The Lost Boys of Barlowe Theater by Jaime Jo Wright (with a GIVEAWAY!)
It promises beauty but steals life instead. Will the ghosts of Barlowe Theater entomb them all?
Barlowe Theater stole the life of Greta Mercy's eldest brother during its construction. Now in 1915, the completed theater appears every bit as deadly. When Greta's younger brother goes missing after breaking into the building, Greta engages the assistance of a local police officer to help her unveil the already ghostly secrets of the theater. But when help comes from an unlikely source, Greta decides that to save her family she must uncover the evil that haunts the theater and put its threat to rest.
Decades later, Kit Boyd's best friend vanishes during a ghost walk at the Barlowe Theater, and old stories of mysterious disappearances and ghoulish happenings are revived. Then television ghost-hunting host and skeptic Evan Fisher joins Kit in the quest to identify the truth behind the theater's history. Kit reluctantly agrees to work with him in hopes of finding her missing friend. As the theater's curse unravels Kit's life, she is determined to put an end to the evil that has marked the theater and their hometown for the last century.
Praise for The Lost Boys of Barlowe Theater:
"Jaime Jo Wright takes readers on a journey that leaves them with a renewed sense of hope... Read this story. You won't be sorry."
~ Lynette Eason, bestselling, award-winning author of the Extreme Measures series
Book Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | ChristianBook | Baker Book House
Read an excerpt:
Chapter 1
Greta Mercy
OCTOBER 1915
KIPPERāS GROVE, WISCONSIN
Sometimes death came quietly. A phantom swooping in and siphoning the last remnant of a soul from oneās body, leaving behind a shell of a person who once was and would never be again. Other times, death decided that dramatics coupled with terror were its preferred method of delivery. Tonight, that was the chosen form death took.
Screams echoed throughout the theaterās golden, embellished auditorium and drifted upward to the domed, hand-Āpainted ceiling, where Putti flew as angelic, childlike spirits over the mass of onlookers.
A shoulder rammed into Gretaās arm as a husky man, far too large for the narrow seats, pushed his way past her toward the center aisle.
āLet me pass!ā he barked. Urgency spurred him forward. āIām a doctor, let me pass!ā
The vaudeville lights on either side of the stage boasted letters a through g, with the g lit and distinct over the other letters.
āIām letter g!ā The doctor shouted while those in front of him jostled to the side or hurried ahead to move out of his way. Doctors were assigned specific letters from the vaudeville lights, and if they were lit, a doctor was neededāĀeither at home, on call, or in the vicinity.
The vicinity was here. It was now.
Onlookers continued to gasp and protest. Women in beautiful silks and satins hurried to the back to find respite in the upstairs ladiesā room. Men in evening wear catapulted over seats and to the floor on the far left of the auditorium.
Greta was frozen in place, her seat having flipped up against its back so she could move. But her eyes were fixed with horror on the scene unfolding. They lifted to one of the box seats above the floor, where men, including the doctor, were congregating en masse. The gilded box was a flurry of activity. A man embraced a woman, who fought and clawed at his hold. Her screams had many onlookers staring at her, including the performer in her violet gown and befeathered hair. Moments before, her vocals had swirled around them all in a cadence of beauty and refined music. Now, her mouth was open, her face pale, her entire pose aghast. She had captured an enthralled audience, all whose gazes toward the stage had kept them from seeing what Greta had seen. Greta, who shouldnāt have been here to begin with. She didnāt belong with the pomp and circumstance, the heady scent of perfume and cologne, which made her mind thick and her eyes wander. Theyād wandered to the box seat, and sheād witnessed what no one else had. The white hands stretching, reaching over the side,
dangling . . .
āIt was a child!ā The horrified cry slipped for the third time from Gretaās lips. She could hear herself screaming and was unable to stop. Her screams had ripped through the performance as the child in a white nightdress plummeted into the shadows of the floorās obscure corner.
The woman in the box seat had been pulled from view, its red velvet curtain shut swiftly.
āIt was a baby!ā Greta rasped out as horror strangled her.
āGreta. Itās all right.ā The reassuring voice of her friend, Eleanor Boyd, as well as the comforting grip on Gretaās arm finally stilled her.
Greta focused again on her friendāĀher wealthy friend who should not be her friend at all.
Eleanorās blue eyes were round with fear that must mirror Gretaās own. Her blond curls swept upward and were twisted with pearls. Her dress was a baby-Āblue silk. Any other moment, Greta would have soaked in the awe that tonight she, Greta Boyd, who could barely keep her family fed and clothed, was sitting among the elite, pretending to be one of them. But now? It hardly mattered. The borrowed corset that tucked in her waistline, the aged but wearable pink dress she had borrowed from Eleanor, and even the gloves she wore on her dry, cracked handsāĀnone of them mattered now.
āWhat happened? What did you see?ā Eleanor clutched at Gretaās arm.
Greta couldnāt reply. The sheer magnitude of the moment, the honor of being in the audience of the Barlowe Theater had been overwhelming . . . until sheād seen it. The baby launched over the side of the box seat. Like a cherub from the mural above, it had taken flight before it disappeared.
Gretaās knees gave out, and she fell to where her seat should have been had it not folded in on itself. Her hip struck the polished wood arm.
āGreta!ā Eleanor reached for her.
Greta felt Eleanorās brother on her other side, grabbing for her waist to give her support. But it was too late. She had collapsed to the narrow walkway between the seats. Her knees hit the carpeted floor.
Was she the only person who had seen deathās swift visitation tonight? The only one who had witnessed its evil intent as it ripped the babe forcefully from its motherās arms?
It wouldnāt survive. It could not. The fall was too far, too great.
Death had decided to match the theaterās reputation for drama and awe. Greta couldnāt tear her gaze from where sheād seen the small form disappear on its way to its resting place on the floor of the Barlowe Theater.
The babe had slipped. No, it had been tossed. Its motherās screams still echoed from the hallway beyond the curtain. Those in the crowd cried āAccident,ā āTraumatic mishap,ā and other such things. But Greta knew differently. She had known before she came tonight, and she should have stayed away.
Barlowe Theater was not a place that brought joy and entertainment, as was its supposed purpose. No, it had already taken lives in the construction of it, tortured the ones who dared stand in its way, and now it was hunting those innocents who had happened into the shadows of its deadly interior. The theater was cursed.
Kit Boyd
OCTOBER, PRESENT DAY
KIPPERāS GROVE, WISCONSIN
Death stuck with a place. Once the blood had seeped into the carpet, the flooring, the walls, it stayed there, long after the stains were removed. They were the testament to lives robbed of their rightful journey through time. Cut short. Obliterated. B
Barlowe Theater was not a place that brought joy and entertainment, as was its supposed purpose. No, it had already taken lives in the construction of it, tortured the ones who dared stand in its way, and now it was hunting those innocents who had happened into the shadows of its deadly interior. The theater was cursed.
Kit Boyd
OCTOBER, PRESENT DAY
KIPPERāS GROVE, WISCONSIN
ludgeoned into nonexistence. Smothered by the grave, burrowed into by the wormsā
āHey!ā
Fingers snapped in front of Kit Boydās face, and she startled out of her staring into the dark, narrow stairwell that led beneath the stage of the Barlowe Theater.
āGet with it, bruh.ā The fingers snapped again. Kit looked up at the taller man beside her. He was overweight and smelled like pizza, but he had a nice face. His name was Tom, theyād told her, the crew from the TV show Psychic and the Skeptic.
āSorry.ā Kit offered him a wince. Sheād paused on the first concrete step while her best friend, Madison, the psychic medium, Heather Grant, and the skeptic investigator, Evan Fischer, disappeared into the bowels of the theater. Tom the cameraman was held back by her hesitation. She gave him a warning look, though the theaterās darkness in the midnight atmosphere probably hid most of her expression. āYou do know people died here . . . have disappeared here.ā
āThatās the point.ā Tom waved her forward, the camera on his shoulder blinking a red light. āBut I need to catch them on film if I can, and youāre in my way.ā
Fabulous. She was on camera. That would probably make the show too. Kit Boyd, the quirky sidekick to Madison Farrington, the historical activist, the beauty, the granddaughter of the townās ambitious CEO of all things expansion, modern, and money-Āmaking.
āHello?ā There was definite irritation in Tomās voice.
āIām going! Iām going.ā Kit hurried down the steps. Sheād taken them many times before. Anyone who was native to Kipperās Grove, Wisconsin, had grown up in the Barlowe Theater at one point or another. Dancers had tapped and glided across its stage in recitals, high school glee clubs with dreams of Broadway had warbled off-Ākey through its hall, and the local theater guild had put on such plays as Arsenic and Old Lace and The Music Man. Kit hadnāt been in any of those. Instead, she was the one backstage handing bottles of water to the performers, smiling and cracking jokes to encourage the stage-Āfrozen little six-Āyear-Āold dressed in a yellow tutu with glitter on her cheeks.
āOh, cāmon!ā Tom hissed, his irritation past the point of being hidden. How heād gotten behind her anyway was a faux pas for filming. He was supposed to stick close to the stars of the show, Heather and Evan. And boy, did those two get along famouslyāĀnot.
āWhew!ā Kit wheezed under her breath, not caring if Tom heard. āIād try to avoid those two if you could.ā
āYeah, well, I have a job to do.ā Tom squeezed past Kit as she hugged the cement-Āblock wall at the bottom of the stairs to let him through. He elbowed her arm and didnāt bother to apologize. He probably felt as if she owed him that luxury. The luxury of being annoyed.
Okay, fine. She did.
If she was being honest, Kit wasnāt a fan of the Barlowe Theater past dark. Which was the clichĆ© of all theaters built just after the turn of the century. It was dark. Haunted. The place was like a tomb. Crank up some vaudeville music and the place became a literal haunted house of horrors for Halloween. And Kit hated Halloween. The darkness, the Gothic look and feel, Halloween was for morbid people who thought Edgar Allan Poe was romantic in his mystery and lore instead of macabre and bleak. Hadnāt he died questionably? Sheād heard a podcast once that claimed the poet might have been murdered, contrary to the popular belief that his death had been the result of some fatal malady undiagnosed.
Kit shook her head to clear her thoughts. Mom said cobwebs couldnāt possibly gather in her head because she had too many ideas. Mom was right. Kit would never be accused of having an underactive imagination.
A finger jabbed into the back of her shoulder.
āStop it!ā Kit spun to glare at the offender.
No one was there.
Her skin began crawling. āGahhhhhh!ā She waved her hands wildly at the unseen ghost finger. Probably her imagination, but whatever. She had let Madison sucker her into a ghost hunt for the popular ghost-Āhunting television show. This was her penance? Getting poked by an elusive spirit?
āSorry, God.ā Kit mumbled an apology to the Almighty, who was probably rolling His eyes at their attempts to mess with the spirit world. But this was Madison. She believed anything was possible. Kit had been raised to believe that this type of anything was probably demonic. There had to be a middle ground. Hadnāt there?
Kit hurried around the corner, stubbing her toe on a bolt that rose half an inch up from the floor. Dampness and time had warped the theaterās floor, making it uneven. She leaned against the wall, rubbing her bare toe. Flip-Āflops on a ghost hunt. Bad idea.
She looked aroundāĀwell, as best as she could. The basement was dark, as were the dressing rooms to her right, sized like prison cells. The short hall to her left leading directly below the stage was also dark.
āHello, darkness,ā Kit crooned quietly, craning her neck to peer ahead. āHello?ā she tried again, this time louder.
No answer.
āSeriously, someone?ā Kit was beginning to share Tom the cameramanās annoyance now. Two argumentative television stars, her best friend, and a cameraman didnāt just vanish within minutes. The basement wasnāt that huge.
But it was Barlowe Theater.
āTom?ā Kit hissed, daring a few steps into the dank blackness. āMadison?ā
Again, no one answered. The only light was a flickering bulb that had to be a wattage short of worth having at all. It buzzed too. Of course it did. If this stunt was for show
dramatics . . .
āMadison!ā Kit shouted. In the ten years since theyād graduated high school, she had followed this woman around. She was owed some loyalty in return. āIf this is for ratings, itās unkind of you!ā Kit yelled. Her words echoed back at her.
āMadisāā
Light slammed into her face, blinding Kit. She raised her hands as the flashlightās beam collided with her eyes.
āTheyāre gone!ā It was Tom.
Kit could see the whites of his eyes just beyond the flashlight he swung around wildly.
āWhat do you mean?ā Kit tried to take captive Tomās arm as he flooded the hallway with the light, then a dressing room, then the ceiling. His camera wasnāt on his shoulder.
He wasnāt filming.
Kitās throat tightened. Okay, that wasnāt a good sign. āWhereās Madison?ā
Tom swung the light back in Kitās face. āWhereās Evan? Whereās Heather? Whereās my team?ā His voice shook with undisguised concern, turning fast into panic. āHow big is this place?ā
āNot that big.ā Kit pushed past him. Concerned now. This had gone too far. Madison and her harebrained schemes to keep her own grandfather from ruining the historic downtown. Make it famous, she said. Put it on TV, she said. Make viewers defend Kipperās Grove, she said. āMadison!ā Kit shouted, anxiousness seeping into her voice. āStop this! Itās not funny!ā
Tomās light bounced on the floor in front of them as Kit spun around and marched back toward him. She shoved past his husky chest and down the short passage to the door leading under the stage. Her fingers curled around the doorknob, its old mechanics making it wobbly beneath her grip.
Kit jerked it open.
She fell back with a shriek, colliding with Tom, who had come way too close behind her.
Heather, the medium from the show, stood stock-Āstill facing them. Her eyes were wide and unfocused, her skin white in the flashlightās glow.
āSheās gone.ā Heatherās monotone voice filtered through the passage.
Kit words were stolen from her as her stomach dropped.
āWhoās gone?ā Tom demanded.
āMadison.ā Evan Fischer, the cohost, the skeptic, and the all-Āaround grumpy hero of the show strode past his partner. Heatherās expression didnāt waver as her eyes remained fixated on . . . whatever she was staring at in the spirit world beyond. āMadisonās gone.ā
Evan left less than a few inches between his face and Kitās as he bent his six-Āfoot frame down to meet her five-Āfoot-Āfour one. āWhere is she?ā
āI donāt knāā
āWhere. Is. She?ā He cut off Kitās answer as unsatisfactory.
Her breaths came shorter, faster. She could feel Tom behind her. She was sandwiched between him and Evan, with Heather staring into the great abyss.
āI told you. I donāt know.ā Kit heard the quaver in her voice. She shoved her trembling hands into her pockets.
āSheās gone.ā Evan slapped the wall, glaring at Tom, who was speechless. āIs this a scam? A stunt?ā
Kit couldnāt answer. Of course, the show would think it was a ploy by Madison. A publicity ploy. But it went deeper than that. Far deeper. Kit sagged against the wall, the air not reaching her lungs as it should.
She prayed then. Prayed that Madison really was messing with them. That she had simply gone too far ahead beneath the stage and left them behind.
But the theater was hungry, and everyone in Kipperās Grove knew it was only a matter of time before this hunger added to the stories of death and spirits. Thatās how the theater was, after all. Drama. Suspense. And the unearthly way that such things drifted through its rafters.
***
Excerpt from The Lost Boys of Barlowe Theater by Jaime Jo Wright. Copyright 2023 by Jaime Sundsmo. Reproduced with permission from Baker Publishing Group. All rights reserved.

Jaime Jo Wright is the author of nine novels, including Christy Award and Daphne du Maurier Award winner The House on Foster Hill and Carol Award winner The Reckoning at Gossamer Pond. She's also the Publishers Weekly and ECPA bestselling author of two novellas. Jaime lives in Wisconsin with her cat named Foo; her husband, Cap'n Hook; and their two mini-adults, Peter Pan and CoCo.
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MY THOUGHTS -
This story was a little eerie, spooky, creepy, and super FUN!!! I won't lie. It did give me goosebumps in a couple places. But the good kind, the kind you love to get when you are reading a really good, intense book. Definitely got my heart pounding.
This takes place in two different time periods - 1915 and present day. Both taking place in the same theater in the same town. I think that made it a little creepier. I feel like both of these could have easily been a book all on their own. They were written that well! Each time period was equally interesting and I was emotionally invested in both. The way the author pulled them both together was amazing.
This book kept my attention ALL THE WAY THROUGH! Great characters. I think my favorite was Greta from 1915. I just really connected to her character. Her story was... sad! I just really felt for her.
Believe it or not, this was my first Jaime Jo Wright book!! I know, shocking, right?? Well it definitely won't be my last! I already own - The Vanishing at Castle Moreau, very excited to read that one sometime as well as others.
If you are looking for something a little edgy, maybe something that might give you a few goosebumps but fun and interesting - give this author a try! You won't be disappointed.
- Thank You!!
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