Sometimes falling in love is like being hit by lightning: quick and fast. Especially when there is no thunder, no warning, but just the briefest flash.
It can also be mysterious and unnerving like feeling cold in the heat, feeling like your mouth is dry.
Summer Lightning is one of those terms like Indian Summer, Strawberry Spring used to describe the weather. As its cover would suggest as well as the blurb on the back...this has nothing to do with that in a literal sense.
This is Gothic Romance for teens at its early 1990s best. It has the privilege to be set in Maine which nowadays has its otherworldly vibe thanks to Stephen King and H.P. Lovecraft setting his own tales in New England. A very modern day The Ghost and Mrs. Muir with computers and Sweet Valley High drama.
Melissa Loring celebrates her seventeenth birthday with her family and two of the closest people in her life with no familial relation. Next door neighbor Robbie who has grown up with Melissa since she was little and Tripp Moody, her boyfriend of almost a year.
The boy next door doesn't have a crush on Melissa but isn't too keen on her jock boyfriend, best girlfriend Polly isn't too thrilled with him either but Tripp is actually too nice a guy to notice. Plays baseball and football, looks like a young Tom Cruise but he has manners and is polite...and he adores Melissa.
She feels pretty lucky to have a boyfriend like Tripp but can't imagine why he is in love with a brunette, book nerd like herself instead of some blonde cheerleader type. Melissa is at that stage in her relationship with Tripp where she wants a little more but since Tripp doesn't pressure her...it has her with some odd feelings.
Her parents get her the latest computer for 1993 for her birthday so she can write stories instead of using her late grandfather's typewriter which is starting to lose the battle and is destined for the attic.
Melissa gets something extra with her computer, however, and the back pretty much spoils it as well as the only reasonable explanation - a ghost.
Once Melissa gets over the shock and realizes this isn't some trick, she begins to communicate with a spirit who identifies himself as Schuyler Whitfield. The name sounds familiar and soon, their connection becomes a strange but compelling one.
Melissa sees Schuyler's face when she and Tripp are out for a ride in his car, dark hair and almost silvery eyes, while they are kissing. Melissa yearns for it more than any other kiss Tripp has given her and later that night, she goes to the house next door and sees Schuyler Whitfield waiting for her.
They talk, they embrace, they kiss and soon it is all Melissa can think about. She loses her appetite, drifts off into fantasies, ignores her friends and even Tripp as well as wearing her hair back now in a long braid...bringing attention to her appearance becoming pale and wan.
Melissa doesn't listen to anything anyone says, becoming as Robbie puts it: "bitchy" but still keeping her boundaries and not ticking off her parents...slightly. You can tell it is really bad when her bratty thirteen year old sister, Tracy, seems concerned with how her older sibling is acting.
There is a connection between Melissa and Schuyler but it has a much deeper meaning connected with his past, Melissa's own childhood and the two old Victorian houses upon the high cliffs of their small, Maine town.
Melissa will soon have to make a choice.
She believes she has already made up her mind that she wants to be with Schuyler forever but of course, there is only one way to remain with a ghost.
Can a love from the living world be enough to compete with a love from the world beyond...a love from the distant past?
Completely enthralled by this book that I could not put it down! A part of me knew a little bit of what was to come because I am a sucker for these kind of stories yet I was thrown by a few of the reveals and twists.
The climax had me on the edge of my seat and I had to take a breath before getting to the ending.
It seems like a pretty, clear cut ending but there is this tiny layer of ambiguousness to it that could mean the future of our main character Melissa is not completely rosy...there could be more summer lightning on the horizon...
If you are a fan of ghost stories with Gothic undertones, it is a good read even if you are not too keen on romances. I would recommend Summer Lightning by Wendy Corsi Staub whether you like one or the other.
Having only read two of Staub's books so far, Summer Lightning is the far more intriguing read than Witch Hunt but both are so different despite being in the same genre.
I can only let you decide for yourself which one is better...