Thursday, April 18, 2024

Why Ghosts Often Appear in My Novels by Marilyn Levinson

 Though I’ve never met a ghost, I’ve read enough about ghost sightings and hauntings to believe they exist. Experts in the field say some spirits remain earthbound because they’ve experienced a brutal or sudden death and don’t realize they’re dead. Others remain here because they have unfinished business or issues they need to resolve before passing on.

Ghosts, whether you believe in them or not, have a permanent place in our literary lore. Readers find their manifestations unnerving, thrilling and intriguing. George and Marion Kerby in Topper and the sea captain in The Ghost and Mrs. Muir are three of my favorite literary spirits.

Ghosts appear in my Haunted Library mystery series; my mystery, Giving Up the Ghost; and in my juvenile novel, Getting Back to Normal. They are fully-developed characters who have remained on the Earthly plane to be of assistance or to settle accounts. In Death Overdue, the first book in my Haunted Library series, Evelyn Havers is the sixty-something ghost that haunts the Clover Ridge Library, where she worked as an aide for many years. While invisible, she urges my sleuth Carrie Singleton not to turn down the position of Head of Programs and Events she is being offered. Carrie takes Evelyn’s advice and soon discovers she has made the right decision. When her first program presenter dies before her eyes and those of a roomful of library patrons, Carrie goes on to investigate his murder and that of the cold case he claimed to have solved. Evelyn helps Carrie in her investigation, but also holds back information for personal reasons. It isn’t until Buried in the Stacks, the third book in the series, that Carrie discovers Evelyn’s death was no accident. 

Cameron Leeds, the ghost in Giving Up the Ghost, is a charismatic scoundrel. In life he was a good-looking man with a generous heart, except when he was wheeling and dealing, often at his friends’ expense; a Romeo who flirted with every woman who crossed his path. Though his best friend, the town’s police chief, has declared his death an accident, Cam knows he was murdered. Trouble is, he doesn’t know who did it, and he can’t move on until he does. When Gabbie Meyerson rents his family’s cottage—the only place where he can manifest—Cam nags and cajoles until she agrees to investigate. Gabbie starts asking questions, and to her dismay discovers that several of Cam’s so-called friends and neighbors are glad he’s dead and are possible suspects. 

Twelve-year-old Vannie Taylor, the protagonist in Getting Back to Normal, has just lost her mother and her father is a basket case without her. Vannie meets Archie the ghost, hours after her father has moved her and her brother to live in a dingy cottage on the estate where he manages events. Archie appears to be carefree and funny. Dressed in a tuxedo, he performs cartwheels and handstands. He has overheard Vannie wondering aloud what to give her brother for dinner, and provides her with a simple recipe. He even tells her she can find the necessary ingredients in the mansion’s kitchen.

But Archie is far from carefree, as Vannie and her best friend discover when they research his life. He was twenty-five when he died chasing the thief who stole his wife’s necklace. Archie tells Vannie that before he can go to his rest, he must atone for having left his wife and their one-year-old son. She is astonished to learn that Mayda, her parents’ close friend and the last of the family athat once owned the estate, is Archie’s granddaughter. Archie implores Vannie to encourage the budding relationship between her father and Mayda—the one thing Vannie doesn’t want to happen. But it may be the only way her life can get back to normal.

Is it any wonder that I've included a ghost in my new Dickens Island series? Helena is my sleuth's grandmother. Like Evelyn Havers, she reappears to offer information about past events and to help restore peace and order in the town where she used to live.

Ghosts, real or imagined, always add a dimension to a novel.






 


20 comments:

  1. Debra H. GoldsteinApril 18, 2024 at 4:35 AM

    If done right, ghosts really can add a dimension and special point of view to a story or book.

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  2. I tend to think I'm not a fan of ghosts in stories, but when I start considering the paranormal books I've read, I realize I really enjoy them! I guess I'm a fan after all.

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    1. I've had several readers tell me that about my Haunted Library series. I think ghosts have a definite place in our literature.

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  3. I enjoy the occasional paranormal provided the ghosts and other phantoms have the same in-depth characterization as the "real" characters.

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    1. So true, Jim. I especially love the ghosts in the Topper series.

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  4. I like friendly ghosts, but only if their presence fits the plot.

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    1. Right. There has to be a reason why they're present in the storyline.

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  5. I enjoy a well-crafted ghost in a story.

    I'm not sure exactly where I stand on "real" ghosts, but imagine my dismay when I ran across a book called "Haunted Houses in Michigan" that included a house in which we had lived for five years. It did explain a lot.

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    1. Kathleen, How interesting! To think you lived in a haunted house!

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  6. I love your ghosts, Marilyn. Thanks for this insight into them as characters and people.

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    1. Marilyn
      Thanks, Molly. My ghosts are among my favorite characters.

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  7. Lori Roberts HerbstApril 18, 2024 at 11:54 AM

    Love, love, love a good ghost story! Great post. Hope you're feeling better, Marilyn!

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    1. Thanks, Lori! I hope I'm better soon.

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  8. You forgot Neil! The Kirby's St. Bernard. :) I do enjoy ghosts in stories when well done. I used to think I didn't like paranormals, or paranormal aspects in books. Then I took a look at my book list and realized I was pulling my own leg! Looking forward to Dickens Island.

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    1. Thanks, Kait.I could write a book about all the paranormal characters in our literature. What about Superman?

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  9. I'm fine with ghosts, as long as they're friendly like Archie or Topper! Shari

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  10. Thanks for this post, Marilyn. I've been hooked on ghosts in stories since I first saw the little boy whisper, "I see dead people."

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    1. What a marvelous movie that is!

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