Give Me Something Good to Eat
By (Author) D. W. Gillespie
Random House USA Inc
Random House Inc
10th September 2024
United States
Young Adult
Fiction
FIC
Hardback
272
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
Perfect for fans of Hocus Pocus and Stranger Things, this middle grade debut tells the story of a boy who travels into an alternate version of his Halloween-obsessed town to save his sister from an evil witch and free the town from the witch's curse. Fear comes home. Welcome to Pearl, a town obsessed with Halloween- the spooky decorations, the costumes, the candy. No one seems to notice that every October 31st, a kid goes missing. Mason Miller does, though. Somehow he's the only one who has any memory the person existed at all. When Mason's sister, Meg, vanishes while they're trick-or-treating, Mason and his friends are pulled into an underworld where monsters roam the streets. They need to fight the evil taking over Pearl, but none of them know the true danger they're facing. Meg has been stolen by a witch who has no plans to let her go. Shadows of death curl around trees and behind doorways as Mason must use every ounce of bravery he has . . . or be haunted forever with the memory of a sister that only he remembers.
"Evil witches and terrifying alternate realities New fear unlocked."Lindsay Currie, author of SCRITCH SCRATCH and IT FOUND US
"Delivers delicious scares!"Wendy Parris, author of FIELD OF SCREAMS
"With deliciously spooky imagery,a creepy, cursed town, ghoulish monsters, and children that go missing on the scariest night of the year, GIVE ME SOMETHING GOOD TO EAT is like a sack full of Halloween candy!"Ally Russell, author of IT CAME FROM THE TREES
Born and raised in Middle Tennessee, D.W. Gillespie wrote his first short story in second grade. It involved (unsurprisingly) monsters wreaking havoc on some unsuspecting victim. Some things never change. He began writing seriously after taking a creative writing class in college, and he's written steadily ever since. He lives in Tennessee with his wife and two kids, and on dark nights, you might find them huddled around a campfire sharing spooky tales.