The Ghost Clause
Staff Reviews
A spooky tale told from the point of view of a ghost residing in an 1845 farmhouse in Calais, Vermont, The Ghost Clause is a testament of love to marriage, to home, and to community. Howard's precise and provocative language draws the reader into the vitality in everyday life and the importance of connection. Whether we make those connections through poetry or through interactions at the Adamant Co-op, The Ghost Clause presents us with a tantalizing cast of characters, including one very engaging ghost.
Description
National Book Award Finalist Howard Norman delivers another “provocative . . . haunting”* novel, this time set in a Vermont village and featuring a missing child, a newly married private detective, and a highly relatable ghost
(*Janet Maslin, New York Times)
Simon Inescort is no longer bodily present in his marriage. It’s been several months since he keeled over the rail of a Nova Scotia–bound ferry, a massive heart attack to blame. Simon's widow, Lorca Pell, has sold their farmhouse to newlyweds Zachary and Muriel—after revealing that the deed contains a “ghost clause,” an actual legal clause, not unheard of in Vermont, allowing for reimbursement if a recently purchased home turns out to be haunted.
In fact, Simon finds himself still at home: “Every waking moment, I'm astonished I have any consciousness . . . What am I to call myself now, a revenant?” He spends time replaying his marriage in his own mind, as if in poignant reel-to-reel, while also engaging in occasionally intimate observation of the new homeowners. But soon the crisis of a missing child, a local eleven-year-old, threatens the tenuous domestic equilibrium, as the weight of the case falls to Zachary, a rookie private detective with the Green Mountain Agency.
The Ghost Clause is a heartrending, affirming portrait of two marriages—one in its afterlife, one new and erotically charged—and of the Vermont village life that sustains and remakes them.
Praise for The Ghost Clause
"Howard Norman, who has always stood admirably apart, has reinvented the ghost story; in the process he has crafted a novel not only suspenseful but elegiac, consoling, and wholly absorbing." —Jhumpa Lahiri, author of Interpreter of Maladies and Lowland "In his ever-exquisite, lapidary prose, Howard Norman shows us in The Ghost Clause how we might best cherish our time, whether in this life or the next: through our restive, earthly passions, to the heart-song of language; and by our deep devotions to other beings. This is a lovely novel indeed." —Chang-Rae Lee, author of Native Speaker and On a Full Sea "Who better than a dead novelist to narrative this tale of married life, a missing child, and a Vermont farmhouse ripe for the haunting? The Ghost Clause is a meditation on many kinds of mystery, not the least of which is the persistent ongoingness of love." —Alice McDermott, author of Charming Billy and The Ninth Hour "...he has a keen eye for the way loss uneasily sticks with those left behind. What opens as a ghost story turns out to be something of a love story instead...he still has a knack for finding emotional resonances in muted, unlikely scenarios." —Kirkus "This is an astute, beautifully written novel." —Publishers Weekly "Thoughtful, elegiac, a good book to read by the fireside with a snifter of bourbon." —Robert E. Brown, Library Journal —