Um, this was terrible. It could have been great, like the Key, In The Garden, and Boonsboro trilogies. Nora knows how to write great paranormal/romance. This is now the third book of hers in a row that I hated (following the last Dragon Heart book and Identity).
Sonya is planning a wedding to a jerk who is all about getting his own way, until she cancels the florist and comes home to find him in bed with her cousin. She immediately stops loving him. Kicks him out, packs his stuff, moves on. They work in the same graphic design firm and he harasses her but too subtly for her to prove, so she quits to go freelance. Her bosses give her an account to take with her because they feel bad. (this doesn't happen in real life) Her freelancing is almost immediately successful, and then after a visit from a lawyer she finds out she's inherited a literal manor in Maine from an uncle she didn't know existed. But don't worry, he's set up a trust to take care of all the financials. She just has to live in the house. So sure, she moves from Boston to Maine. Oh, but the house is haunted.
Let's cut to the chase. Nice lawyer (Deuce) has a family law firm with his dad (Ace) and son (Trey). Sonya and Trey hit it off and at some point in the last third of the book start sleeping together. There's no chemistry. It's just convenient for them to start dating.
*Side note: Ace is in his 70s or 80s and he's gross. When he meets Sonya at the office, he tells her he likes to take "pretty girls" to lunch. It's 2023, someone clue Gramps in that we don't say sh*t like this to women anymore.
Sonya immediately starts getting graphic design clients in her new town and is hugely successful. She never cooked before but makes a perfect pot roast for the Ace/Deuce/Trey family (what are they going to call Oliver IV, I wonder?) followed by a perfect scallop and linguine dinner for her mother, who comes to visit. A ghost maid cleans up after her, doing dishes, making the bed, polishing the whole house. Sure, the house is haunted by multiple dead brides and the witch who killed them and stole her rings, but overall Sonya has it made. Her ghost grandmother is constantly playing songs on her iTunes to fit any situation - which, honestly, the constant song references became incredibly annoying after the first five times. She adopts a perfect rescue dog who plays fetch with a little boy ghost and never ever makes a mess. Oh and then her old bosses give her the opportunity to pitch another perfect client she'd previously worked with.
Are you tired of reading this review? That's what reading the book felt like. Too many subplots, not enough forward progress. Just Sonya designing brilliant websites in her amazing two story library. I haven't even mentioned her perfect best friend, Cleo, who also leaves Boston to move in since she can be a successful illustrator from anywhere. Other than the mean witch who stole the dead brides' wedding rings (which Sonya is supposed to get back but we have no idea how), lives in a room on the third floor, and makes a ruckus from time to time, there's no real adversity or danger. Then the damn book ends on a cliffhanger.
What even is the point of this storyline?