Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Unavailable
Scary Stories for Young Foxes: The City
Unavailable
Scary Stories for Young Foxes: The City
Unavailable
Scary Stories for Young Foxes: The City
Audiobook18 hours

Scary Stories for Young Foxes: The City

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

The heart-stopping companion to the 2020 Newbery Honor recipient Scary Stories for Young Foxes, chronicling the adventures of three fox kits desperate to survive the terrors of a frightening new world.
Fox kit O-370 hungers for a life of adventure, like those lived long ago by Mia and Uly. But on the Farm, foxes know only the safety of their wire dens and the promise of eternal happiness in the White Barn. Or so they’re told. When O-370 gets free of his cage, he witnesses the gruesome reality awaiting all the Farm’s foxes and narrowly escapes with his life.
In a nearby suburb, young Cozy and her skulk are facing an unknown danger, one that hunts foxes. Forced to flee their den, they travel to a terrifying new world: the City. That’s where they encounter O-370, and where they’ll need to fight for their lives against mad hounds, killer robots, and the most dangerous of all creatures: humans.
Award-winning author Christian McKay Heidicker once again surprises, delights, and terrifies with eight interconnected stories inspired by classic and modern horror tropes and paired with haunting illustrations from Junyi Wu.
Prepare to be scared.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 28, 2021
ISBN9781705036655

Related to Scary Stories for Young Foxes

Related audiobooks

Children's Horror For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Scary Stories for Young Foxes

Rating: 3.78125 out of 5 stars
4/5

16 ratings10 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Enjoyed this just as much as the frist one. Great start to Halloween!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Clever, but not quite as clever as the first. The audiobook file had some major issues and randomly repeated chapters intermittently...it probably had 20 repeat earlier chapters thrown in at odd times.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I picked this book up on a whim as a Christmas present for my husband and I'm so glad I did! It is extremely charming, and actually quite scary. It's a realistic approach to animal fiction (think Watership Down) and the first story almost put me off because it's scary just because the real world is terrible sometimes. The framing narrative of "can you sit through the night" is a good mechanism for assuring the reader that it'll pay off, and it does. The stories grow and intertwine, and by the end it's uplifting in a still realistic way. I learned some things about foxes! And Beatrix Potter makes a surprise appearance as a villain? Really, really charming, keeps you guessing and questioning, and it's also a gorgeous physical book. Highly recommended (perhaps not, actually, for young children?).

    2 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The stories in this middle grade book were pretty scary, so in that sense they were a success, but with a really wide range of topics compared to the first book, it was a little all over the place.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It can be a fearsome thing to be a young fox, too soon alone in the world. Fox kits Mia and Uly, each separated from their families, must make their way through all of the world's dangers in order to have any hope of surviving to adulthood.This dark set of tales (really just one tale, with a framing device of an old fox telling the story to a dwindling number of kits) shows nature to be red in tooth and claw, indeed. There is death and disaster. Adults do not always take care of the young. Good does not always triumph. But for those who stick around to the very end, there is some measure of hope and redemption . . . if you can get through the scary parts. I'd recommend this to middle-grade readers with a taste for horror, especially those who can take stories where bad things happen to animals. It was a little darker than what I'd usually read, but indubitably well-written.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is a perfect creepy fall read, with scary bits that are deeply unsettling, a great framing device, and plenty of actual fox facts. Highly recommend for readers looking for something scary and gory that's kind of National Geographic scary rather than Slasher Horror Flick scary, with plenty of dread and twisty thriller moments too.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is indeed a book with seven very scary and realistic stories (young foxes die). It is a well written page turner and does sort of redeem itself at the end. I would not recommend it for the fainthearted.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Truly scary, very effective at bringing out the fears that kids know: losing mom’s protection, being abandoned, being teased about being scared (Ewwwly), “She was supposed to stay there with him forever. She’d promised.” A terrifcially and sometimes disturbingly scary story.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Eager for scary stories, six fox kits sneak away from their den in the Antler Wood and make their way to Bog Cavern, where the old storyteller regales them with the tale of two young foxes, born of different families, whose youthful misfortunes bring them together. When all of Mia's siblings, as well as her tutor Miss Vix are stricken by the "yellow disease," she and her mother set off into exile, only to become separated when they run afoul of an unexpected human enemy, in the form of Beatrix Potter. Uly, in the meantime, is persecuted by his sisters (and unbeknownst to him at first, his father) for having an atrophied leg, and must eventually flee his own family, when it becomes apparent that his life is in danger. Not yet fully grown, and unprepared for life in the wild, the two kits meet up and go on to encounter many more dangers, all related by the storyteller to the kits in Antler Wood. As each episode is completed, another kit sneaks off home, leading to the question: will any of the listeners stick it out to the end? More importantly, what purpose do these scary stories serve...?Due out for publication next month (August, 2019), Scary Stories for Young Foxes is animal fiction at its best, and I'm grateful to the work colleague who set the ARC of it aside for me, knowing my fondness for fox stories. Christian McKay Heidicker really captures the vulpine perspective in his writing here, and I appreciated the way in which monstrous things, things that might at first glance appear fantastical to the reader, are shown to be natural - for instance, the "yellow disease" is clearly rabies - as this highlights how differently things must look to our foxy friends. I wasn't really sure what to expect, going in - horror? dark fantasy? - but what I found was fairly realistic animal fiction, with an emphasis on the hardships and dangers to be found in the wild. I didn't find the stories particularly scary, but clearly the young foxes did, and I would imagine young children might as well. Heidicker writes well, with both humor and pathos, and I was completely invested in these characters, hoping throughout that they would find a (relatively) happy ending. The artwork from Junyi Wu, although not final in this ARC edition, is lovely, and added to my enjoyment, as did the choice to use black paper for the scenes depicting the storyteller and listening foxes, and white paper for the eight inset tales. The tying together of those two strands - storyteller and stories - at the end proved most satisfying.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Life as a young fox is scary, with so much to learn about the dangers out there in the woods. Little foxes learn about these dangers from their mama, a masterful storyteller, or the hard way, by facing the world. This beautifully-written and illustrated middle-grade book invites the reader to step inside the minds of little foxes, and embark on an adventure, full of the real-life challenges that they often face: Nasty humans, vicious woodland creatures like the Golgathursh and badgers, and dangerous territorial foxes. And especially the harsh Winter.This is a tale within a tale, and just like scary stories told around a campfire, it has elements of horror and delight. Not only is it precautionary for fox kits, like foxes Mia and Uly, readers will recognize the themes of friendship, family, bravery, and the drive to push ahead when life is difficult. Author Christian McKay Heidicker has a way with words too, and through his writing he has conveyed a very vivid picture of woodland life, describing objects as a fox would see them, and creating new words for things that wouldn’t make sense to them. He also doesn’t shy away from the brutality of nature, from the cycle of life and death, and the struggle for survival against the most difficult of odds. The young foxes in his story face hunters, painful separation from family members, and gruesome injuries and death. Heidicker draws inspiration from classic authors Bram Stoker, Edgar Allen Poe, and H.P. Lovecraft, and weaves in a very well-known children’s book author into this very book; young readers who love a scary story will enjoy this, but it’s not for those who are easily upset by animals getting hurt or struggle with the harshness of nature.The most wonderful part in my reading this (aside from enjoying the adventure and the amazing artwork by Junyi Wu) was how it reminded me of discovering books about animals in my childhood, such as ‘Charlotte’s Web,’ ‘The Wind in The Willows,’ and ‘Watership Down.’ I enjoyed these with my dad, and they fueled my love and compassion for animals. I expect many readers who will enjoy this book will be or are animal-lovers too, as Heidicker has embodied the curious and mischievous nature of foxes so well in this book, and it’s really hard not to love them because of it. This deserves to be a children’s animal classic!