Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

The Ghost Belonged to Me

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
8
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
8
1 Ratings
100
90
81
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This


Publication date
  
1975

ISBN
  
0-670-33767-6

Originally published
  
1975

Genre
  
Children's literature

Publisher
  
Viking Press


Language
  
English

Pages
  
183pp

OCLC
  
1174625

Author
  
Richard Peck

Followed by
  
Ghosts I Have Been

Country
  
United States of America

The Ghost Belonged to Me t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRoPrY58w49tZsBe

Media type
  
Print (Hardback & Paperback)

Similar
  
Richard Peck books, Blossom Culp books, Children's literature

The Ghost Belonged to Me is a novel written for children by Richard Peck, author of Newbery Medal winning A Year Down Yonder.

Contents

Plot

1913. Alexander Armsworth is a normal boy until he sees a ghost of a girl in his barn, warning him of an impending disaster. This leads to him to become a local hero. But when he explains that a ghost warned him, it unburies the story on how she came to rest on their property, far from her home in New Orleans, Louisiana. He takes it upon himself to take her body home to New Orleans.

Alexander Armsworth

13 years old, and a 7th grader at Horace Mann Middle School, he is informed by his classmate Blossom Culp, that he is receptive to ghosts. When she also tells him his barn is haunted, he thinks that she is playing a trick on him. Eventually he meets the ghost of Inez Dumaine, the ghost that haunts his barn. With her help he saves the lives of others when a mad man weakened and set a fire to the supports for the trestle in hopes to crash the trolley. He becomes a famous local hero, but when he explains he had help from a ghostly source, it leads to a journey to return her body to New Orleans. With the help of Blossom, and his great uncle Miles, he eventually returns her body to New Orleans, to be placed within her family’s crypt.

Blossom Culp

She is a 12-year-old girl, who first informs Alexander of his ability to see ghosts. She lives in a shack by the trolley tracks, and she helps out Alexander on his trip to return Inez’s body to New Orleans.

Uncle Miles Armsworth

Alexander’s great uncle. He is a carpenter who works as he pleases. He is the only one who knew the history of Captain Campbell and Inez Dumaine. He accompanies Blossom and Alexander to New Orleans, and to sees to it that Inez returns home.

Inez Dumaine

She is the ghost that haunts the Armsworth barn. She warns Alexander about the man who damaged the trestle bridge, so he could save others. She tells him her body is buried nearby and asks to be returned to her family, who were “above ground, but they rest.”

Real Life Inspirations

According to Richard Peck’s autobiography Anonymously Yours, several characters and places were based on reality.

Uncle Miles Armsworth was based on his Uncle Miles Peck, who even in his eighties continued with his carpentry, and like Alexander’s uncle “he worked when he wanted to, he fished when he wanted to, and he said rude things in front of people’s mothers. I thought he was God”

Blossom Culp voice came from Peck's grandmother and great-aunts, and speaks in their combined voice “never wrong and always precise except for grammar.”

The Snake Creek trestle bridge in The Ghost Belonged to Me was inspired by Williams Creek trestle bridge in Decatur, Illinois.

Film Adaptation

In 1978, the book was adapted into a film by Walt Disney Productions entitled Child of Glass.

References

The Ghost Belonged to Me Wikipedia