Ghost novel review: Ghost Orchid

Ghost Orchid by Carol Goodman

Ballantine Books, 336 pages

 I read a favorable review of this book on the Haunted Travels website and decided to check it out myself. After I was thirty pages in, I realized I had read this novel before. Here’s the interesting part: I enjoyed it more the second time. I think it’s because I wasn’t trying to figure out what would happen, and I could just relax and enjoy the flow.

The protagonist Ellis Brooks has been invited to the historic Bosco estate, now an artist’s retreat, to finish a novel based on tragic events that transpired at Bosco more than a hundred years earlier. Ellis Brooks writes of the original 19th century occupants, Milo and Aurora Latham, who had invited psychic Corinth Blackwell to Bosco to contact the spirits of their dead children. But Corinth unexpectedly encounters people from her past, and the séance request is not as straightforward as first appears. And then tragedy strikes again.

In an author’s sleight of hand, it turns out that the present day author Ellis sees dead people, one of whom leads her to uncover the mysteries of Bosco and Corinth. And if these plotlines are not enough, there’s Abenaki mythology braided into the mix. Confusing, huh? Rest assured, the author (the real one), leads you through the labyrinth with a sure step.

This is a book filled with lyrical language. Here’s a sample: “…she spears the death certificate to the muslin curtain, where it flutters like an impaled moth” (109). Lovely, yes? There is lush description to satisfy the most discerning landscape architects, especially those interested in fountains and statuary. The ghost orchid pictured above (isnt’ it eerily beautiful?) has its own mysterious place in the story.

As a writer, I enjoyed observing the angst-ridden fictional author write portions of her novel—both because of the derision of her colleagues and because of the ways she wove historical details into the text. Then, of course, we have the real author Carol Goodman juxtaposing in ingenious ways Ellis’s novel with the lives of the historical characters Ellis imagines. That wowed me the most, I think, this tight interweaving between what “really” happened (remember, this is fiction) and what the fictional author surmises.

In some ways, this sort of meta fiction reminded me of a Margaret Atwood book The Lady Oracle.  Lest you ask, no, I am not related to Margaret Atwood. Alas.

Recently, I read an interesting post by Roz Morris in which she discusses authors tying up loose ends at the conclusion of novels–as in how much is too much. If there is one flaw of Ghost Orchid, it is that the author meticulously ties and triple ties (just to make sure) each of the multiple story threads. I thought if one more red-tipped blackbird feather fell from an overhead branch (reader beware: symbol alert) as it does in a triptych of conclusions,  I would expire. And then there would be one more forlorn apparition wandering the woods of Bosco.

About Deb Atwood

I am a writer, editor, tutor interested in literary and women's fiction, ghost novels, and all things Korean.
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5 Responses to Ghost novel review: Ghost Orchid

  1. Helen says:

    I haven’t heard of this book but I’ll look out for it as it does sound fascinating. And yes, it’s interesting that sometimes a book can be more enjoyable the second time you read it.

  2. Great blog! Do you have any hints for aspiring writers? I’m planning to start my own blog soon but I’m a little lost on everything. Would you recommend starting with a free platform like WordPress or go for a paid option? There are so many choices out there that I’m totally confused .. Any suggestions? Thanks a lot!

    • Deb Atwood says:

      Hi Johan,

      I couldn’t be happier with wordpress. It’s easy to use and pretty fool-proof. (I’m definitely an e-klutz.) Jane Friedman does a great webinar on starting a blog. I suggest you check it out.

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