The Ghost of Thomas Kempe
The Ghost of Thomas Kempe is a low fantasy novel for children by Penelope Lively, first published by Heinemann in 1973 with illustrations by Anthony Maitland. Set in present-day Oxfordshire, it features a boy and his modern family who are new in their English village, and seem beset by a poltergeist. Soon the boy makes acquaintance with the eponymous Thomas Kempe, ghost of a 17th-century resident sorcerer who intends to stay.
Lively won the annual Carnegie Medal from the Library Association, recognising the year's best children's book by a British subject.
Characters
;Major characters- James Harrison, the main character
- Mrs Harrison, James's mother
- Mr Harrison, James's father
- Helen Harrison, James's sister
- Tim the dog
- Thomas Kempe, the poltergeist who troubles James
- Simon, James's friend
- Bert, the local handyman who tries to deal with the poltergeist
- Mrs Verity, an old lady whom Thomas Kempe accuses of being a witch
- Arnold, a Victorian boy who experienced the ghost before James
- Aunt Fanny, Arnold's aunt
- Mr Hollings, James's teacher
- The vicar
- Julia, Helen's friend