Olivia Kidney Stops for No One (Olivia Kidney, #2)

by Ellen Potter

Other authorsPeter H. Reynolds (Illustrator)
Paperback, 2007

Status

Available

Call number

J3D.Pot

Publication

Puffin Books

Pages

252

Description

Twelve-year-old Olivia Kidney and her father move into a Manhattan brownstone that has a lagoon in the living room, hosts visiting strangers in the middle of the night, and is mysteriously close to the spirit world.

Description

Originally titled Olivia Kidney and the Exit Academy

What is it with Olivia and ghosts? No matter where Olivia Kidney goes, they follow. even when she and her klutzy handyman father start over in a new brownstone in New York City—owned by the mad, bad, and dangerous Ansel Plover—there is no escape from the weirdness that is Olivia's life. Their new living room is entirely submerged underwater, and Olivia needs a boat to navigate past the bobbing furniture and snapping turtles just to get to her bedroom. Complete strangers show up in the middle of the night to practice bumping into walls! And then, there are the ghosts. The house holds secrets, lots of them—Olivia can feel it. Why, she wonders, was she invited to live there?

Collection

Barcode

3315

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

252 p.; 7.75 inches

ISBN

9780142407721

Lexile

790L

User reviews

LibraryThing member Cheryl_in_CC_NV
Not sure why I'm reading all three of these. I guess because they're so creative - not quite anything else I've read. They certainly don't condescend to children, but rather have appeal to readers of all ages. Lots of ideas and relatively rich characters and humor and thoughtfulness all compactly
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presented. A little creepy for my personal preference, but certainly nothing most kids age 9 and up can't handle. Also, I might personally might rather give it 3.5 stars, but since the option is 3 or 4 and it's certainly better than a 3, well, it gets a 4. Ok.
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LibraryThing member fingerpost
There are some truly delightful moments in this book, usually when Olivia has encounters with the highly eccentric adults she tends to meet, most of whom seem to have stepped out of Roald Dahl novels. The humor is Dahl-like. But the overall story isn't as successful as those moments. The parts are
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better than the whole.
Olivia can see and communicate with ghosts. In this volume, she gets lured into an "Exit Academy" which trains people who are about to die, how to die, while they are still alive and dreaming. It's confusing, and doesn't hold up well to theological or philosophical scrutiny, which I suppose the reader isn't really intended to give it anyway.
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Rating

½ (19 ratings; 3.7)

Awards

Read Aloud Indiana Book Award (Middle School — 2006)

Call number

J3D.Pot
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