Tag Archives: paranormal series

Spectral Analysis: Seeking Lost Souls

(Book 1 of 3)

by Joanne Cook

This novel follows the story of Janine Stinger, a tech specialist on the crew of a TV ghost-hunting show. Janine is deeply scarred by a previous relationship and especially vulnerable, although she does her best to hide it. When the team stumbles upon a story that dovetails with her own growing up, family history and local legend collide to confront Janine’s darkest fears. Is she part of a true haunting and curse? Her attempts to keep her past private start to crumble as her crush on the team’s lead paranormal investigator become mutual. How can she balance the past, the present, and the increasingly darker threats all while a river ghost lures people to their deaths?  

Janine’s character is well-developed as are the other supporting characters. The personal dynamics of work, family, and romantic relationships all play a role in this historical ghost story. The author provides wonderful technical details on ghost hunting, the equipment, and the process. I loved the historical details and research that provided the backstory of the book. The reader learns about the culture in which ghost stories arise and grow. Although this book deals with one haunting, the reader is deeply invested in Janine’s experience and what is in store for her next.  

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THE HOSTESS WITH THE GHOSTESS

By EJ Cooperman

(Book 9 of the Haunted Guesthouse Series)

I read this book a while ago because I liked the premise. As a writer I was also interested in how to pull off a book where a ghost helps solve a crime. How can a ghost effectively take an active role in a plot?

The basic idea of the series is that Alison Kerby has opened a guesthouse and actively markets the place as haunted. Visitors flock to have the experience of ghostly phenomena which her resident ghosts help provide since they are all friendly types. Alison herself can see, hear, and interact with all these beings but her guests witness only the results of their daily shows.

In this particular installment, a new ghost arrives who happens to be the brother of one of her ghostly residents. Richard is disoriented having been recently killed while trying to solve a murder case in which he was representing the state’s number one suspect. Alison is drawn into the case and with help from the other side, she attempts to solve the murder.

This is a bestselling series so there is no doubt some people love it. I found nothing spectacular here. None of the characters stood out in any way. There is a kind of humor in the writing that over explains things and leaves nothing to the reader’s imagination. The tone is lighthearted and spoofy. There’s nothing really creepy here even though violent murder is the subject of the farce. I also had the feeling that the author is far older than the Alison character she is trying to portray. This happens a lot. For some reason, mainstream literature insists on having characters in their 40s, even though they read more like they are in their late 60s or 70s. This isn’t a horrible book, it’s just a very predictable cozy mystery like so many others.   

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