World Famous Comics NetworkWorld Famous Comics Network World Famous Comics CommunityComic Book ClassifiedsSketchCards.com
WFC Home | About | Columns | Comics | Contests | Features | Freebies | Gallery | Links | News | Podcasts | Shop
SHOP >> David Mack | Andy Lee | Amy Allen | Michonne | Dean Haglund | Virginia Hey | WFC Published | WFC Auctions



ScheduleUPDATED TODAY! Tue, 18-Nov-2008
Anything Goes TriviaAnything Goes Trivia
Bob Rozakis
Megaton ManMegaton Man
Don Simpson
TailipoeTailipoe
Craig Boldman
TrevorTrevor
Piper & Lee


NewsNEWS 18-Nov-2008 12:31am
Stan Lee, Olivia de Havilland Win Honors
Supergirl 38 cover and solicitation reve...
Marvel Comic Books: Escape To Fantasy & ...
Fans flock to comic book show

Comic Book - Movie - Video Game - Anime 

Friends & Affiliates
Adobe Store
Amazon.com
Anime Studio
Apple Store
Dick Blick Art Materials
eBay
GoDaddy.com

StarWarsShop.com
TFAW
World Famous Comics: The Boy in the Burning House
The Boy in the Burning House
By: Tim Wynne-Jones
Publisher: Usborne Publishing Ltd
Average Rating:4.50 out of 5.00 stars
Binding: Paperback
Label: Usborne Publishing Ltd
Number of Pages: 272
Publication Date: January 24, 2005
Reading Level: Young Adult

Enlarge Image
The Boy in the Burning House
List Price: $10.35
Used Price: $1.79
3rd Party New: $3.99
Amazon's Price: $3.99

You Save: $6.36 (61%)
Usually ships in 1-2 business days


Similar Items

The Westing Game (Puffin Modern Classics)

Holt Handbook: Third Course

A Thief in the House of Memory

Heroes, Gods and Monsters of the Greek Myths

Writing Research Papers (perfect bound) (12th Edition) (Writing Research Papers)
More Similar Items...

Editorial Comments

Product Description:
"An absolutely riveting thriller . . . a tour de force." -- Quill & Quire

Two years after his father's mysterious disappearance, Jim Hawkins is coping -- barely. Underneath, he's frozen in uncertainty and grief. What did happen to his father? Is he dead or just gone? Then Jim meets Ruth Rose. Moody, provocative, she's the bad-girl stepdaughter of Father Fisher, Jim's father's childhood friend and the town pastor, and she shocks Jim out of his stupor when she tells him her stepfather is a murderer. "Don't you want to know who he murdered?" she asks. Jim doesn't. Ruth Rose is clearly crazy -- a sixteen-year-old misfit. Yet something about her fierce conviction pierces Jim's shell. He begins to burn with a desire for the truth, until it becomes clear that it may be more unsettling than he can bear. What is the real meaning of the strange prayers Father Fisher intones behind the door of his private sanctuary? Why does Ruth Rose suddenly disappear? And what really happened thirty years ago when a boy died in a burning house?


Amazon.com Review:
From its opening scene, in which a teenage girl overhears her stepfather's creepy confessions, to its terrifying conclusion in a deserted mine shaft, Tim Wynne-Jones's The Boy in the Burning House has the magnetic energy of a well-crafted made-for-television thriller, without pausing for commercial breaks. Like the best of the TV thrillers, The Boy in the Burning House features a smiling, unredeemable villain: Father Fisher, who leads the Church of the Blessed Transfiguration in a remote farming community.

Fourteen-year-old Jim Hawkins's father, Hub, has disappeared, and Ruth Rose, the pastor's stepdaughter, tries to convince him that Fisher killed Hub. If that possibility isn't unsavory enough, Jim discovers that his dad and Fisher were both involved in a fire that killed another teenage boy 30 years before. It is the unraveling of this long-hidden mystery that gives The Boy in the Burning House its page-turning edginess. As Jim investigates his father's past, his memories of a gentle and morally upright father are twisted out of shape. "He felt like he was burning up," Wynne-Jones writes, "and there was a boy inside him hammering to get out into the air."

As the novel roars towards its conclusion, some of its psychological richness and narrative consistency are sacrificed to fast-paced action sequences. Fisher's midnight stalking of Jim and Ruth Rose is as terrifying as Jack Nicholson's frenzied house crawl in The Shining, but Wynne-Jones never fully explains how Fisher became a monster. The Boy in the Burning House is a great read, but one that starts to wobble like a house of cards once the thrills are over. --Lisa Alward


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:4.50 out of 5.00 stars

4 out of 5 starsThe Boy in the Burning House
The title of the book is The Boy in the Burning House, the author is Tim Wynne-Jones. Jim Hawnkins lost his father two years ago and Jim doesn't know how. One day Jim meets a girl named Ruth Rose who tells Jim that the minister of their church Father Fisher murdered his father, but needless to say Ruth Rose is Fishers stepdaughter. As Ruth and Jim try to find out who murdered Jim's father they find out that another one of Jim's father's friends died around the time of his father's death. As this happens Ruth and Jim are having problems because some one is coming to Jim's house and some things are happening that are just real creepy.
I really liked this book; I liked this book because it kept me reading and it all ways had something exciting going on. I would recommend this to a friend who likes a mystery book and likes a book that keeps them on the end of their chair.

Sincerely,
Kid Reader



5 out of 5 starsThe reader will be panting for breath.
Everyone in the tiny Canadian farming community knows that Ruth Rose, despite being the preacher's step-daughter, is a crazy-bad girl. So who is Jim Hawkins to say otherwise?

When Ruth Rose surprises Jim while he's taking down a beaver dam on his farm one day he thinks she's playing some sort of elaborate game on him. She has been spying on Jim and his mother for long enough to know both of their schedules. Freaky. Even freakier, Ruth-Rose insists that Jim's father, Hub, who's been missing for a year, is dead. And not just dead, murdered --- by Ruth Rose's step-father, Father Fisher, to be exact.

Jim doesn't want to believe Ruth Rose, but when the crazy-bad girl tells him about a fire that links Father and Hub, he begins to think that maybe Ruth Rose isn't completely insane in this case and that there may be a connection between the long-ago fire and his father's disappearance.

THE BOY IN THE BURNING HOUSE is a fast paced, thrilling ride that begins
quietly and builds intensity as the pages fly by. At its center, is Jim Hawkins, a completely average young guy who finds he can no longer place his faith in his knowledge of the world. And with only Ruth Rose to help him piece together all the mysteries, Jim feels as if he's gotten into something he can't control. He knows he must find the truth or he won't have a future.

Tim Wynne-Jones sets his tale in the most unlikely of places --- a quiet, isolated town in rural Ontario --- and plops the reader into boiling emotions and the swift moving currents of events both past and present. The result is a wild plot filled with suspense. The reader will be panting for breath as Jim gets caught up in a series of events he cannot fathom or control until the story ends!

--- Reviewed by Cassia Van Arsdale



5 out of 5 starsPage Turner
The Boy in the Burning House is a compelling novel written by Tim Wynne-Jones. The setting is Ladybank, a small town where everybody knows everyone else's business. Young Jim Hawkins and his mother lived on a farm. Just 3 years ago Jims Father, Hub Hawkins disappeared. Jim and his mother try to forget the pain they went through losing him. They are reminded of him when the pastors daughter Ruth Rose shows up and tries to convince Jim that Father (Eldon) Fisher killed his father. Jim is caught between believing Ruth Rose who they say is crazy and has two personalities. Jim late decides to trust Ruth Rose and the two of them do a little detective work to see if they can solve Hubs disappearance.



4 out of 5 starsBest Young Adult Mystery
The Boy in the Burning House is a compelling novel written by Tim Wynne-Jones. The setting is Ladybank, a small town where everybody knows everyone elses buissness. Young Jim Hawkins and his mother lived on a farm. Just 3 years ago Jims Father,Hub Hawkins disappered. Jim and his mother try to forget the pain they went through losing him. They are reminded of him when the pastors daughter Ruth Rose shows up and tries to convince Jim that Father (Eldon) Fisher killed his father. Jim is caught between believing Ruth Rose who they say is crazy and has two personalities. Jim trusts Ruth Rose and the two of them do a little detective work to see if they can solve Hubs disapperance.



4 out of 5 starsThe Boy in the Burning House
The Boy in the Burning House
By Tim Wynne-Jones

Summary:
Two years after his father mysteriously disappeared, Jim Hawkins' life is leading toward uncertainty and grief. He then meats this moody, punky stepdaughter of Father Fisher. She was known as Ruth Rose. She shocks him by telling him that his stepfather is a murderer. Jim of course was in denial, but Ruth Rose asks him this question, and that was all to arouse Jim's suspicion. In spite of his fear, he wants Rose to tell him the truth. As Jim gets closer to the truth everyday, danger is also closing in. Jim then must decide if this is worth it. Should he risk his life and find out what happened to his father or should he keep a sacred memory?

Why I liked this book:
I'm not very used to reading books about killing. I never would have thought it would be crime. It has been a long time for me when I have read a crime book, and it just sounded good to me. The books I'm used to are all science fiction, and it really has good suspense like "Don't you want to know who he murdered?" or when somebody sprayed these words "Father killed Hub" in anger red. It's just like an entire new taste to me when I was reading that crazy scaring book.

My favorite part of the book:
It was really at the end when Jim was captured, and had to escape out a mysterious, maze-like cave. I had predicted that Jim would get out of course, and would be like those good ending books. One thing that aroused my attention though was the action in the air. It had so many turns I was confused, but I really liked it even though I had to read it twice. This book took the breath out of me!


Related Categories:Similar Items

The Westing Game (Puffin Modern Classics)

Holt Handbook: Third Course

A Thief in the House of Memory

Heroes, Gods and Monsters of the Greek Myths

Writing Research Papers (perfect bound) (12th Edition) (Writing Research Papers)
More Similar Items...

Books
 Comics
  Comic Strips
  How to Draw Comics
  How to Draw Manga

 Graphic Novels
  AiT/Planet Lar
  Alternative Comics
  Archie Comics
  Avatar Press
  DC Comics
    Batman
    Justice League
    Superman
  Dark Horse Comics
    Hellboy
    Sin City
    Star Wars
  Drawn & Quarterly
  Devil's Due Publishing
  Dreamwave
  Fantagraphics Books
  Gemstone/Gladstone
  IDW Publishing
  Image Comics
  Kitchen Sink Press
  Marvel Comics
    Fantastic Four
    Spider-Man
    Wolverine
    X-Men
  Oni Press
  SLG/Slave Labor
  TwoMorrows
  Top Shelf Productions

 Manga
  ADV Manga
  Antarctic Press
  Central Park Media
  Digital Manga
  Gutsoon
  TokyoPop
  Viz Communications

 Books
  Animation
  Antiques & Collectibles
  Art Instruction & Ref.
  Art Reference
  Arts
  Business
  Cartooning
  Children's
  Computer Graphics
  Computers & Internet
  Digital Business
  Drawing (general)
  Entertainment
  Entrepreneurship
  Figure Drawing
  Games
  Graphic Design
  Horror
  Humor
  Literature & Fiction
  Movies
  Music
  Mystery & Thrillers
  Nonfiction
  Photography
  Pop Culture Collectibles
  Popular Culture
  Publishing & Books
  Reference
  Role Playing & Fantasy
  Sci-Fi & Fantasy
  Screenwriting Film
  Screenwriting TV
  Sketchbooks/Journals
  Stationary
  Teens
  Television
  Toys
  Video Games
  Writing

 Calendars


WFC Home | About | Columns | Comics | Contests | Features | Freebies | Gallery | Links | News | Podcasts | Shop



World Famous Comics Network
World Famous Comics Community
ComicsCommunity.com
Comic Book Classifieds
ComicBookClassifieds.com
SketchCards.com
SketchCards.com

GO SHOPPING >>

© 1995 - 2008 World Famous Comics. All rights reserved. All other © & ™ belong to their respective owners.
Advertiser Info . Terms of Use . Privacy Policy . Contact Info
World Famous Comics Network