No Place for Monsters

No Place for Monsters

No Place for Monsters

No Place for Monsters

Audio MP3 on CD(MP3 on CD)

$39.99 
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Overview

In this spellbinding, lavishly illustrated story that Diary of a Wimpy Kid author Jeff Kinney calls "wildly imaginative and totally terrifying," two unlikely friends face down their worst fears in order to stop their small town—and themselves—from disappearing. 

Levi and Kat are about to discover a very dark side to their neighborhood. 

Nothing ever seems out of place in the safe, suburban town of Cowslip Grove. Lawns are neatly mowed, sidewalks are tidy, and the sounds of ice cream trucks fill the air. But now . . . kids have been going missing—except no one even realizes it, because no one remembers them. 

  • Not their friends. 
  • Not their teachers. 
  • Not even their families. 

But Levi and Kat do remember, and suddenly only they can see why everyone is in terrible danger when the night air rolls in. Now it is up to Levi and Kat to fight it and save the missing kids before it swallows the town whole. 


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781664783232
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Publication date: 09/15/2020
Series: No Place for Monsters Series , #1
Product dimensions: 5.30(w) x 7.50(h) x (d)
Age Range: 8 - 12 Years

About the Author

Kory Merritt is a former public school art teacher from western New York who enjoys reading weird stories, looking for strange wildlife, and drawing creepy monsters. In addition to teaching, Kory previously worked as an illustrator for the online game franchise Poptropica and its spin-off book series.



Kory Merritt is a former public school art teacher from western New York who enjoys reading weird stories, looking for strange wildlife, and drawing creepy monsters. In addition to teaching, Kory previously worked as an illustrator for the online game franchise Poptropica and its spin-off book series.


Read an Excerpt

On Monday Cindy Fogle woke her parents at 2 a.m. with a scream.
      Mr. and Mrs. Fogle found Cindy sitting bolt upright in her bed, eyes wide and skin clammy. Night terrors, figured Mrs. Fogle. Cindy slept with her parents the rest of the night.
      On Tuesday Cindy woke at 1:45 a.m. She was hysterical when her parents arrived to calm her.
      She spent another restless night in her parents’ room, babbling about the Really Tall Man.
      On Wednesday Cindy’s screams started shortly after midnight. She begged to spend the night in her parents’ room again.
      Her room was bad.
      The closet was bad.
      The curtains were bad.
      Under the bed—bad, bad, bad.
      Mr. Fogle even checked under the bed. See? No monsters. No “Really Tall Man.” Just a plush rabbit that Mr. Fogle didn’t remember buying.
      At last her parents relented, and while Cindy snuggled between them, Mr. Fogle silently vowed this would be the final time his daughter slept in their bed.
      On Thursday Mrs. Fogle was roused in the middle of the night by a faint shuffling noise. She held her breath and listened.
      Silence.
      Probably just the fridge or the water heater or one of many strange house noises she noticed only at night. She fell back into sleep.
      In the morning Mr. and Mrs. Fogle woke and went about their business. They did not notice that Cindy was gone.
      Her room was empty. The speckled wallpaper, the pony border, the Tinker Bell bed sheets, the toy chest, the clothes that should have been hanging in the closet: gone.
      No, not gone. More like never there to begin with. It was just a spare room Mr. Fogle had been planning to fill with a pool table.
      And the family portrait hanging in the hall? Oh, that was there. It showed Mr. and Mrs. Fogle holding hands and smiling. No Cindy between them. Why should there be a Cindy? The Fogles did not have a daughter.
      And the school didn’t call when Cindy failed to show. Why should they? There was no Cindy Fogle in their records.
      Cindy?
      Cindy who?

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