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The Ghost Compendium Volume 1

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For the first time, collect the definitive saga of Ghost in two oversized trade paperback graphic novel collections.

Elisa Cameron is dead—murdered in cold blood. One intrepid reporter will not stop until she finds the perpetrator, even if it means crawling through the depths of hell to do it. That reporter is Elisa Cameron herself, risen from the grave as the spectral avenger Ghost!


She won’t rest in peace until she delivers a double dose of .45 caliber retribution to the wicked criminals who killed her. Ghost’s journey to the truth follows a dark, twisted path through the mean streets and corrupt towers of Arcadia, and the revelations she unearths may not lead to redemption, but damnation. Nothing is as it seems and mystery abounds!

Compendium Volume 1 collects over a thousand pages of story, including the entirety of series one of Ghost. A complex tangle of mystery, vengeance, eroticism, and absolution, Ghost pushes the definition of “hero” to the bleeding edge and is delivered by master storytellers featuring screenwriter Eric Luke, and superstar artists Adam Hughes, Terry Dodson, Ivan Reis, Jason Pearson, John Cassaday, Randy Emberlin, and Tony Harris!

This massive tome includes Comics Greatest Arcadia Week 3: Ghost, Ghost Special #1, Ghost (series one) #1–#12, A Decade of Dark Horse #2, Ghost (series one) #13–#36, Ghost Special #2 and #3, and Dark Horse Presents #145–#147.

1104 pages, Paperback

Published November 18, 2025

3 people want to read

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Eric Luke

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Profile Image for Online Eccentric Librarian.
3,391 reviews5 followers
November 19, 2025
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This is a title that didn't age very well: published at a time when the 80s hyperrealism was transitioning out in favor of puerile 90s Top Cow soft porn, the illustration work starts Patrick Nagel and ends with the prototypical suggestive posing that likely catapulted many a tween into puberty. The story wants to be deep but instead only feels very 'try hard'. One positive is that you do get a LOT for your money in this first volume.

Story: Elisa Cameron is a ghost - a murdered girl who is able to materialize and sometimes corporealize. She doesn't know why she is the only ghost but she knows she needs to discover why she was killed. As she starts delving further, she finds a horror story rooted deeply in the seedy underside of the city.

There are some excellent and informative introductions to several of the sections of the book: the character's creation as part of Dark Horse Comics expanded superhero universe, mostly as a side character. From there, it was decided to give her a full series in the universe and so the 1990s gave us a series of Ghost titles.

The plots and storytelling are very cringe - a lot of monologues where the character constantly contradict herself while trying to sound philosophical (e.g., she'll talk about knowing men and how to control them in early chapters but then in the next chapters becomes an ingenue who asks her sister to teach her how to control men). The tone is dark and almost dystopian, following the Watchmen and Dark Knight trend of the late 1980s. Since this title debuted in 1990, you can clearly see the influences there. But while the Watchmen and Dark Knight did give us some genre definingly new perspectives on the comic storytelling genre, Ghost falls very flat.

One of the larger problems I had with the title is the lack of consistency in the character/story. Ghost alternates between smart and stupid, jocular and deathly serious. It doesn't make her nuanced since these are not moods but rather entire personality traits that change from story to story. As such, she was more of a construct that a story was built around rather than a character who was organically developed and then cultivated and grown. There is a LOT of show but not a lot of tell, especially at the beginning with all the ridiculous monologues.

Similarly, the art is all style with no substance. The only good moment was a self referential one when the character has a dream sequence and jokes that she kept falling out of her outfit. We aren't really given much of a reason for why she looks as she does other then because it looks showy. This is compounded with the style changes that pulled her design from very dated 1980s (complete with pumps for shoes) to 1990s more grungier looks (natch with flat heeled slouchy boots). That is just an example but also things like hairstyles and even the cape changes within a few years of each publication. While character designs can indeed grow and reflect the period in which they are published, here the artist(s) just went for whatever was trendy at the time and didn't try too hard. I didn't get an impression of any originality. Just increasing excuses as the series went on to put the character in provocative (if physically improbable) poses.

To me, this was very dated, very shallow, and all grandiloquent. I couldn't help but wish that so much more had been done with the premise rather than aping whatever storytelling or style trend was popular at the time of publication. I kept hoping for an honest ounce of originality but never really found it in this first volume collecting Series one. Reviewed from an advance reader copy provided by the publisher.
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