• Gallows Hill

  • By: Lois Duncan
  • Narrated by: A. Savalas
  • Length: 6 hrs and 41 mins
  • 4.0 out of 5 stars (46 ratings)

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Gallows Hill  By  cover art

Gallows Hill

By: Lois Duncan
Narrated by: A. Savalas
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Editorial reviews

Written by master of young adult fiction Lois Duncan, Gallows Hill is a chilling tale based on the historic Salem witch trials, and tells the story of a young girl whose playful claim that she’s a real, live psychic takes a turn for the deadly when she begins actually to see the future...and her terrified classmates decide that something must be done.

Performer A. Savalas’ slightly scratchy voice adds an extra-spooky vibe to this supernatural mystery, and her exquisite timing will doubtless thrill listeners with a taste for tension, which this creepy audiobook has in spades!

Publisher's summary

17-year-old Sarah doesn’t believe in magic, but she thinks it’s fun to pretend to be a psychic - until her startling visions of the future turn deadly.

When Sarah Zoltanne moves from sunny California to a small town in Missouri, she feels like she'll never fit in. Her mother is dating a jerk, the kids at her school despise her, and she misses her old home. So when a popular boy asks her to tell fortunes at a school fair, she jumps at the chance. But soon her crystal ball begins to swirl with strange visions and her outlandish predictions start to come true with startling accuracy. Now Sarah must confront a community that not only mistrusts her, but also fears her strange powers.

Gallows Hill is a spine-chilling thriller based on the story of the Salem witch trials.

©1997 Lois Duncan (P)2013 Audible, Inc.

What listeners say about Gallows Hill

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    4 out of 5 stars

A modern day witch hunt

"Gallows Hill" is a very well crafted suspense/supernatural thriller. Although I don't usually go for the paranormal books, this one was presented in a way that was, for the most part, believable. It is also supposed to be a young adult book, but I found it entertaining for the not-so-young adults as well.

The book starts with Sarah Zoltanne being forced to relocate from Ventura, California, to tiny Pine Crest, Missouri, for her final year of high school. She was forced to follow when her mother Rosemary, widowed for several years, met Ted Thompson at a teacher conference and fell irresistibly in love. Ted was still married, although separated, and had a teenage daughter, Kyra, who was only one year younger than Sarah. The move was particularly rough for Sarah as no child wants to move away from their friends for their last year of high school. Add to that the fact that Pine Crest was a small community where the children had known each other almost from birth, and Sarah and Kyra couldn't stand each other, and you get what was the makings of a pretty miserable senior year for Sarah.

The class president, and anointed golden boy of Pine Crest, Eric Garrett, asks Sarah to help with the senior class fundraiser. They were holding a carnival in the gymnasium and Eric wanted her to be 'Madame Zoltanne,' fortune teller extraordinaire. Sarah tried every excuse she could think of to get out of it especially the fact that she didn't know the first thing about telling fortunes. Eric had a plan though. Kyra had a wireless radio and would feed info on all the people walking in Sarah's tent. Sarah would then put everything together and come up with a fortune. Her mother even had a crystal paperweight (which had a life of its own) that Sarah could use as a crystal ball.

Pressured to try and 'fit in' by Ted and Rosemary, Sarah agrees. The night turned out to be a major success. People were astonished that a stranger knew so many details about them, many she had never even spoken with before. All was going very well until Charlie Gorman walked in. Overweight and uncoordinated, Charlie was the class whipping board and was constantly being teased. When Sarah looked in the crystal ball for Charlie, she saw him being pushed down a flight of stairs. She was so taken aback by this that she feigned a headache and, since the carnival was almost over, decided to call it a night. When Charlie showed up at school the next day with a cast on his arm, things started getting sticky for Sarah.

Eric, having a hidden agenda of his own, pressures Sarah into holding private readings for cash. Kyra has a major crush on Eric and agrees to help. As she holds more fortune readings, Sarah sees things in the crystal ball which ultimately come to fruition. Add to this her nightmares about the Salem Witch trials and her growing friendship with Charlie, who is a proponent of reincarnation, and things start to spiral out of control for Sarah.

I very much enjoyed reading this book and while the plot was not really surprising, it kept the pages turning. None of us know what's on the other side of the grave, so who can say what happens.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Loved it 18 years ago, and more so now!

I first came upon this book in the school library in about fourth grade, give or take a year. Raised by a Christian family with plenty of personal demons to hide, stuck in a tiny rural town much like the one described in this story. Like Sarah, however, from childhood I was fascinated by new age ideas, reincarnation, mythology, the occult, etc. I saw The Crucible and immediately read up on the witch trials for fun, and guess what? I grew up to become a Wiccan witch!

Now, before you go blaming this book for the conversion, don't even think about it. This book did not draw me to witchcraft. This book provided comfort when I recognized even as a child that I was not like the other people around me. Back when I felt I was simply a freak, this book told me there were other ways of thinking, and other ways to live, and that there's no shame in being the odd duck; you just have to be patient and strong until you find your real flock. This book reminds the reader to keep an open mind, to question everything, and that no good ever comes from caging and denying your true self. I highly recommend it to readers and listeners of all ages.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Nostalgia

I read this novel as a kid and I’m return to it frequently as an adult. Lois Duncan and her protagonists have become lifelong friends.

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    1 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

Nearly unreadable

I chose this book because of the Sarah Chalke movie I've Been Waiting For You. The movie is 1,000 times better. The characters are annoying and one dimensional, the mother is especially infuriating. Lois Duncan's understanding of karma and the Salem Witch Trials is superficial at best and it really shows in this piece. The dialogue is unnatural and laughable. The ending is sloppy and hastily put together and unsatisfying. Don't waste your time on this book.

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    4 out of 5 stars
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A unique read

This is one of the few books that I read as a child and I still return to reread it. I love how Lois Duncan is able to craft a world of paranormal in such realistic settings.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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great imagination

I enjoyed this book, I don't adhere to new age beliefs, but all in all good storyline. I always liked Lois Duncan's books.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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Book had potential

The general story line of the book had potential but got slightly campy with the “twist”. The movie based on it (I’ve Been Waiting For You) is actually surprisingly better, and I don’t say that much. The narrator was the worst part. More emotion was needed and better pronunciation and less mistakes would’ve helped.

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