Imagine getting the chance to solve your own murder. For Sarah, the prospect becomes a reality after finding her dead body in the morgue and deciding that the injuries sustained indicate she was murdered.
She won’t let being a ghost stop her from tracking down the murderer and stopping him from killing again. However, she’ll need help from someone living. She finds that help in the form of Steve; a near recluse who sees ghosts and isn’t thrilled at the idea of Sarah appearing in his house whenever she feels like it.
Can they work together and save lives, or will more women have to die?
Not the Amanda Steel who writes erotic werewolf novels.
Also, I have some publications under my married name of Amanda Nicholson, but there is another author with the same name and Goodreads keep crediting my books to her.
These include: Death to All Men Nobody Left Behind: A Printed Word Anthology (editor) Summer Bludgeon (contributor) Nobody Left Behind| (editor) Summer Bludgeon (contributor)
This is a rare find. A great paranormal thriller. Spine-tingling and goosebumps throughout the book. Fast paced and action packed storyline. Keeps you from putting this book down.
I received a free copy of this book via Booksprout and am voluntarily leaving a review.
Sarah finds herself standing in a morgue, staring at her own mutilated body. So begins Amanda Steel’s latest book Ghost Of Me, a riveting tale of a ghost trying to solve her own murder. Of course, this is no simple undertaking - for a start she is unable to touch or lift anything and no one can see or hear her. She spends some time, as any of us would I suppose, visiting the house she shared with her fiancée Paul and her place of work, but it is after visiting her mother that she has her first breakthrough. As she is leaving her childhood home, a scruffy individual turns to look at her and she realises he can see her. ‘You’re one of them,’ he grunts and begins to walk away. Sarah discovers that his name is Steve and that he is not very keen on his supposed ‘gift’, finding it a nuisance when dead people turn up at his flat asking for favours. It takes some convincing on her part, but after a second murder, Steve agrees to help. Inexperienced, and to some extent inept investigators, they begin by following up on some ideas Sarah has about her possible killer - ideas that will open up the proverbial can of worms, ideas that will have serious implications on both their lives. But is there any chance at all that the mismatched pair can stop a dangerous and determined serial killer? Amanda Steel writes in a light conversational style which offers occasional glimpses of her humour and humanity. This makes her prose a joy to read. Ghost of Me is a well-structured story which handles what, on the face of it would be a hugely difficult subject, with a fair degree of panache. The characters are solid and well-drawn, the locations and situations almost cinematic in their description. The narrative moves along at a brisk pace making it difficult to tear oneself away from the story. I thoroughly enjoyed the book and am sure it will appeal to a broad spectrum of tastes. Ghost of Me is a fine addition to Amanda Steel’s body of work and I do not hesitate to recommend it.
She was killed and she is now a ghost. She finds out there is a chance she had been murdered. Being a ghost is not going to stop looking for her killer. Who killed her? How will she do it? See if she can
I received a free copy of this book via Booksprout and am voluntarily leaving a review.