Product Details
Ghost Story

Ghost Story
By Toby Litt

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Average customer review:

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #79602 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-07-07
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 288 pages

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
When Agatha and Paddy decide to leave London and buy a house on the coast, they are full of hope for themselves and their growing family baby Max and a new child on the way. Three months later, when the builders move out and they move in, things look very different. A personal tragedy threatens to destroy all they have carefully built up and only a small miracle, it seems, will save them...Ghost Story is a book both haunted and haunting, which asks how we can ever mourn something that hasn't lived. Emotionally resonant, beautifully crafted and ultimately redemptive, it will take you to the heart of suffering and desire.


Customer Reviews

A perceptive study of bereavement.4
A skilled narrative depicting the disintegration of a personality and relationship following bereavement. Accurately observed, perceptive prose.

A chilling look at motherhood and bereavement3
Agatha and Paddy move into a new house on the south coast. They have a two-year-old son called Max, but Max doesn't live with them. Instead, he is being cared for by Agatha's mother. Why? Because Agatha is grieving for the loss of her daughter Rose, who died in-utero, and is having trouble coping with day-to-day life.

While Paddy commutes to London each day to work, Agatha stays at home and begins to go slightly mad. The bereavement, which is a kind of unspoken pain between the couple, is the cause of Agatha's mental anguish. And in a Yellow Wallpaper type of way, she begins to think that the house is breathing...

Ghost Story is a harrowing read. It's a dark, brooding novel with little light or joy to be found within its 226 pages. But its perfect prose, it's clear-eyed portrayal of a married couple's relationship and it's realistic analysis of how bereavement can overshadow life, makes it worth the effort.

Coupled with the book's preface -- Litt's non-fiction account of his girlfriend's miscarriages -- this tale of love and loss is a particularly heartfelt one.

I wouldn't, however, recommend this to anyone thinking of starting a family or if you are recently bereaved: the pain in these pages might just be too realistic to bear.

Okay.3
I'm not sure if I like this book or not. The character of Aggie annoyed me, and although most of the story came out eventually, there were still some things that I was left wondering about.
It took me a while to read because I was reluctant to keep going back to it. I did not really identify with the characters and felt that the ending was rather abrupt.