genre: fantasy
age: children's
rating: 4/8 tentacles
Ghost Knight is a fun story filled with murderous ghosts, medieval
history, and school children sneaking around ancient cathedrals and dark
crumbling cemeteries in the dead of night (no pun intended). After
behaving badly towards his mother's new boyfriend, Jon Whitcroft is sent
off to boarding school, where four ominous ghostly figures call him by
his mother's maiden name and threaten his life. His endeavors to escape
them lead to a friendship with beautiful Ella, daughter of a local
ghost tour guide, and together they work to solve the mystery of the
ghosts' determination to hunt Jon.
Some of Cornelia Funke's other
works (the Inkheart series, The Thief Lord, and Reckless) have become
favorites of mine, but Ghost Knight just didn't measure up. I'm not
sure if Funke was targeting a younger age group, but it lacked the
complexity of her other works and failed to conjure up a vivid illusion.
The story seemed a little hazy, which made it difficult for me to feel
as if I was experiencing its unfolding events along with the
characters. For example, Jon attends an old cathedral boarding school,
but we hardly see any of this part of his life. We watch him sneaking
out of his bedroom window at night and we witness brief, ultimately
meaningless conversations between Jon and his roommates, but get nothing
of life at a boarding school. I think the story needed this scenic
backdrop, this context, to anchor it. I suppose there is much more telling than showing.
Funke seems to leap from
event to ghostly event with little build up between. Many opportunities
to create suspense weren't taken advantage of. We're just told,
"Here's this guy and this is what happened to him." There's very little
mystery, nothing to keep us wondering. No drama, no build-up, no
suspense. We are simply pelted with ghosts.
That's the thing I
didn't like about this book. It's a light and entertaining read, but it
led me to believe I was getting a ghost story, and I didn't. Ghost
Knight was rushed. It was shallow. I never felt like I got to know
anyone besides Jon and Funke failed to cultivate that eerie mood where
fear creeps around you like a mist and it always seems that someone (or
something) is just out of sight, watching and waiting. My favorite
thing about ghost stories is the mystery, and Ghost Knight provided very
little of this.
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