I've been reading The History of God by Karen Armstrong for the past two weeks, and while non-fiction is intellectually stimulating, it's not near as much fun as good fiction. So it was with this desire to take a short vacation back to fiction that I picked up Nik Korpon's Old Ghosts. Within the first few pages, I realized something - it was good to be back to fiction.
Old Ghosts is about Cole, a man who is deeply in love with his girlfriend and trying to conceive a child. He works in residential remodeling, which seems an apt metaphor, because for the past few years he seems to be someone who has been remodeling his life toward the domestic. Just as everything seems to be falling into place, some 'old ghosts' from his former life come back to haunt him.
This is a familiar plot in crime fiction, but in the hands of Korpon it becomes something unique. He successfully distills the story to its best elements, which means leaving out overdrawn melodrama and making Cole's story echo with a deeply felt sense of heart. In fact, I think the sympathetic nature of Cole's story is where Korpon exceeds those who have told similar stories.
Unlike other stories where a dark past rears its ugly head, Cole doesn't have a terribly unique talent that's being sought. Instead, Cole is pitted between different notions of family, one from the past and one in development. I think most everyone has some skeletons in their closet, and at some point, they have come back, whether in memory or physical form, and threatened their current well-being. This is where I felt connected to Cole, and I could feel his desperation and reluctance on every page, whether it was trying to resist the seduction of the pleasures from his past or wondering whether he would ruin the new life he had created.
Cole's relationship with his wife is also well done in such a short amount of time. Their relationship feels familiar, also with that 'everyman' familiarity that makes the story hit home.
I was affected enough by the story that, after reading it, I embraced my wife, kissed her cheek, and told her I loved her. As we hugged, I reminded myself how great my life is with her.
Who ever thought that something labeled a 'crime novella' could cause that kind of reaction in a reader?
Also worth mentioning are Korpon's delicious use of language, which makes us taste and smell this story as if we're living every gritty detail.
All this, topped off with a great, unforgettable ending that will make this quick read linger in the mind of the reader for a long time to come.