A “smell of rotten fish, boiled frogs and stuffed bats” invades young Lili’s room. This stench can only mean one thing: the villainous witch is back. However, the strange but endearing character has a low expression. “I have a stomach ache, sweaty hands, dry throat, strange head, and my heart is pounding like crazy,” she explains to her confidante. Sick villain? No way. She is rather in love. Will she succeed in charming her suitor? In any case, it will make the children laugh.

“I want a friend!” », Draculotta constantly complains. The vampire doesn’t want to play with skeletons, “naughty cheats”, nor with ghosts, who “have a bad habit of disappearing at any moment”. Fortunately, her aunt Mimolette, a fly fairy, comes to the rescue. She brings to life a drawing created a little too quickly by Draculotta. To our greatest pleasure, this rather “horrible” new friend will have many surprises in store for the young vampire.

Niko “excels in the art of playing dirty tricks.” It’s not for nothing that in town they nickname him Niko the Terrible. One morning, while he is riding his bicycle while thinking about his next stupidity, he has a nasty fall. When the boy wakes up, he realizes that he has become… a ghost. His grandmother, who has been dead for three years, warns him: he has one week to repair the wrong he committed while alive, otherwise an abominable place awaits him. In a humorous tone, author Jimmy Poirier introduces us to a very intriguing vision of the afterlife.

Finnigan lives in a gloomy mansion with his parents and brother. Since “the events”, his family has lived cloistered there, with the exception of his father who sometimes goes out hunting. Outside, dangerous creatures lurk. These would be former humans transformed in this way for some obscure reason. Which ? Finnigan’s parents forbid him from asking questions. Will the elements that the teenager discovered in the cellar allow him to find an answer? A well-crafted plot with a surprising outcome.

In his room, Hugo sees “a monster” passing by. “A terrible spider with eight hairy legs, horrible eyes and a plump body,” describes the arachnophobic boy. With courage, he and his friend Arnaud will try to send the frightening visitor home, outside the house. This short story in which some children will surely recognize themselves is part of the new “Froussette” collection intended to offer little scares to beginning readers.

Brume dreams of becoming a witch. When her adoptive father reveals to her that an old grimoire was at his side when he saved her, she is convinced that she has a gift. With her pig Hubert and her friend Hugo, she opens her witchcraft store and concocts magic potions. Very sure of herself, Brume even dared to volunteer to protect her village from a terrible dragon. An adventure full of twists and turns, magnificently illustrated by Carine Hinder.