The Bogeyman Caper by Susan Pearson, 1990.
This is part of the Eagle-Eye Ernie mystery series.
Everyone says that the old yellow house in their town, White Bear Lake, Minnesota, is inhabited by a bogeyman, but Ernie doesn’t believe it. She decides to prove to her friends that there is no bogeyman in the old house.
Ernie finds ways for her and her friends to keep an eye on the house. At first, all they see is a creepy-looking old cat. Then, William finds a strange bone in the yard, and Ernie sees a red glow inside and hears tapping sounds. Are her friends right about the bogeyman, or is there another explanation?
Ernie uses her powers of observation to determine that many of the spooky things about the house and its new owner are actually familiar, both to herself and her friends.
The book is available to borrow and read for free online through Internet Archive.
Eagle-Eye Ernie Comes to Town by Susan Pearson, 1990.




#2 The Red Trailer Mystery by Julie Campbell, 1950.
#1 The Secret of the Mansion by Julie Campbell, 1948.
The 123 Zoo Mystery by Susan Pearson, 1991.
The Master Puppeteer by Katherine Paterson, 1975.
Okada was once Yoshida’s teacher, and he accepts Jiro into the theater. Jiro is fascinated with the world of the theater, studying alongside Yoshida’s son, Kinshi, who becomes his closest friend. However, he must first graduate from apprentice to puppeteer before he can begin earning enough money to support his family, and the news from outside the theater is grim. Word has reached him that his father is ill and his mother is starving. The poor people of Osaka, starving and oppressed by the wealthy merchants and tax collectors, begin rioting.
The Mystery in Old Quebec by Mary C. Jane, 1955.
The solution to the mystery involves family quarrels, custody issues, and racial tensions. In spite of that, this is actually a very gentle story. In the end, the kids are dependent on the people the mysterious message was intended for to help a troubled, lonely child. It turns out that the boy is an orphan, and some of his relatives are white, and some are First Nations (Native American). There is a fight for the boy’s custody, but the boy knows where he really wants to be.
The Blue-Nosed Witch by Margaret Embry, 1956.
Blanche looks for her fellow witches but ends up joining a group of trick-or-treaters by mistake. They love her blue nose and introduce her to the idea of trick-or-treating. Thinking that even the grumpiest man in town would be impressed by Blanche’s amazing nose, they stop at his house, too. The old man isn’t impressed by anything and plays a mean trick on the kids. However, Blanche is a real witch, and she and her cat Brockett give the old man a real Halloween scare.
Terror on Cemetery Hill by Drew Stevenson, 1996.