s withered old ghost had found freedom when Poppy had handed him his old journal.

But Poppy had no ideas for freeing Dylan. Cyrus had never taken anything from him that Dash could return. So what did Dylan need in order to be released?

Dash forced the thought from his head. Dylan was already gone. As awful as it was to imagine, Dash knew that he’d have to leave his brother behind and get as far away from Larkspur as his feet would take him.

Azumi grabbed at Dash’s shoulder as she stared into the distance ahead.

“Why are we stopping?” asked Poppy. “What’s wrong?”

“Do you guys see that?” Azumi nodded at the darkness. “Or is the house messing with my head again?”

“See what?” asked Dash. But then he noticed dim silhouettes of shacks or tents throughout the wide meadow about a hundred feet away. Under the cloudy sky, it was impossible to make out any details. “Whoa. What is all this?”

“Look!” Poppy whispered as they drifted closer, pointing at one of the taller shapes. “Is that a . . . a Ferris wheel?”

“It’s a carnival,” said Azumi. “Like the one that comes through my town every fall, right around when school starts. I think I see a carousel.”

“And a fun house,” said Poppy, her voice wavering as she pointed. “I went into one of those in the city once with the other girls from my group home. They tried to scare me in the mirror maze, but my Girl . . . Connie . . . she showed me where to hide from them.”

“And Larkspur is trying to scare us again,” said Dash, clipping the discussion short. “Come on, let’s go around.”

“We’ll have to either go close to the house or into the woods for a bit,” said Azumi. “Neither seems like a very good idea.”

“Wouldn’t it be safer to just go straight through?” asked Poppy. “It looks deserted.”

“Do you really want to trust what it looks like?” asked Dash.

Poppy hugged her chest. “So then, what? Turn around and go the way we came? Head around the other side of the house? What about the . . . the thing? The  creature?”

Sounds of breaking branches and crunching brush echoed out of the woods behind them. Then came a low growling noise. The three grabbed hands and huddled together.

“There’s no other way,” said Azumi, shivering as she glanced back at the dim shapes that made up the makeshift carnival. “We’ve got to go through.”

Dash sighed. “But we know it’s a trick.”

“We’ve managed to get past the house’s other tricks,” Poppy said, sounding much  more  confident than Dash felt.

The image of Marcus came to him, humming his uncle’s tune while bravely confronting the creature back at the edge of the forest. “Not all of us,” he whispered.

But Poppy squeezed his hand and Azumi’s and then began to march forward, pulling everyone along with her.

---

Want more Shadow House? Visit scholastic.com/shadowhouse to download the app, join the forums, listen to audio excerpts and more! You can also hear author Dan Poblocki talk about writing the spooky series on our podcast episode

Watch: R.L. Stine and Dan Poblocki talk Halloween and spooky stories

It's tradition to involve Goosebumps creator R.L. Stine in any Halloween activities. Over the years, he's taken over Scholastic's social media accounts (multiple times!), judged Halloween costume contests, and hosted spooky events that fit the season. This year, he joined Shadow House author Dan Poblocki on a Facebook Live Video to discuss Halloween, books, and all things creepy.

Moderated by Scholastic librarian Deimosa Webber-Bey, the Live Video lasted about 20 minutes and featured cover reveals for both Shadow House 2: You Can't Hide and the new Goosebumps series, Slappyworld. Viewers submitted questions during the show, some of which were then answered live on air. Watch the replay here, and happy Halloween! 

Scholastic is haunted by Shadow House!

Halloween is just a week away, but it’s never too early to start celebrating the most spook-tacular holiday of the year!

Last month, ghost story expert Dan Poblocki welcomed readers to Shadow House, the first book in a chilling new series. The five young heroes of the book lived through a terrifying day in Shadow House, but they weren’t the only ones having supernatural encounters. Several members of Scholastic’s Team Shadow House have reported ghostly experiences since working on the series . . . as if the books themselves are haunted! Check out their spooky stories below, and then head over to the Shadow House site to learn more about the book and accompanying app!

Dan Poblocki

When I was writing Shadow House, I often worked at an office space in a sleepy, industrial section of Brooklyn, New York. One night, the sun had gone down, and I didn’t realize that I was alone in the space, so when I stood up from my cubicle and turned off my little lamp, the room was completely dark. Walking home, I couldn’t shake the feeling that something was following me. But whenever I turned around, no one and nothing was there, thank goodness!

Erin, Editorial

A few months after I started editing Shadow House, I was in the woods trying to find a lost dog. My husband and I walk by one small clearing, just a few feet across, and what do we see there? Doll parts. Arms, legs, heads, no torsos. And one of the doll faces had been burnt. It was so creepy, and so very Shadow House.

Beth, Marketing

Right after I started working on the series, my team created a marketing display that looks like the mirror from the cover of Shadow House #1: The Gathering (complete with a ghost girl looking back at you!). Unfortunately, when we first made it there was a noticeable white mark on the front of the mirror and it really bothered me. One evening, I asked the production department to fix it. I came in the next morning and voilà! the mirror was fixed. I called my production colleague to thank him and on the other end I heard a long pause. Confused, he said, “I haven’t touched the mirror.” I’m not saying the mirror fixed itself, but I am saying that the ghost inside the mirror has a knack for handy work. 

Lisa, Marketing

One night, not too long after I became a member of Team Shadow House, I was about to go to sleep when I started to hear piano music; it sounded clear enough to be coming from within a few feet of my bedroom. My roommate is a musician and often practices on her keyboard late into the night, so I asked her about it the next morning. It turns out that she WAS playing music . . . but with her sound-proof headphones on the entire time!

Monica, Publicity

A couple of months after I began working on the series, I was watching a baseball game at home one night when I looked up at the television screen and saw what I (still) swear was a girl in a white gown with dark hair standing in the doorway of my kitchen. When I turned my head towards the kitchen, nothing or no one was there. I was so spooked that I had to convince myself that it was just a trick of the lighting. Either that or the girl was a really big baseball fan and wanted to catch the end of that game.

Books with Scare Power: Dan Poblocki on "Shadow House"

Just in time for Halloween, Dan Poblocki, author of the new multiplatform series Shadow House, discusses the origins of this new spooky series, including its affiliated app, which is perfect for young readers who like to get immersed in books. Dan also reveals all the creepy things that have happened to the various people who've worked on the Shadow House series. Join us for some spooky stories!

Dan Poblocki takes over Instagram

Shadow House #1: The Gathering is a spooky book (and supplementary app!) featuring a house that's more than just haunted...it's hungry.

We asked Dan Poblocki, the author of Shadow House, to share with us some of his inspiration for creating the world of Shadow House—a world of mysterious powers, girls in mirrors, unexplained fires, and creepy-crawlies that keep you up at night. Dan took over Scholastic's Instagram account yesterday, revealing some must-see images for anyone who's interested in things that go bump in the night!

See how it all went down...

 

 

 

 

See more about Shadow House here, and check out the full book trailer here!

Dan Poblocki welcomes readers to Shadow House!

Who doesn’t love a good scary story? Here at OOM we’re already counting down the days until Halloween. To get everyone in the spirit, ghost story maestro Dan Poblocki stopped by to chat about his first book in the new Shadow House series! But be warned: This book will keep you up at night, too afraid to close your eyes for fear of what hides in the dark . . .

Dan, you’re no stranger to scary stories. What are you most excited about for Shadow House?

Shadow House is a series that tells the haunting story of five kids who are summoned to a sprawling mansion and then get trapped by the ghosts inside. This project is my favorite fantasy come to life. Ever since I was a kid, I’ve dreamed of having the freedom to discover the secrets of an enormous, gothic house, and the fact that this Shadow House is also filled with nasty spirits is a fun bonus.

And the book is just the beginning! There’s also a Shadow House app available (and it’s just as creepy as the book!). Tell us a little more about it!

I’m really excited about the app! The books in the series can be read alone, but the app is there for a whole new kind of haunting. The five kids who are summoned to Shadow House in book one aren’t the first to have been called, and the app is a series of stories that will help readers unlock the mystery of Shadow House.

You recently got a rave review from another master of spooky stories for kids: R.L. Stine! How did that feel?

It was awesome and a little bit surreal. I was reading books by R.L. Stine when I was in elementary school. If someone had told me then that he would be reading— and enjoying!—my own books one day, I wouldn’t have believed it. I think when I saw his review, I started trembling in disbelief!

Shadow House combines so many elements from classic horror films and books. Where did you get your inspiration from?

The mansion in Shadow House is not what it seems. The characters quickly learn that it can move its doors and hallways, change shape, and make things appear—and disappear—at will. Preparing to write this series, I reread The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson, which I think is the classic haunted house novel.

Let’s talk about writing!  How do you want your readers to react when they read the last page of Shadow House?

I wanted to leave the reader at the end of each book with a sense that the ground had shifted, that what they thought was true might actually be false, and that anything could happen next. The most fun aspect was that each kid changes dramatically from book to book, and I had a good time allowing them to surprise me with their decisions and reactions to the threats that the house presents to them.

And while we’re on the topic of writing, any tips for aspiring horror writers out there?

Keep a notebook and write down the things that scare you, fascinate you, make you laugh, and make you angry. Horror stories aren’t only about horror. To be truly scary, they need to be peopled with characters that readers care about, that have real lives and relationships that readers can cry for or panic with or shout at.

There are rumors that ever since you started writing this series, spooky things have been happening to you! Are you being haunted?

Yes! I sometimes work at an office space in a sleepy, industrial section of Brooklyn, New York. One night, the sun had gone down, and I didn’t realize that I was alone in the space, so when I stood up from my cubicle and turned off my little lamp, the room was completely dark. Walking home, I couldn’t shake the feeling that something was following me. But whenever I turned around, no one and nothing was there, thank goodness!

We need to know, as a master spooky storyteller, are you a big fan of Halloween?

I love Halloween. I think of October as one big celebration. I like to watch a ton of horror movies and read ghost stories, stroll through Prospect Park in Brooklyn, go on ghost tours of historic spots in New York City, pick pumpkins, and carve jack-o’-lanterns. I also enjoy seeing other people’s costumes, even more than creating my own. My favorite costume ever, though, was a reader who dressed up like the creepy statue in my book The Stone Child. She emailed me a picture, and I felt so incredibly honored. I was like, “Yes, this is why I do what I do!”

See the full trailer for Shadow House

Coming August 30: Shadow House by Dan Poblocki, a haunting new reading experience from the team that brought you Spirit Animals and The 39 Clues.

The books tell the story of five kids who have been invited to the sinister Shadow House for what they thought were innocent reasons—but once they’re inside, they realize they’re being haunted (or hunted?) by five ghosts who have lived in the house before.

Alongside the hauntingly-good books, you can download an app for phones or tablets that allows you to step inside the Shadow House for a new, immersive storytelling experience.

Another spooky trailer from Shadow House

Did the first two teaser trailers for Shadow House get you appropriately spooked?

Good. Because here's another.

 

 

You are cordially invited to Shadow House, coming August 30th from Dan Poblocki.

Shadow House is a haunting new reading experience from the team that brought you Spirit Animals and The 39 Clues. The books tell the story of five kids who have been invited to the sinister Shadow House for what they thought were innocent reasons—but once they’re inside, they realize they’re being haunted (or hunted?) by five ghosts who have lived in the house before.

Alongside the hauntingly-good books, you can download an app for phones or tablets that allows you to step inside the Shadow House for a new, immersive storytelling experience.



 

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