When a sixty-years-dead lonely ghost meets the spirit of a child, she’s forced to confront the monsters haunting her to provide the child with companionship. Whether by finding others trapped in-between as they are, or contacting the girl’s living father using a smarmy paranormal investigator hunting for fame, she’s determined to succeed in her task.
But the ghost’s memory isn’t what it used to be, and reality fades more by the day. The monsters are growing more resolute. She’ll have to reunite the child with family before she forgets her mission…and herself.
Fans of “The Haunting of Velkwood” by Gwendolyn Kiste, “The Spite House” by Johnny Compton, and “It Rides a Pale Horse” by Andy Marino will enjoy “Ghost Glasses” by Rikki Goodwin.
Rikki Goodwin lives in North Carolina, where she owns a tattoo and piercing studio with her husband. Since she scares people every day as a body piercer, she figures it's only natural to also be a horror author. She's constantly bringing home potentially haunted home decor, but so far there's no ghosts in the house, just two very bad dogs. Lovers' Leap is her debut novel.
Oh my goodness. I was lucky enough to get an ARC of this book and I devoured it in less than 24 hours. It was absolutely brilliant from start to finish! A totally different perspective of a "ghost story". The writing flowed so well. The characters are super engaging and pull you in. Warning: it made me cry twice and it takes a lot to break me! Usually I can't stand the "memory loss" trope but the way this was written it hooked me in. Absolutely fantastic; high praise for Rikki Goodwin!
This book is so inventive, clever, heartfelt and kind. It is a ghost story that will leave an impression not just through its creepy scenes, which are excellent, but through the human connection and truly beautiful emotion that Goodwin creates. My favorite book of all time is A Fine and Private Place by Peter S. Beagle, and this is the first book since that one that captures the melancholy, the loneliness, the desire for love that we experience in life and can be so well captured through a ghost story.
Poppy, Buddy, Addie, Sharleen, and even August (F that dude for real) will live in my memory, and I will be recommending this to anyone that enjoys a quiet, meditative horror book.
This was my first Rikki Goodwin book and it was a doozy. This is well outside my normal genres of choice but I took a chance on it because the blurb sounded great and the cover is gorgeous. I really loved how much detail she put in to the ghosts personalities particularly Poppy and Addie! If you like spooky reads, solving mysteries of where these monsters come from, don’t mind a little death, then this needs to be added to your 2026 TBR! Thank you to the author and Rowan Prose Publishing for the arc. I definitely recommend this book!
First I want to say thank you to the author and the publisher for the ARC I received!
Now on to the review. I usually read thriller/horror books with more gore but this book came with a deeply human element that resonated with me. I was able to connect with the MC easily as well as the other characters.
Some things the MC was struggling with understanding, I understood before her but that didn’t bother me. I liked taking the journey with her.
This book is filled with twists and turns, some I didn’t even see coming. I loved every second of it. I can’t wait to read more from this author!
Rikki Goodwin has been on my radar and TBR list for a while now. So, when the ARC for Ghost Glasses opened, I jumped at the opportunity!
Ghost Glasses follows the story of a lonely ghost who doesn’t even remember her name. She’s essentially wandering endlessly (in a world of “monsters”), searching for someone to FINALLY see her. Without giving too much away, the MC stumbles upon a spirit of a child and her entire afterlife changes. This book dives into the world of life after death, loneliness, a bit of the "memory loss" trope, plus the mystery of where these monsters came from! (And is it too much of a spoiler if I say we peer into crazy online influencers?!)
Honestly, I had no idea where the story was going. Nothing felt predictable or forced. I even gasped a few times! I also loved Chapter 1. I’m probably the only person to think this, but the full first chapter gave off Studio Ghibli/Spirited Away vibes. I could see every detail animated so vividly in my head!
The MC and her newly found friends, though, truly make this book. Each the characters have such distinct personalities and you either LOVE them or HATE them, which is so great to find in stories today. (RE: HATE- If you've read the book, you know exactly who I'm talking about)
If you’re looking for a quiet, quick read-HIGHLY recommend! Just be prepared to shed a tear or two.
This is a highly engaging and creatively tackled, albeit not necessarily new as a concept. It is singularly expressive in its approach to its plot and central message. A ghost who is not only self-aware but also grappling with memory loss and the terrifying existence of other, more monstrous spirits she comes across as she travels along on her melancholic journey for connection in an endless existence where 99%, of people can't even see you, and the overarching grief that comes with being dead. Both witty and sarcastic, this story is propelled by the main character on every note of the developing plot and its take on grief as a part of human existence.
The structure is clever, weaving together Poppy's present-day narrative with her notebook entries and excerpts from August Waters' streams and interviews. Though it only happens in singles page increments at the end of chapters, you get to learn a lot of this characters personality and motivations in a most succinct manner that is wholeheartedly appreciated in a market full of bloated and bland stories. This only added to the tight pacing of the whole narrative that pushed the plot along at a nice clip and didn't feel any sort of slow at any point.
The writing itself is fun and detailed, with vivid descriptions that bring both the mundane and the monstrous to life (you see what I did there?). The author's ability to dedicate the proper detail to the scenes of genuine creepy as fuck creatures is where the text shines most in my opinion. The vivid imagery that my mind conjured up whilst reading was fun to consume as much as I side eyed that suspicious looking jacked hanging from the hook on my room door. 👀 The corn field scene was my favorite.
The world building was both subtle and familiar as a Chicago resident, and seeing daily encountered names throughout the journey was a nice ingredient mixed in with the rules of Ghost existence that author created for this book. Woot! Berwyn mentioned!
All around I had a good time with this read and would readily re-read come spooky season next time around.
This is my first Rikki Goodwin book, and I’m impressed. I knew after I finished the first chapter that this story was going to be awesome. Seriously, chapter one was amazing, so vivid and electrifying. And spooky. And then I knew this book was going to be downright tear-your-heart-out emotional. Our ghost lady has been dead for almost 60 years (but we don’t really know she’s a ghost at first). She is self-aware, but her memory isn’t what it used to be, and the memory she does have fades more every day. She doesn’t even remember her name anymore. What transpires on the train in the first chapter is crazy. The way the author described that creature was terrifying. The screams it made sounded like something from my worst nightmares come to life!
The book is written in first person, and the pace is medium to fast. I’m not going to summarize the book/plot, but rather tell you how the book made me feel. It’s a different kind of ghost story. Thanks to the author’s very genuine, honest, heartfelt words, I felt sympathy/empathy toward our ghost. I thought about our connectedness as human beings and how that would be lost to a ghost, but then the book proved me wrong on another, different level of connectedness. The book had me thinking about memory and its role in my own life, too. Nothing in the book felt forced or fake. All the relationships felt real and genuine. It was so refreshing!
Overall, I loved the book, and I’m giving it 5 stars! If you’re a fan of quiet, contemplative horror that feels real and goes on a journey, this is the book for you! Thank you to @tlcbooktours and the author for the arc copy. All opinions are my own.
This was my first read of a Goodwin book, but definitely not the last. I believe this was my favorite read of the year so far. It has so much heart and brilliant story-telling. Goodwin takes the reader through all the gears, from heartbreak to terror, so smoothly and captivating in a way you won't want to put it down. It touches on themes about our shared humanity and individual identities through the story of a ghost struggling to hold on to both and not forget who she was (or is). A ghost coming to grips with her own death and yet trying to prevent and ease the trauma of others, including a young ghost of a girl and her family. The story also has some of the most terrifying and imaginative monsters I've read in a while, but somehow also brings a humanity to them and recognizes there are monstrous aspects in all of us. In other words, I highly recommend this story and I'm looking forward to other books from Goodwin, and perhaps a sequel?
I wasn't sure what to expect with this story. I found it quite intriguing, a different way to look at ghosts. Poppy tried to hang onto her notebook to keep herself relatively grounded. As we followed her journey, we encountered a truck driver, several monstrosities, a ghost child, a ghost hunter, the selfishness of humanity, and love. I did figure out the monstrosities before Poppy did, and I wished we found out Poppy's real name. Little Addie had my heart and tears, and the ending hint at Buddy and Poppy helping out other ghosts had me rooting for this duo.
I received an ARC through Rowan Prose, and this is my unsolicited review.
4.5 🌟 It is so refreshing to read a book that is unlike anything else you will pick up in a store today! I fell in love with these characters, and the way the scenes are portrayed makes me feel as if I am there in the story too. I did feel as if some scenes of Poppy's journey were a little drawn out for me personally; They did not detract from the story but I felt didn't add to the story either. Overall a really refreshing, beautiful book!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.