Plus, receive recommendations and exclusive offers on all of your favorite books and authors from Simon & Schuster.
Noah McNichol and the Backstage Ghost
LIST PRICE $7.99
PRICE MAY VARY BY RETAILER
Get 25% off plus free shipping on orders of $40 or more with code GIFT25. (Terms apply)
Buy from Other Retailers
Table of Contents
About The Book
“Will make a theater lover of any young reader.” —Booklist
Perfect for fans of The Wednesday Wars, this raucous and delightful middle grade mystery from Edgar Award–nominated author Martha Freeman is filled with backstage fun, relatable family drama, and maybe even a ghost.
Break a leg! That’s what you say to actors when what you mean is Have a good show!. Anything else is bad luck. But when Miss Magnus literally breaks her leg, eleven-year-old Noah McNichol and the rest of the Plattsfield Winklebottom Memorial Sixth-Grade Players are out of luck, left without a director for their production of Hamlet. Coach Fig comes to the rescue—sort of. He’ll direct, even though he is clearly more interested in whatever is happening on his phone than in directing. He doesn’t even know upstage from downstage! But then something weird happens: out of nowhere appears a strangely dressed old guy named Mike. He tells Noah he has theater experience, before disappearing—poof.
Noah has some investigating to do and some decisions to make. Like, does he care more that their new director might be a ghost or about getting to make his stage debut? And who is Mike and why has he decided to help? As things get weirder and weirder, one thing becomes clear: The show must go on, and Noah will do whatever it takes to make sure that happens.
Perfect for fans of The Wednesday Wars, this raucous and delightful middle grade mystery from Edgar Award–nominated author Martha Freeman is filled with backstage fun, relatable family drama, and maybe even a ghost.
Break a leg! That’s what you say to actors when what you mean is Have a good show!. Anything else is bad luck. But when Miss Magnus literally breaks her leg, eleven-year-old Noah McNichol and the rest of the Plattsfield Winklebottom Memorial Sixth-Grade Players are out of luck, left without a director for their production of Hamlet. Coach Fig comes to the rescue—sort of. He’ll direct, even though he is clearly more interested in whatever is happening on his phone than in directing. He doesn’t even know upstage from downstage! But then something weird happens: out of nowhere appears a strangely dressed old guy named Mike. He tells Noah he has theater experience, before disappearing—poof.
Noah has some investigating to do and some decisions to make. Like, does he care more that their new director might be a ghost or about getting to make his stage debut? And who is Mike and why has he decided to help? As things get weirder and weirder, one thing becomes clear: The show must go on, and Noah will do whatever it takes to make sure that happens.
Excerpt
Chapter One
CHAPTER ONE
Monday, Rehearsal Week One, 46 Days till Performance
Miss Magnus went to New York City over spring break to see shows and was crossing Broadway, not even jaywalking, when a taxi hit her and broke her leg in three places, and that’s how it started.
Miss Magnus had been teaching at Plattsfield-Winklebottom Memorial Elementary for twenty-five years and had so many sick days saved she didn’t have to come back to school till fall, so she didn’t. Instead, she sat home with her leg propped up and read poetry to her elderly chihuahua.
At least, that’s what my mom heard at Sal’s, the mini-mart close to our house, the store we go to if we don’t need anything unusual, like matzoh for my dad’s favorite weekend breakfast, matzoh brie, which is like scrambled eggs with crackers, only it tastes better than that sounds.
“It’s pretty funny that our director broke her leg—get it? Break a leg?” Clive said after school that Monday. We were walking from the school’s main building to the auditorium next door.
“Not funny exactly. I bet it hurt. But yeah, I get it,” I said. Break a leg! is what you say to actors when what you mean is Have a good show! because if you say something positive, it’s bad luck. Theater people think everything is bad luck.
“So without Miss Magnus, who will be in charge?” Clive asked.
“I guess we’ll see when we open the door to the auditorium. Can you wait that long?” I said.
“Hey—snark alert,” Clive said. “I was merely asking.”
“Sorry. I’m worried is all. I have a bad feeling that without Miss Magnus, the grown-ups will mess this up.”
“Mess up your chance to be a star?” Clive said.
“You got it.” By now we were climbing the steps. “Broadway! Hollywood! My ticket out of this backwater!”
“You’re strange, Noah,” Clive said.
“What do you expect? I’m a sixth-grade boy trying out for Shakespeare. You’re strange too.”
“I know, but don’t tell my mom,” Clive said. “She’s not-so-secretly hoping I won’t get a part so I can play baseball.”
“Ha! You’re a dude and you can read. You will definitely get a part.”
In the lobby, Clive pointed to a poster on the wall by the box office:
PLATTSFIELD-WINKLEBOTTOM MEMORIAL SIXTH-GRADE PLAYERS PRESENT WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE’S HAMLET, THE TALE OF A GRITTY PRINCE WHO LEARNS TO BE PATIENT! ONE NIGHT ONLY: FRIDAY, MAY 8!
The Plattsfield-Winklebottom Memorial Auditorium, the aud, is old-fashioned and massive and fancy. Now, with Clive behind me, I pushed open the heavy door that led from the lobby to the house. Before us, down the long aisle, was the stage, curtain closed, looking small and far away. Right and left of the aisle were rows and rows of seats, enough to hold grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, neighbors—practically the whole town of Plattsfield.
I was in second grade the first time I walked into the aud, probably for a presentation on playground safety or the alphabet from A to Z. Back then, I was a very small person in a very large space. The stage might as well have been in Canada. The ceiling seemed as distant as the sky. I can’t describe how it made me feel exactly, but the feeling was strong. I don’t mean I felt scared or puny or unimportant, which would have made sense. Instead, it was more like the opposite, as if I had the power to expand, grow big enough to fill the emptiness.
So even before I ever saw a play in it, I loved the aud for the feeling I got when I was there. Then, the same year, I think, my parents took me to the sixth-grade play, and even though I didn’t understand the story exactly, and even though I had to pee really bad, I thought that was great too. The actors were only sixth graders, same as I am now, but when they put on costumes and makeup and spoke strange, beautiful words, they became something else: the characters they were playing.
That day, Clive and I ran down the aisle. I think he was excited, too, even though, cool as he is, he never would’ve admitted it. Since the house lights were up, we could see that already around twenty kids were clustered in the seats closest to the stage. Most of them I’d known since my family moved to town almost five years ago. Plattsfield, New York, is not very big.
“I don’t see a teacher,” Clive said. “Maybe Mrs. Winklebottom couldn’t find anybody. I heard no one wants to do it. They’ve all got too many kids and extra jobs.”
Squeals and high fives—“Hey!” “Hey!” “Hello!” I mean, all of us had seen each other, like, half an hour before, but we did the long-lost friend thing anyway. Drama geeks, right?
And with or without a director, we were excited to be getting started.
I guess because of Mrs. Winklebottom—Mrs. Winklebottom and her money—the Plattsfield-Winklebottom Memorial Sixth-Grade Play is a big deal. I’m going to bet everyone in the auditorium that day went to it with their families every year. Clive’s big sister, Gillian, had acted in it when we were in third grade. Lila Moseley’s and Eddie Muir’s moms had been in it when they were kids. Maybe other kids’ parents had too.
Not my parents, though. My family’s not from here, and I wasn’t born here. Around Plattsfield, that makes me strange, an outsider.
Meanwhile, everybody at rehearsal was talking about who the new director would be.
“Mrs. Winklebottom is going to direct us herself. I have it on good authority,” said Emma Jessel.
“What does that even mean—good authority?” asked Sarah Monti.
Emma rolled her eyes the way she does. “Well, if you don’t know, far be it from me to tell you.” Emma was standing right next to me. Her loud voice rang in my ear, and I took a step away.
“She means she heard it somewhere,” Clive told Sarah. Clive, even if he called me a snark, is actually one of the nicer people in sixth grade.
“Well, so what? Because I heard—on authority—that Mr. Irving is going to do it, only he’ll have to bring his new baby, so half the time he’ll be”—Sarah made a face—“changing diapers.”
Brianna Larkin said, “This is going to be a disaster.”
Madeline Howard said, “I love babies.”
Diego Arcati said, “You guys! You guys! I know—”
But whatever he knew, we didn’t find out. From onstage came the hissing of the ropes raising the curtain, and—like a well-trained audience—we went silent. There must’ve been someone in the tech booth because—buzz—the stage lights came up, and there stood Mrs. Winklebottom herself.
“See?” Emma said.
“Shhhh!” everybody told her.
“Greetings, sixth graders!” Mrs. Winklebottom is the kind of person you can’t believe was ever young. You can’t believe she will ever die. She is and always was Mrs. Winklebottom. She wears and always wore either a red, a purple, or a blue dress—red that day—matching jewels in her ears, and heeled, uncomfortable-looking shoes with buckles.
“By now you have all heard the unfortunate news about dear Miss Magnus’s encounter with a taxi,” Mrs. Winklebottom continued. “But, as the Bard said, fear not! I have arranged for someone else to take over directing duties for this year’s production. With your permission, I would like to introduce your new director now.”
Well-trained audience, right? We kids clapped and whistled. From the wings strolled Mr. Nate Newton, the gym teacher, wearing headphones, muttering and looking into the great faraway.
In other words, he was on his phone.
“Coach Fig!” Diego hollered.
“Hello? What was that?” Mrs. Winklebottom squinted.
We sat in silence, stunned silence I mean. Mr. Newton—known as Coach Fig—is one of those bulgy kind of guys, with some bulges being muscle and others probably fat. He’s a good guy, popular, with six kids of his own he talks about all the time. Besides knowing the rules to every sport, he doesn’t blame you for being a klutz, doesn’t favor the superstar athletes either.
But did he know downstage from upstage? Unlikely.
“Hang on a mo, so sorry,” he said to whoever he had on the phone. Then he looked around, oriented himself in real life. “Hey, you guys. Hey, Mrs. Winklebottom. This Hamlet play is gonna be great, you know what? I mean, we are gonna dominate!”
“Excuse me! Mrs. Winklebottom?”
“Is that Mia Duffy addressing me?” Mrs. Winklebottom said. “With the lights, you’re a bit of a blur.”
“Mrs. Winklebottom,” said Mia, “first, can I just say thank you for all you’ve done for the performing arts?”
“You’re quite welcome, I’m sure,” Mrs. Winklebottom said. “Now”—she looked at her watch—“if you don’t mind, I have—”
“I’m not done,” Mia said.
“Oh,” said Mrs. Winklebottom.
“What I’d like to know, with all due respect, is this: What exactly is Coach Newton’s theatrical background?”
Mia Duffy’s family are neighbors of Mrs. Winklebottom. They live on the nicest street in Plattsfield, the one that overlooks the lake and has all the big houses, which is why, I’m guessing, she thought she could be rude like that. Usually I think Mia Duffy is a pain, but that day I was grateful.
Mrs. Winklebottom straightened her shoulders and her frown. “Well, Mia, dear, I think I’ll allow the coach himself to answer.”
Coach Fig had returned to his call, but something alerted him to look up, first at Mrs. Winklebottom, then at us. “I’m just happy to be here,” he said. “And I want to thank all the people who made it possible. Now, who else is ready for kickoff?”
“Heck yeah!” said Diego, who has a reputation for being outrageous, mostly meaning he dresses funny. Also he is super enthusiastic. According to Clive, you have to love the kid or else you’d be tempted to punch him.
Mrs. Winklebottom took a deep breath and let it out. “I know we all appreciate Mr. Newton’s dedication,” she said. “Now on to practical matters. Rehearsal schedules will be available before you leave this afternoon. Scripts will be here tomorrow for pickup so you can study before auditions on Wednesday. With the time remaining today, perhaps you could warm up with recitations?”
“Recitations,” Fig repeated. “Fan-tas-tic!”
Blowing two-handed kisses, Mrs. Winklebottom retreated offstage. “Adieu, adieu, adieu,” she said, voice fading. “?‘Remember me-e-e-e!’?”
“What was that about?” Clive asked.
“Like we could forget Mrs. W,” Emma said.
“It’s from the play,” Madeline said. “Act one. The sun’s about to come up, and the ghost can’t be out in daylight. He’s telling Hamlet goodbye.”
Clive said, “Whoa—you read the play already.”
Diego said, “There’s a ghost in this play? How cool is that!”
Brianna said, “I hate ghosts. And spiders.”
Meanwhile, Mr. Newton called, “Hey, see ya, Mrs. W! And thanks again for that donation. Those old goalposts were hanging by rust and paint.”
With Mrs. Winklebottom gone, Fig stowed his phone in a pocket and sat down on the edge of the stage, feet dangling. “So, team, here’s the deal,” he said. “I don’t know jumping jacks about plays, but Mrs. W was in a bind and I offered to help out. Eight weeks, right? So, first things first. Who can explain to me recitations?”
CHAPTER ONE
Monday, Rehearsal Week One, 46 Days till Performance
Miss Magnus went to New York City over spring break to see shows and was crossing Broadway, not even jaywalking, when a taxi hit her and broke her leg in three places, and that’s how it started.
Miss Magnus had been teaching at Plattsfield-Winklebottom Memorial Elementary for twenty-five years and had so many sick days saved she didn’t have to come back to school till fall, so she didn’t. Instead, she sat home with her leg propped up and read poetry to her elderly chihuahua.
At least, that’s what my mom heard at Sal’s, the mini-mart close to our house, the store we go to if we don’t need anything unusual, like matzoh for my dad’s favorite weekend breakfast, matzoh brie, which is like scrambled eggs with crackers, only it tastes better than that sounds.
“It’s pretty funny that our director broke her leg—get it? Break a leg?” Clive said after school that Monday. We were walking from the school’s main building to the auditorium next door.
“Not funny exactly. I bet it hurt. But yeah, I get it,” I said. Break a leg! is what you say to actors when what you mean is Have a good show! because if you say something positive, it’s bad luck. Theater people think everything is bad luck.
“So without Miss Magnus, who will be in charge?” Clive asked.
“I guess we’ll see when we open the door to the auditorium. Can you wait that long?” I said.
“Hey—snark alert,” Clive said. “I was merely asking.”
“Sorry. I’m worried is all. I have a bad feeling that without Miss Magnus, the grown-ups will mess this up.”
“Mess up your chance to be a star?” Clive said.
“You got it.” By now we were climbing the steps. “Broadway! Hollywood! My ticket out of this backwater!”
“You’re strange, Noah,” Clive said.
“What do you expect? I’m a sixth-grade boy trying out for Shakespeare. You’re strange too.”
“I know, but don’t tell my mom,” Clive said. “She’s not-so-secretly hoping I won’t get a part so I can play baseball.”
“Ha! You’re a dude and you can read. You will definitely get a part.”
In the lobby, Clive pointed to a poster on the wall by the box office:
PLATTSFIELD-WINKLEBOTTOM MEMORIAL SIXTH-GRADE PLAYERS PRESENT WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE’S HAMLET, THE TALE OF A GRITTY PRINCE WHO LEARNS TO BE PATIENT! ONE NIGHT ONLY: FRIDAY, MAY 8!
The Plattsfield-Winklebottom Memorial Auditorium, the aud, is old-fashioned and massive and fancy. Now, with Clive behind me, I pushed open the heavy door that led from the lobby to the house. Before us, down the long aisle, was the stage, curtain closed, looking small and far away. Right and left of the aisle were rows and rows of seats, enough to hold grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, neighbors—practically the whole town of Plattsfield.
I was in second grade the first time I walked into the aud, probably for a presentation on playground safety or the alphabet from A to Z. Back then, I was a very small person in a very large space. The stage might as well have been in Canada. The ceiling seemed as distant as the sky. I can’t describe how it made me feel exactly, but the feeling was strong. I don’t mean I felt scared or puny or unimportant, which would have made sense. Instead, it was more like the opposite, as if I had the power to expand, grow big enough to fill the emptiness.
So even before I ever saw a play in it, I loved the aud for the feeling I got when I was there. Then, the same year, I think, my parents took me to the sixth-grade play, and even though I didn’t understand the story exactly, and even though I had to pee really bad, I thought that was great too. The actors were only sixth graders, same as I am now, but when they put on costumes and makeup and spoke strange, beautiful words, they became something else: the characters they were playing.
That day, Clive and I ran down the aisle. I think he was excited, too, even though, cool as he is, he never would’ve admitted it. Since the house lights were up, we could see that already around twenty kids were clustered in the seats closest to the stage. Most of them I’d known since my family moved to town almost five years ago. Plattsfield, New York, is not very big.
“I don’t see a teacher,” Clive said. “Maybe Mrs. Winklebottom couldn’t find anybody. I heard no one wants to do it. They’ve all got too many kids and extra jobs.”
Squeals and high fives—“Hey!” “Hey!” “Hello!” I mean, all of us had seen each other, like, half an hour before, but we did the long-lost friend thing anyway. Drama geeks, right?
And with or without a director, we were excited to be getting started.
I guess because of Mrs. Winklebottom—Mrs. Winklebottom and her money—the Plattsfield-Winklebottom Memorial Sixth-Grade Play is a big deal. I’m going to bet everyone in the auditorium that day went to it with their families every year. Clive’s big sister, Gillian, had acted in it when we were in third grade. Lila Moseley’s and Eddie Muir’s moms had been in it when they were kids. Maybe other kids’ parents had too.
Not my parents, though. My family’s not from here, and I wasn’t born here. Around Plattsfield, that makes me strange, an outsider.
Meanwhile, everybody at rehearsal was talking about who the new director would be.
“Mrs. Winklebottom is going to direct us herself. I have it on good authority,” said Emma Jessel.
“What does that even mean—good authority?” asked Sarah Monti.
Emma rolled her eyes the way she does. “Well, if you don’t know, far be it from me to tell you.” Emma was standing right next to me. Her loud voice rang in my ear, and I took a step away.
“She means she heard it somewhere,” Clive told Sarah. Clive, even if he called me a snark, is actually one of the nicer people in sixth grade.
“Well, so what? Because I heard—on authority—that Mr. Irving is going to do it, only he’ll have to bring his new baby, so half the time he’ll be”—Sarah made a face—“changing diapers.”
Brianna Larkin said, “This is going to be a disaster.”
Madeline Howard said, “I love babies.”
Diego Arcati said, “You guys! You guys! I know—”
But whatever he knew, we didn’t find out. From onstage came the hissing of the ropes raising the curtain, and—like a well-trained audience—we went silent. There must’ve been someone in the tech booth because—buzz—the stage lights came up, and there stood Mrs. Winklebottom herself.
“See?” Emma said.
“Shhhh!” everybody told her.
“Greetings, sixth graders!” Mrs. Winklebottom is the kind of person you can’t believe was ever young. You can’t believe she will ever die. She is and always was Mrs. Winklebottom. She wears and always wore either a red, a purple, or a blue dress—red that day—matching jewels in her ears, and heeled, uncomfortable-looking shoes with buckles.
“By now you have all heard the unfortunate news about dear Miss Magnus’s encounter with a taxi,” Mrs. Winklebottom continued. “But, as the Bard said, fear not! I have arranged for someone else to take over directing duties for this year’s production. With your permission, I would like to introduce your new director now.”
Well-trained audience, right? We kids clapped and whistled. From the wings strolled Mr. Nate Newton, the gym teacher, wearing headphones, muttering and looking into the great faraway.
In other words, he was on his phone.
“Coach Fig!” Diego hollered.
“Hello? What was that?” Mrs. Winklebottom squinted.
We sat in silence, stunned silence I mean. Mr. Newton—known as Coach Fig—is one of those bulgy kind of guys, with some bulges being muscle and others probably fat. He’s a good guy, popular, with six kids of his own he talks about all the time. Besides knowing the rules to every sport, he doesn’t blame you for being a klutz, doesn’t favor the superstar athletes either.
But did he know downstage from upstage? Unlikely.
“Hang on a mo, so sorry,” he said to whoever he had on the phone. Then he looked around, oriented himself in real life. “Hey, you guys. Hey, Mrs. Winklebottom. This Hamlet play is gonna be great, you know what? I mean, we are gonna dominate!”
“Excuse me! Mrs. Winklebottom?”
“Is that Mia Duffy addressing me?” Mrs. Winklebottom said. “With the lights, you’re a bit of a blur.”
“Mrs. Winklebottom,” said Mia, “first, can I just say thank you for all you’ve done for the performing arts?”
“You’re quite welcome, I’m sure,” Mrs. Winklebottom said. “Now”—she looked at her watch—“if you don’t mind, I have—”
“I’m not done,” Mia said.
“Oh,” said Mrs. Winklebottom.
“What I’d like to know, with all due respect, is this: What exactly is Coach Newton’s theatrical background?”
Mia Duffy’s family are neighbors of Mrs. Winklebottom. They live on the nicest street in Plattsfield, the one that overlooks the lake and has all the big houses, which is why, I’m guessing, she thought she could be rude like that. Usually I think Mia Duffy is a pain, but that day I was grateful.
Mrs. Winklebottom straightened her shoulders and her frown. “Well, Mia, dear, I think I’ll allow the coach himself to answer.”
Coach Fig had returned to his call, but something alerted him to look up, first at Mrs. Winklebottom, then at us. “I’m just happy to be here,” he said. “And I want to thank all the people who made it possible. Now, who else is ready for kickoff?”
“Heck yeah!” said Diego, who has a reputation for being outrageous, mostly meaning he dresses funny. Also he is super enthusiastic. According to Clive, you have to love the kid or else you’d be tempted to punch him.
Mrs. Winklebottom took a deep breath and let it out. “I know we all appreciate Mr. Newton’s dedication,” she said. “Now on to practical matters. Rehearsal schedules will be available before you leave this afternoon. Scripts will be here tomorrow for pickup so you can study before auditions on Wednesday. With the time remaining today, perhaps you could warm up with recitations?”
“Recitations,” Fig repeated. “Fan-tas-tic!”
Blowing two-handed kisses, Mrs. Winklebottom retreated offstage. “Adieu, adieu, adieu,” she said, voice fading. “?‘Remember me-e-e-e!’?”
“What was that about?” Clive asked.
“Like we could forget Mrs. W,” Emma said.
“It’s from the play,” Madeline said. “Act one. The sun’s about to come up, and the ghost can’t be out in daylight. He’s telling Hamlet goodbye.”
Clive said, “Whoa—you read the play already.”
Diego said, “There’s a ghost in this play? How cool is that!”
Brianna said, “I hate ghosts. And spiders.”
Meanwhile, Mr. Newton called, “Hey, see ya, Mrs. W! And thanks again for that donation. Those old goalposts were hanging by rust and paint.”
With Mrs. Winklebottom gone, Fig stowed his phone in a pocket and sat down on the edge of the stage, feet dangling. “So, team, here’s the deal,” he said. “I don’t know jumping jacks about plays, but Mrs. W was in a bind and I offered to help out. Eight weeks, right? So, first things first. Who can explain to me recitations?”
Product Details
- Publisher: Simon & Schuster/Paula Wiseman Books (March 8, 2022)
- Length: 272 pages
- ISBN13: 9781534462946
- Grades: 3 - 7
- Ages: 8 - 12
- Lexile ® 700L The Lexile reading levels have been certified by the Lexile developer, MetaMetrics®
- Fountas & Pinnell™ X These books have been officially leveled by using the F&P Text Level Gradient™ Leveling System
Browse Related Books
Awards and Honors
- Colorado Book Awards Finalist
Resources and Downloads
High Resolution Images
- Book Cover Image (jpg): Noah McNichol and the Backstage Ghost Trade Paperback 9781534462946
- Author Photo (jpg): Martha Freeman Photo courtesy of the author(0.1 MB)
Any use of an author photo must include its respective photo credit