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The Empty Lot Next Door (revised edition) by Arthur M. Mills, Jr.: Book Review
http://book-critique.com/articles/425/1/The-Empty-Lot-Next-Door-revised-edition-by-Arthur-M-Mills-Jr-Book-Review/Page1.html
Reader Views
Book review, by readers, for readers 
By Reader Views
Published on 04/10/2011
 
Author Arthur Mills knows firsthand what it is to be bullied and how bullying can lead to suicide. Arthur’s older half-brothers as well as older neighborhood boys continually bullied and tortured his brother, Richard. While Richard did not fight back, he released his frustration by then beating and bullying Mills. Eventually, Richard could no longer deal with being an outcast and being bullied, so he hung himself at the age of twelve. Mills has spent his life mourning his brother, trying to cope with the horrible memories of bullying, and trying to understand how dysfunction resulted in the tragic events of his childhood. Because bullying has received more media attention in the last couple of years, Mills decided it was time to take his story public to raise awareness about bullying and suicide. While "The Empty Lot Next Door" includes Mills’ own true experience of a haunting by a ghost he knew as “Candle Face” during his childhood, many readers have found the bullying and suicide of Mills’ brother Richard to be the scariest part of the book.

The Empty Lot Next Door (revised edition) by Arthur M. Mills, Jr.: Book Review
Xlibris Corporation (2010)
ISBN 9781450072229
Reviewed by Lisa McCurley for Reader Views (07/10)

“The Empty Lot Next Door” is a tale of a haunting based on the actual experiences of the author, Arthur M. Mills, Jr., at about age eleven.  After a move out of the projects and into a regular house in a better neighborhood, Ray (Arthur’s nickname) has great expectations for a normal life.  The youngest of four brothers in a family faced with financial trouble and emotional distress, Ray instead endures an ordeal so terrifying, so confusing, that years went by before he could tell a soul about it.  This is the story of his visits from Candle Face, the girl rumored to have died in the house fire next door, and who relentlessly tormented him. 

But this story is much more than a ghost story.  It is also a story of the desperation, the pain and the helplessness experienced by children whose parents work long hours away from home, necessarily leaving them to fend for themselves against both real and imagined evils.  It’s about sibling abuse, and the scars that such abuse leaves on the victim as well as the abuser.  And this is the story of the intense struggle of a child to make sense of the world without communicating his fears and thoughts to the adults in his life since he doesn’t want to add to the family’s problems. 

I began to read this book at my usual reading time, right before bed.  After the first night of sleeping with the light on, I ended up taking off two afternoons from work to finish it which is all it took because I couldn’t put this book down.  The story is related in such a way that I could truly felt the author’s fear, pain and anxiety.  As a mother of two teenage boys, I could so hear the eleven-year-old heart and mind in these pages.  There are some places where the information is a little jumbled but it even furthers the style to that of a story told by an eleven-year-old.   “The Empty Lot Next Door” is gripping, frightening and well-paced.  After the last page I cried; not only because the book was over, but because I was so moved by the emotional experience this little boy had to go through.

I would so like to see “The Empty Lot Next Door” become a movie.  It’s a thrilling ghost story, but it is also so much more.  Since I live in Austin, I have decided to make a trip to the setting to see it for myself, and wonder if I will see Candle Face.  I’m taking a friend, just in case.