3.68 AVERAGE

adventurous informative lighthearted medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: No

I read this when I was younger and it scared the ?*@^%#$^%# out of me! hahaha I couldn't fall asleep that night because I was thinking about creepy ghosts or whatever. I decided I never wanted to see that book again and my mom said she'd hide it somewhere I'd never find it. (She probably just threw it away.) I LOVE YOU MOM

Between Slim Cooley, the acknowledgment of time travel and watching Jack and Annie begin to adopt one another's strengths, this may have become my new favourite in the series.

There was an actual ghost in this book. Granted, he played a piano and helped the kids, but there goes my "no such thing as ghosts" story.

"Mommy, ghosts are NOT imaginary! They are in real life!"

Awesome.

Very quick read!

3.25. Splitting hairs but I liked this more than dolphins. Felt a little more developed and I liked the connection to the present

The saga and success of The Magic Tree House continues! The tenth adventure, Ghost Town at Sundown, is filled with the excitement, action, and fun facts always found in Magic Tree House books.
Morgan le Fay has promised to make Jack and Annie masters of the tree house if they can solve four riddles. In Ghost Town at Sundown, the Magic Tree House whisks Jack and Annie back to a ghost town in the Wild West of the 1880s. There, they meet a mustang herder named Slim as they search for the answer to the second riddle.