Reviews

Beyond the Doors by David Neilsen

rkiladitis's review against another edition

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3.0

Four siblings have the weirdest, worst day of their lives when they’re pulled out of class to learn that their father is in a coma after a fire consumed their home. As their mother disappeared years ago, there’s a sobbing social worker, ready to split them up to horrors unknown, until a mystery aunt is located. Janice, Zack, Sydney, and Alexa Rothbaum are quickly shuttled off to this mysterious, scatterbrained aunt. Once the kids start exploring and settling in, they learn the bizarre secret behind their aunt’s fortress home: she’s got a machine that allows her to use doors to access the memories contained within them, and she’s searching for her father: their grandfather.

Remember Monsters, Inc? How the Monsters would go through different doors to reach different kids’ rooms? Think of it like that, but instead of using the doors to get into kids’ rooms, you stepped into the memories of the person most identified with the door. If you stepped through the door to my room from 1986, for instance, you’d see me, sprawled on my bed reading a copy of Bop! Magazine, in a room papered with Duran Duran posters, and talking to my best friend on the phone. The memories are sepia-tinged, and while you can interact to a degree with the memories, too much interaction has… consequences.

It’s a madcap adventure, with a wacky aunt, an off-the-walls social worker with a penchant for the melodramatic, and loads of family secrets to discover, but character development and world-building aren’t as rich as I’d have enjoyed. There’s quite a bit of humor and a climactic battle that’s both gruesome and thrilling, and readers will never look at a bowl of Cheerios without groaning again. Black and white illustrations keep readers invested in the story. Beyond the Doors will appeal to Series of Unfortunate Events and Mysterious Benedict Society fans; display and booktalk with The Problim Children for some fun discussions about weird siblings and families. Ask kids what doors they would like to wander into – or what their doors would have to say. It’s a great creative writing or art exercise!

dougsasser's review against another edition

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1.0

This was a ARC from Goodreads.com. Four children are taken to live with an aunt they did not realize they had when their father was injured in a fire. Their mother has been missing for years. Their aunt's home has no doors. She uses doors and "mad scientist" equipment to connect to peoples memories. This is the key to unlocking what happened to this chidren's parents. All the adults are eccentric and the kids have to care for themselves in this fantasy tale.

book_nut's review against another edition

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3.0

The cover is awful, but the story's pretty cute.

singerji's review against another edition

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adventurous dark emotional funny mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.75

samanthaisonline's review against another edition

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4.0

"When a family disaster forces the four Rothbaum children to live with their aunt Gladys, they immediately know there is something strange about their new home." Soon, the children are pulled into a world where you can access the memories behind doors - except these memories can sour with too many visits.

It is an interesting premise and I really enjoyed Beyond the Doors. It had a vaguely Series of Unfortunate Events vibe and it was fun and entertaining. It's clearly middle grade but that's not a bad thing and I would definitely recommend!
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