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Ghosts on the Red Line

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Riders see their Departed on Boston's Red Line trains. As word spreads about the ghostly visitations, seekers crowd the Red Line, disrupting transit service. The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority hires consultant Harry West to investigate. When Harry discovers the source of the visitations, the MBTA acts to put an end to them. Harry’s ex-wife Alexandra has a brilliant Replicate in “Visitation Rooms” the ghost-welcoming attributes of Red Line train cars so people can continue to meet their loved ones. But the Archbishop of Boston condemns Visitation Rooms as sacrilegious and pushes to get them banned. And a notorious gangster frets that his victims might reappear in the Visitation Rooms, pointing accusatory fingers. He warns Harry and Drop the Visitation Room project, or else.

298 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 14, 2011

7 people are currently reading
111 people want to read

About the author

Peter David Shapiro

8 books4 followers
Peter David Shapiro was born in Montreal, Canada, and now lives in the Boston area. He frequently rides the Red Line, the one that was disrupted by ghostly encounters in GHOSTS ON THE RED LINE. He spent quality time in Hong Kong where a story of intrigue and revenge unfolds in THE TRAIL OF MONEY. He loves the area in Vermont where a remarkable oil painting opens a portal for the paranormal in PORTRAIT OF IGNATIUS JONES. His fourth novel, JACOB'S PLAN, released in May 2019, is about a man who who does what he must to survive. More info at www.peterdshapiro.com...

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5 stars
8 (13%)
4 stars
14 (23%)
3 stars
23 (38%)
2 stars
11 (18%)
1 star
3 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Icy_Space_Cobwebs  Join the Penguin Resistance!.
5,652 reviews330 followers
December 24, 2012
Review of Ghosts on the Red Line by Peter David Shapiro
5 stars

An intriguing and comfy psychical (and psychological) mystery with a cast that includes not just individuals, but corporations (the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority-MBTA; Blair West International consultants), universities (MIT), and metropolises (Cambridge and Boston), the novel purports the premise: “What if-what if the deceased began to appear to individuals during a subway ride?” Not a wholesale “everybody sees ‘em,” but rather one departed appearing to one individual at a time, and only the recipient individual can “see,” touch, talk to, the gone person. That’s fine when the visitations are of lost loved ones, dearly missed and grieved; but when those include murdered witnesses appearing to a gangster, and a man dead by his own hand who accuses his brother-in-law, trouble ensues. Not to mention, that crowds upon crowds now want to ride this single line, the Red Line, in hopes of retrieving time with those they’ve lost.

Creative and original, “Ghosts on the Red Line” delves into detail about the subways, the cities, the MBTA, and showcases Harry West, co-owner and partner of Blair West International, the consultancy called in to assist the MBTA in discovering exactly what is happening, and why, and how to bring about its cessation. Readers who like their mysteries wrapped up in cozy, with sufficient intrigue to keep those pages turning, are sure to enjoy “Ghosts on the Red Line.”
Profile Image for Jennifer.
245 reviews14 followers
Want to read
December 29, 2011
I ride the Red Line every day, I must read this!
234 reviews2 followers
April 9, 2013
I found "Ghosts on the Red Line" amazing. It was very intreging! I highly recommend it for anyone wanting to read about Boston.
Profile Image for Peter Shapiro.
Author 8 books4 followers
Read
January 3, 2020
GHOSTS ON THE RED LINE explores what happens when commuters see their Departed on Boston's subway trains.

The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority hires consultant Harry West to investigate. Harry's project turns personal when his ex-wife Alexandra Ben-Tov meets their daughter on the Red Line, who looks like the teenager she might have become if she had lived. Included in what one reader review calls an "engaging cast of characters" are a Boston psychic, the Archbishop of Boston, members of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, MIT researchers, Cambridge police, and a notorious gangster.

Buzz from readers -- "imaginative, strange account" "great read" "compelling storyline."

Review on BN.com: "I really enjoyed this book being from Boston, but it is great for anyone even if you have never have ridden the infamous Red Line!!!!!"

Review on Amazon.com: "A great story with surprising twists and turns. Reads like a good mystery novel."

At Amazon in paperback and for Kindle ($2.99).

Check it out at www.ghostsontheredline.com or at Amazon at http://amzn.to/GhostsRedLine.
Profile Image for Stephen Dorneman.
510 reviews3 followers
July 29, 2014
I may be kind giving this book three stars - the writing in this self-published novel sorely lacks the hand of a good editor, but the essential elements of the plot, that ghosts that first began appearing on Boston's Red Line subway cars due to an MIT research project can be reliably summoned, and that summoning turned into a business, is so strong and taken relatively well to its logical conclusions, that I had to at least give it a three. Shapiro knows the world of consultants, start-ups, Boston politics and Boston-area police procedure, but he doesn't know when to stop telling you irrelevant details, or that a woman's eyes shouldn't be described as "dark as dark chocolate." You have been warned.
Profile Image for Marti.
210 reviews6 followers
February 10, 2013
This was a pretty good story and I might have rated it more highly had it not had so many editing errors. Basically, people start seeing dead friends, relatives, and sometimes even enemies on Boston's Red Train Line. A group of MIT scientists and engineers become involved and so does the Catholic Church and a local crime boss. It has a fairly sweet ending and on balance was a nice little story but it really did have an annoying number of editing errors.
Profile Image for Ed.
39 reviews2 followers
May 25, 2012
Not that good. I wanted to like this book because it was recommended by a good friend. Shapiro got too bogged down in describing the details that didn't add to the plot or character development. He had an interesting premise, but didn't take it far enough. It didn't help that I couldn't care:: about the main characters. I'll stick to Philip R. Craig for my local mystery color.
Profile Image for Marietta.
47 reviews
July 16, 2012
I probably enjoyed it more than I otherwise would have simply because it's set on the Red Line and that is the train that I take to work every day. So I recognized a lot of the settings, etc. Overall a nice story, nothing earthshaking.
Profile Image for Flannery.
86 reviews25 followers
December 16, 2011
Neat premise, but the dialogue and descriptions could use some tightening.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
245 reviews14 followers
Want to read
January 17, 2013
I tried to read this and just could not get into it. I will try again another time. As a real Red Line rider, the Red Line could use some ghosts over what I normally see on the train!
54 reviews1 follower
November 4, 2013
Interesting in parts but boring and too much information in others.
Profile Image for J.
336 reviews2 followers
November 24, 2013
It was good, started getting better a little over mid way but I felt a little disappointed that it did not build up more and felt the ending was a little abrupt.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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