A sleepover at an amusement park in Georgia turns terrifying.
New eighth grade student Brie Turner has her sights set on befriending the wealthy, pretty, popular girls everyone calls “the Ems”—Emma Bryan, Emerson Smith-Robinson, and Emily Bell. She’s gleeful when a field day triumph leads to an invitation to Emily’s birthday party: The four of them will have an overnight stay at Wildwoods, a nearby amusement park. But Brie begins to see a darker side to the Ems, especially when a game of Truth or Dare leads to her being trapped in an off-limits part of the park with “no adults, no lights, no working bathrooms”—on the anniversary of a 1995 accident that killed four teenagers. She encounters some older teens, CJ, Dawn, and Trip, who take her under their wing, and she revels in their acceptance and camaraderie, but she’s soon plagued by dark visions and ends up in genuine danger even though her new friends put themselves at risk to help her. The frights are accompanied by strong messaging about bullying and the value of being yourself and finding friends who like the real you. Dawson’s smooth writing brings the well-drawn amusement park setting to life. Characters are largely white presenting or racially ambiguous; Brie has tan skin that’s “genetic,” Emerson has beaded braids, and Dawn is Asian.
A fast-paced roller-coaster ride of a novel that effectively blends the familiar with the uncanny.
(map) (Horror. 8-13)