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The Ghost Writer by John Harwood
Book Summary InformationAuthor: John Harwood Edition: Paperback Format: Bargain Price Published: 2005-06-01 ISBN: N/A Number of pages: 384
Book Reviews of The Ghost WriterBook Review: Awsome, just like reading Collins or James! Summary: 5 Stars
I really enjoyed this book, even more than I enjoyed the Seance, which was very good. It was a classic page turner, with a carefully crafted and slowly unfolding mystery, I truly could not put it down! The story, even though it takes place in modern times, feels like you're reading a Victorian gothic novel. It is the story of a shy boy living in Australia who begins to discover bits and pieces of what seems like a family mystery. He also starts corresponding first by mail and then by email, with a girl in England named Alice. Alice is confined to a wheel chair and is an orphan, the accident that paralyzed her killed her parents. Now to complicate the story, the boy's grandmother was a writer, a writer of ghost stories. The stories are intertwined with the main story, and make sure you pay attention because they all fit together and offer clues! After reading the book I read the review on the back of the book and the Amazon review and I immediately understood why this book sat on my to be read shelf so long despite the fact I really liked the author's other book: reviews do NOT do the story justice, they give you only a general idea of the characters and the setting. Take it from me, just read it. And by the way, the ending is not confusing at all. I read it twice as some reviewers said they did, I did it to see what the fuss was about. At least to me, its perfectly clear, and perfectly Victorian!! Well done Mr Harwood!
Summary of The Ghost WriterA tantalizing tale of suspense and family secrets that weaves Victorian ghost stories into the present ? where they start to come true
Timid, solitary librarian Gerard Freeman lives for just two things: his elusive pen pal Alice and a story he found hidden in his mother?s drawer years ago. Written by his great-grandmother Viola, it hints at his mother's role in a sinister crime. And as he discovers more of Viola?s chilling tales, he realizes that they might hold the key to finding Alice and unveiling his family's mystery ? or will they bring him the untimely death they seem to foretell?
Harwood?s astonishing, assured debut shows us just how dangerous family skeletons ? and stories -- can be.
(20040704) The Cornish prayer: "From ghoulies and ghosties and long-leggety beasties and things that go bump in the night, Good Lord, deliver us!" is an appropriate invocation when reading The Ghost Writer, John Harwood?s debut novel. It is a rousing good ghost story, with many twists and turns, rather like taking apart a Russian matryoshka nesting doll. Gerard Freeman, at age ten, sneaks into his mother's room and unlocks a secret drawer, only to find a picture of a woman he has never seen before, but one that he will find again and again. His mother discovers him and gives him the beating of his life. Why this excessive reaction? She is a worried, paranoid, thin, and fretful type with an "anxious, haunted look." By tale's end, we know why. Phyllis Freeman, Gerard's mother, was happiest when speaking fondly of Staplefield, her childhood home, where there were things they "didn?t have in Mawson [Australia], chaffinches and mayflies and foxgloves and hawthorn, coopers and farriers and old Mr. Bartholomew who delivered fresh milk and eggs to their house with his horse and cart." It's the sort of childhood idyll that the timid and lonely Gerard believes in and longs for. He strikes up a correspondence with an English "penfriend," Alice Jessel, when he is 13 and a half, living in a desolate place with a frantic mother and a silent father. She is his age, her parents were killed in an accident and she has been crippled by it. She now lives in an institution, whose grounds she describes as much the way Staplefield looked. They go through young adulthood together, in letters only, thousands of miles apart, eventuallydeclaring their love for one another. Interwoven with the narrative of Alice and Gerard's letters are real ghost stories, the creation of Gerard's great-grandmother, Viola. At first, they seem to be scary Victorian tales of the supernatural. Then, we see that they have a spooky way of mirroring, or preceding, events in real life, off the page. Gerard comes upon them, one by one, in mysterious ways, but clearly something, or someone, is leading him. The stories seem to implicate his mother in some nefarious goings-on, but the truth is far worse than Gerard imagines. Any more would be telling too much. Turn on all the lights in the house when you settle down with this one, and plan to spend a long time reading because you will be lost in the story immediately. --Valerie Ryan
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