
Jenny, the Halloween Spy by Lillie Patterson, 1979.
One Halloween, Jenny goes to visit Nancy, a woman who local people say is a witch. Jenny is curious about magic and, knowing that there are magical creatures abroad on Halloween, she wonders if she might see something unusual at Nancy’s house.
As she arrives at the house, Jenny peeks inside before announcing herself and sees Nancy putting some kind of oil in her eyes. After Nancy welcomes her inside and offers her some cider, Jenny sneaks a little of this oil and puts it in one of her eyes to see what it does. She discovers that the oil allows her to see magical beings that are hidden to most people. There are fairies in Nancy’s house and rich furnishings that appear very ordinary to Jenny’s unaffected eye.
Using her new ability to see magical creatures, Jenny goes to the town market to see what is going on there. However, when she catches a pixie stealing some fruit, the fairies and other “wee folk” decide to put an end to Jenny’s spying on their activities. With some magic dust, the pixie removes her ability to see magical creatures and tricks her into getting onto an enchanted horse that takes her on a wild ride ending with a view of the devil!
The book is available to borrow and read for free online through Internet Archive.
My Reaction
This is a kind of cautionary story about the dangers of curiosity. Jenny’s curiosity invites the attention of dangerous creatures and leads her into a frightening situation, something that she never wants to repeat. For the most part, I think that curiosity is a trait that should be encouraged, but Jenny did deliberately seek out a person with a dangerous reputation and pry into the things she was doing, even trying some herself because she wanted to know more about it, so she could be considered to have gone looking for trouble.
In some ways, this book is very strange, but I can see where it draws on old folklore. The end part about seeing the devil (accompanied by headless hounds) is a little bizarre and rather frightening for a modern children’s picture book but in keeping with folklore about Halloween and witches. Although everything that happens to Jenny is supposedly really happening, part of me did wonder about the oil that she put in her eye because plants with hallucinogenic properties are used in folk medicine. As far as the story is concerned, though, the magic and supernatural creatures are real.
The pictures are colorful and fascinating, but this book may be frightening for very young children. Some of the fairies remind me a little of the pictures that inspired the Cottingley Fairy hoax.











A boy called Nicky and his mother are looking for a new place to live somewhere in New England. The mother wants to buy an old cottage with the idea of turning it into a tea room. At first, they have trouble finding a place, but finally they buy an old house that badly needs fixing up, not knowing that there is an old witch living there.







Felicity’s grandfather is a wealthy man who owns the Kings Cross Plantation. Every summer, Felicity and her family go to visit him there, and Felicity loves it. Her grandfather teaches her a lot of things, like which plants can be used for food and medicine, and takes her for horse rides around his estate.
Ben tells Felicity that he ran away from his apprenticeship to join the revolutionary army. He wants badly to fight for the colonies’ freedom from England, but he had a bad fall while traveling and hurt his leg. Felicity tries to convince Ben to let her get help for him and to return to her father to finish his apprenticeship, but Ben doesn’t want Felicity’s grandfather to find out that he’s there or why he ran away because he knows that he disapproves of the revolutionaries. Because Ben kept her secret when she used to sneak out to see Penny, Felicity reluctantly agrees to keep Ben’s presence a secret for awhile, sneaking him some food and supplies. She tells Ben that, while she thinks that standing up for what he believes is good, he’s going about it in the wrong way because breaking his apprenticeship was dishonest.

This is the second book in the
Then, Felicity’s father declares that because of the tax on tea, he will no longer carry it in his shop. It leaves Felicity feeling conflicted about Miss Manderly’s lessons, which include the proper way to serve tea. She has started enjoying the lessons and doesn’t want to lose Elizabeth’s friendship, but she wants to support her father, too. Then, Annabelle criticizes Felicity for what her father said at one of the lessons, prompting Felicity to storm out angrily. She is doubly angry and hurt that Elizabeth didn’t try to defend her, making her doubt Elizabeth’s friendship.

This is the first book in the
Every morning for about a month, Felicity sneaks out of the house early, dressed in a pair of breeches that she borrowed from Ben without his permission. She goes to visit Penny and gradually gains her trust. When Penny finally allows her to ride her, Felicity thinks that she has won ownership of her, but Jiggy Nye accuses her of theft and takes back the horse. He denies that he ever promised to give her to anyone who could ride her, although Felicity’s younger siblings agree that they heard him say so.






