64 pages • 2 hours read
Mary Downing HahnA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
The boys race into the cemetery where they hide under a giant willow tree. The long branches hide them from view, and they stay there for a long time, on the lookout for Silas. Arthur tells Logan that he found the hiding spot previously when Danny and his crew had been chasing him. The two boys then begin looking at the map where they notice there is a “fence made of gingerbread men leading to the Witch’s Hut” that look exactly like the plastic men mentioned in the note (86). Arthur and Logan make plans to go to check the place out tomorrow, and as they make their way out of the cemetery, Arthur points out “a statue of a woman and her little boy. The woman had an open book in her lap, and the boy stood beside her, looking up into her calm marble face” (87). According to Arthur, the woman is Eleanor Beale, who was once the wife of the town’s founder.
The little boy was Eleanor’s son, also named Arthur. Arthur tells Logan that he used to pretend that she was his mother, climb into her lap, and pretend to read together. Logan asks Arthur about his real mother, but the boy in question insists that he has lived with his grandmother since he was a baby.
By Mary Downing Hahn
All The Lovely Bad Ones
All The Lovely Bad Ones
Mary Downing Hahn
December Stillness
December Stillness
Mary Downing Hahn
Deep and Dark and Dangerous
Deep and Dark and Dangerous
Mary Downing Hahn
Stepping on the Cracks
Stepping on the Cracks
Mary Downing Hahn
The Old Willis Place
The Old Willis Place: A Ghost Story
Mary Downing Hahn
Time for Andrew: A Ghost Story
Time for Andrew: A Ghost Story
Mary Downing Hahn
Took
Took: A Ghost Story
Mary Downing Hahn
Wait Till Helen Comes
Wait Till Helen Comes
Mary Downing Hahn