
The Ghost Hunter
2000 • Drama, Sci-Fi & Fantasy
Roddy and Tessa Oliver, two ordinary children have their lives are turned upside down when William Povey, a shoeshine boy from Victorian England appears in Roddy's bedroom as a ghost and appeals to him for help.
Why you should read the novel
Discover the original The Ghost Hunter books by Ivan Jones—the gripping children’s ghost adventure novels that inspired the BBC TV series. On the page, you’ll find richer atmosphere, deeper character moments, and a more nuanced look at Roddy, Tessa, the Victorian ghost William, and the relentless Mrs Croker.
Reading the source novels reveals layers of humor, heart, and haunting detail that television can only hint at. Ivan Jones crafts suspenseful, page-turning mysteries filled with inventive ghost lore, moral dilemmas, and warm, compassionate storytelling—perfect for middle-grade readers, families, teachers, and anyone who loves classic British children’s fiction.
If you’re deciding between streaming and reading, choose the books for the fullest experience. The Ghost Hunter novels are widely available in libraries, bookstores, and eBook formats—search for “The Ghost Hunter Ivan Jones” to start at the beginning and enjoy the story exactly as the author imagined it.
Adaptation differences
The TV adaptation reshapes pacing and structure to fit episodic storytelling, compressing timelines and combining incidents for cliffhangers and action set pieces. The books build tension more gradually, allowing mysteries and relationships to unfold with quieter, haunting beats and a stronger sense of place.
Characterization is notably deeper in the novels. Ivan Jones gives readers close access to Roddy, Tessa, and William’s thoughts, fears, and hopes, while the series streamlines family and school subplots. Mrs Croker remains a standout on screen, but the books offer subtler motives and psychological shading that heighten the cat-and-mouse stakes.
Ghost lore and world-building are more detailed on the page. The novels elaborate the rules of haunting, the Victorian background of William, and the ethics of catching spirits. For clarity and visual impact, the series simplifies or reimagines certain mechanics, adds TV-friendly gadgets, and updates settings to contemporary life around its broadcast era.
Tone and theme also shift. The books lean into themes of memory, loss, courage, and compassion, often lingering on reflective moments and moral choices. The series prioritizes family-friendly thrills, humor, and tidy episodic resolutions, sometimes altering sequences, locations, or outcomes to fit production realities and audience expectations—making the novels the definitive way to experience the story’s full emotional breadth.
The Ghost Hunter inspired from
The Ghost Hunter
by Ivan Jones