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A Certain Slant of Light

A Certain Slant of Light
by Laura Whitcomb

Started Reading:
December 18th, 2009
Finished Reading:
December 27th, 2009

Synopsis:

Helen died 130 years ago as a young woman. Unable to enter heaven because of a sense of guilt she carried at death, she has been silent and invisible but conscious and sociable across the generations. Her spirit has been sustained by its attachment to one living human host after another, including a poet and, most recently, a high-school English teacher. While she sits through his class one day, she becomes aware of James and he–unlike the mortals all around them–is aware of her as well. James, who also died years earlier, inhabits the body of a contemporary teen, Billy. James and Helen fall in love, he shows her how to inhabit the body of a person whose spirit has died but who still lives and breathes, and the two begin to unfold the mysteries of their own pasts and those of their adolescent hosts. Jenny, whose body Helen now uses, is the only child of strict religious parents who controlled her beyond what her spirit could endure. Billy’s spirit left his body after a string of tragedies resulting from drug abuse and domestic violence. James and Helen court in both modern and old-fashioned ways; here is a novel in which explicit sex is far from gratuitous or formulaic. Whitcomb writes with a grace that befits Helen’s more modulated world while depicting contemporary society with sharp insight. In the subgenre of dead-narrator tales, this book shows the engaging possibilities of immortality–complete with a twist at the end that wholly satisfies.–Francisca Goldsmith, Berkeley Public Library, CA

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Review

Rating: 8

This was such a unique story. About a woman who died and was left to haunt one person after another, stuck to them day in and day out, year after year. Totally unseen until one day one of the living looks right at her. It was really easy to read and I love how the story unfolded, I never got bored and the only complaint I could come up with was that it wasn’t longer. I feel like there was so much more the author could have done with the two main characters in the book before taking us to the end. Regardless, what there was of it was still enjoyable. A great concept for a plot, which I loved, because so many books now seem to follow the same sort of cookie cutter storyline.

Tags: Ghosts