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Prom Nights from Hell
Prom Nights from Hell
Author: Meg Cabot, Kim Harrison, Michele Jaffe, Stephenie Meyer, Lauren Myracle
In this exciting collection, bestselling authors Meg Cabot (How to Be Popular), Kim Harrison (A Fistful of Charms), Michele Jaffe (Bad Kitty), Stephenie Meyer (Twilight), and Lauren Myracle (ttyl) take bad prom nights to a whole new level - a paranormally bad level. Wardrobe malfunctions and two left feet don't hold a candle to discovering y...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780061253096
ISBN-10: 006125309X
Publication Date: 4/1/2007
Pages: 320
Reading Level: Young Adult
Rating:
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
 128

3.6 stars, based on 128 ratings
Publisher: HarperTeen
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

GeniusJen avatar reviewed Prom Nights from Hell on + 5322 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Reviewed by Me for TeensReadToo.com

What do you get when five great authors come together to create a paranormal prom anthology? In a word - greatness!

Meg Cabot starts off the collection with THE EXTERMINATOR'S DAUGHTER. When Mary shows up at Swig, an exclusive VIP club in Manhattan, it's not to socialize. No, she's on a mission to take out Sebastian Drake -- and by take out, I mean kill him with a crossbow. But when Adam, a fellow student at Saint Eligius, takes his own potshots at the dreaded Sebastian, things get a lot more interesting.

Lauren Myracle, the author of THE CORSAGE, has written what is probably the saddest, and creepiest, story of the bunch. All Frankie wants is for her best guy friend, Will, to realize that it's his destiny to ask her to the prom. To accomplish that goal, she drags Will and her other best friend, Yun Sun, to visit Madame Zanzibar, a fortune-teller. She's sure that Madame Z will proclaim that Will is her one true love, and that will be that. But the psychic is short on information, but does end up grudgingly handing over to Frankie a dried up old corsage, which she says will grant her three wishes. Over the next couple of days, however, Frankie will come to realize that she'll have to make some requests that she never in her wildest dreams would have thought of making.

MADISON AVERY AND THE DIM REAPER by Kim Harrison is the longest story in the group, and the most involved. When Madison ends up at the costume prom with a dud date, she's surprised to find one guy who can pick up the slack. Seth isn't like anyone she's ever met before. Unfortunately, before too long she'll find out why that is, and the picture it paints isn't pretty. There are deaths, white reapers, black reapers, grim reapers, and odd amulets. I really liked this story, and would be happy to see more of these characters in the future.

Michele Jaffe's story, KISS AND TELL, was by far my favorite. Miranda has a secret. Not only is she a student and a part-time driver/chaeffeur, but she also fights crime in her spare time. It turns out Miranda has special abilities that allow her to do things most regular teens can't do -- like, say, knock over a lamppost just by leaning on it. This particular day turns out to be stranger than the norm, though, when she picks up young Sibby Cumean, a strange girl who has an even stranger habit of kissing every boy she can find. When weird things start happening, Miranda's day turns into an action-adventure movie beyond anything she could have expected. I LOVED this story, and I HAVE to read more about Miranda and Sibby in the future! Yes, Ms. Jaffe, that's me begging!!

Last but not least is HELL ON EARTH by Stephenie Meyer. This is the story of Sheba, a demon on earth who loves bringing misery to others. Her plan is working pretty well, too, because nearly everyone at the prom is having a downright horrible time. Everyone, that is, except for Gabe, who seems not just happy but serene. By the time Sheba can figure out what's happening, it's too late, and prom just might end up having a happy ending after all.

PROM NIGHTS FROM HELL is a great paranormal anthology that teens and adults alike will enjoy. I highly recommend picking up a copy today!
reviewed Prom Nights from Hell on + 54 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Some books written for the young adult audience are enjoyable for every age group. This one is not really one of them. I picked it up because I'm a Kim Harrison fan, and I have to say that her short story was the only one that I really enjoyed. The others, with the exception of the one that followed "The Monkey's Paw" too closely, were quick and fairly enjoyable reads. Not a keeper, which is why it's going out here on my bookshelf. I hope the next owner enjoys it more!
reviewed Prom Nights from Hell on + 287 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I liked the Meg Cabot story and I thought the Stephenie Meyer one was cute. Michele Jaffe's was okay - it felt like it was part of some bigger story, but I wasn't motivated enough by it to check to see if it actually is. The Kim Harrison story also felt like the beginning of a larger project and I liked it enough to look it up. Sure enough, it is a new series she is working on. I look forward to reading more. The Lauren Myracle story was blah. She does give credit to "The Monkey's Paw" as the inspiration for the story, but it's much too close to the original (which I'm familiar with), so it was a bit of a yawn because I knew exactly how it would turn out. She should have had some neat twist that was different from the original story.
reviewed Prom Nights from Hell on + 164 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This was really good! I was planning on reading these stories one a night before bed, but they got gobbled up a bit quicker then expected. You never know with anthologies, and short stories aren't always my thing, but great collection! They all fit nicely with the theme and each one was engaging right from the start. Not a bad apple in the bunch!

But as usual with short stories, I want more! Only the second story, "The Corsage," seemed really like it had nowhere else to go. (And as usual, I marvel at silly bad use of the three magic wishes. Really, put some thought into these things, people!) The rest of them seemed like they could easily have made the base of a yummy novel! Kim Harrison's "Madison Avery and the Dim Reaper" actually seemed like it was an excerpt from a larger story -- so much so that I was a little dumfounded when I turned a page and there was nothing else. It left me feeling like I was hanging at the end of a chapter break instead of the end of a story. No real conclusion at all!

It's hard to pick a favorite -- "The Exterminator's Daughter" and "Kiss and Tell" are probably vying for first place, but all five stories are up there.
skywriter319 avatar reviewed Prom Nights from Hell on + 784 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
A group of teen chick lit's greatest writers come together for this altogether unique and interesting collection of short stories--not about perfect, normal proms, oh no, but ones that have been interrupted by, shall we say, the paranormal.

A vampire exterminator rushes to save her friend from her enemy's evil clutches. A magic corsage delivers wishes gone wrong to a group of friends. A girl is killed by the grim reaper at her prom, which also happens to be her seventeenth birthday. Two very special girls with clashing personalities must stick together to outwit the people who are after them. And angels and demons show up at one school's prom.

The five stories in this collection delight fans of books such as TWILIGHT--whose author, by the way, is one of the contributors to this short story collection. All the stories are interesting, amusing, and leave you wanting more.
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reviewed Prom Nights from Hell on + 6 more book reviews
It was an awesome book!!!!
moondance120 avatar reviewed Prom Nights from Hell on + 422 more book reviews
YA anthology from several heavy hitters. good quick read. 3.5 stars
reviewed Prom Nights from Hell on + 9 more book reviews
The authors did a great job! There were funny quotes and surprising twists in almost every story. As with most short stories, I felt like there wasnt a certain ending. The story by Kim Harrison, Madison Avery and the Dim Reaper, does have a sequal and I have high hopes for it. Kiss and Tell was the funniest story, Madison Avery and the Dim Reaper had the most interesting plot (a close tie with Stephenie Meyer`s), The Corsage has my vote for creepiest, and The Exterminator`s Daughter was the sweetest for romance.
solarawynn avatar reviewed Prom Nights from Hell on + 724 more book reviews
was pretty good,enjoyed all the stories

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