Author: David Gardner
Genre: Humorous Paranormal ThrillerPublished by: Encircle Publications, LLC
Publication Date: February 10th 2021
Number of Pages: 322
ISBN: 164599144X (ISBN13: 9781645991441)
Purchase Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Goodreads
If Jeff can't save his ghostly ancestors from disappearing, so will he.
Writing for a cheesy Boston tabloid, Jeff Beekle fabricates a whimsical tale about a mob-built CIA prison for ghosts.
Which turns out to be true.
Now both the mob and the CIA have Jeff in their sights.
Even worse, Jeff discovers that his great-grandmother is an inmate and that she and the other spectral residents are being groomed as CIA spies. (And why not? They're invisible, draw no salary, and won't hop into bed with enemy agents.)
To his horror, Jeff learns that ancestors held too long in earthly captivity will vanish as if never born, taking with them all their descendants, which includes him.
Can Jeff outwit the mob and the CIA, free his ghostly ancestors, destroy the prison and save himself?
My thoughts:
The Journalist involves Jeff a former Pulitzer winning journalist who is now writing for a tabloid in Boston. Think The Enquirer. While he makes up stories for publishing, He has a secret. He can see some of his ancestors in their ghostly form. This book was definitely out of my comfort zone. But I found myself compelled enough to keep reading.
I enjoyed the premise and it was a nice escape for a while. When I was younger, I used to enjoy reading those tabloids and imagined what kind of person wrote for them. I liked Jeff as a character and he kind of fit what I pictured. In fact, the book is filled with fun quirky characters. One of my favorite parts of the book was the horoscopes at the start of each chapter. I also loved the Boston setting. Being very familiar with the area, it was a nice addition to my enjoyment of the book. Definitely give it a shot.
Here is a sneak peek:
Chapter 1
SCORPIO Oct. 23 – Nov. 21
Your ancestors are the raw material of your being, but
who you become is your responsibility alone. Learn to turn your troubles into
opportunities. Today is a good day to defrag your hard drive.
He hovers in the doorway at the far end of the newsroom, his feet not touching the floor. When he spots me, he glides forward, trailing diaphanous versions of himself that become smaller and smaller until they disappear. He wears leather chaps, an oversized black cowboy hat and high-heeled boots that almost bring him up to five feet. He has leathery skin and a drooping gray mustache.
It’s my great-great-grandfather Hiram Beekle, back for
another ghostly visit.
He first showed up when I was six years old, right after I
shot and killed my stepfather.
I’m the only one who can see him, hear him, talk to him.
As a kid, I would wet my pants and run away whenever Hiram
showed up. Now he’s just a pain in the ass.
I turn back to my keyboard, hoping he’ll go away. I’m not in
the mood for advice, taunts, prods, complaints, boasts.
He showed up last week to tell me to quit my job and find
something better. Same thing the week before and the week before that. Probably
why he’s back today.
I have to admit he’s right, but I’m sure as hell not going
to tell him that.
Just four months ago I was a hot-shot investigative reporter
for the Boston Globe. Now I write for a tacky supermarket tabloid, the Boston
Tattler. Its newsroom is an open bay on the second floor of a ratty
building that once served as a cheese warehouse that on humid days still smells
of camembert. Out front are the marketing and distribution people, along with
the office of the publisher, my Uncle Sid. Only he would hire a disgraced
journalist like me.
I churn out fanciful tales about creatures from outer space,
Elvis sightings and remedies for double chins. Some readers believe my stuff
and some don’t. Those in between ride the wave of the fun and nonsensical and
don’t care whether the stuff they’re reading is true or not.
Our larger rivals concentrate on noisy Hollywood breakups
and soap-opera stars with gambling addictions. The worst of our competitors
traffic in fake political conspiracies. But Uncle Sid stays with alien
visitors, kitten pictures and herbal cures for chin wattles. He likes to point
out that kittens and spacemen don’t sue. He’s been sued too often.
I type:
Although local sportswriters puzzle over the inconsistencies of Red Sox hurlers, the shocking truth is that—
“That’s crap, Jeff.”
Hiram has drifted around behind me to peer over my
shoulder.
“Try ‘terrifying’,” he adds. “‘Shocking’ is overused.”
Hiram pretends he’d been a cowpoke, but in fact made a
living writing pulp westerns.
I look around to see if anyone is watching, then turn back
to Hiram and whisper, “Is that why you’re here, to dispense advice on
adjectives?”
“That and to let you know I sense danger.”
“You’re always sensing danger. Just last week, you told me
than an earthquake was…”
I stop whispering when Sherwood shuffles over, coffee cup in
hand. He’s a doughy, middle-aged man who reads the dictionary for pleasure.
“Another tale about space critters, Jeff?”
“A follow-up to last week’s. It’s Uncle Sid’s idea. He loved
the national exposure.”
Sherwood nods. “You knocked that one out of the ballpark.”
Sherwood loves sports metaphors but hates sports.
One of my stories from the week before somehow got into the
hands of a particularly dim U.S. Congressman who scrambled onto the floor of
the House of Representatives to fume against the government agency for hiring a
mob-controlled construction company to build a prison for creatures from the
planet Ook-239c.
I kick off my sneakers, tilt back my chair and put my bare
feet up on my desk. “What’re you working on today?”
“I’ve got a TV chef who’s gone on a hunger strike, identical
twin sisters in Chattanooga who’ve been secretly exchanging husbands for
fourteen years, and an eight-year-old boy in Brisbane who can predict the
future by licking truck tires—the usual stuff.” Sherwood takes a gulp of
coffee, shrugs, sighs. “Do you ever wonder what you’re doing with your life?”
“Sometimes. But who doesn’t?”
Again Sherwood sighs. I’ve never known anyone to sigh so often.
His wife ran off with a termite inspector a few years back, and soon afterward
he lost his professorship and his house. Sherwood was put on the earth as an
example of what I don’t want to become.
“You should look for another job,” I say.
Sherwood shrugs, then ambles back to his desk. He doesn’t
want another job because it would make him feel better.
But I want a better job so badly that I dream I’ve found
one, then wake up to reality.
Hiram floats around front and shakes his head. “The little
guy’s right—you should get a better job. And for that, you need to get that
darn Pulitzer back.”
I delete ‘shocking’ and type ‘terrifying.’ “Think I’m not
trying?”
“Try harder. Young people these days—”
“…don’t know the meaning of hard work,” I contribute. “Yeah,
I know. Now go away.”
“No, you go away. You’re in deep trouble, young man. Two
black-hearted sidewinders have ridden into town to—”
“That’s the ridiculous opening line from Rise From Ashes.
A dreadful novel.”
“Dreadful? Do you know how many copies I sold?” Hiram
says.
“The protagonist was an idiot who shot his own big toe off.”
“That had a solid plot purpose. And at least he shot
himself, not a member of his own family.”
Whenever I piss Hiram off, he brings up the shooting.
“Screw you!” I whisper and turn back to my keyboard.
Green Monsters on the Green Monster!
Late last night, a sharp-eyed Boston Red Sox guard spotted a pack of green, three-eyed space monsters in Fenway Park. Authorities believe them to be the aliens who escaped from the secret government prison first brought to the public’s attention in last week’s Boston Tattler. The guard reported seeing the creatures scrambling up the wall that Red Sox fans have lovingly dubbed ‘The Green Monster.’
Green monsters attracted to a green wall? A coincidence? Unlikely. In fact, experts on the subject of aliens from outer…
“This little piggy—”
“Hey!” I jerk my foot back.
Melody has sneaked up on me. She likes to do that.
She wiggles my little toe again. “This little piggy went to
market, this little piggy—well, you know the rest of the narrative.” She lets
go of my toe.
“Actually, that felt good. Don’t stop.”
“That’s as much wiggling as you get, Jeff. You’re married.”
I pull my feet off my desk and rest them on the floor.
“Separated.”
“That’s still married.”
Melody is my editor. She’s thirty-seven—three years older
than I am. Her face is narrow and pretty, her hair red and wavy. She likes hoop
earrings and has long feet.
She shuffles through the printout in her hands. “You
sent me eight stories this week but promised me nine.”
“I’m still working on the last one. Did you know that a
space creature has replaced the Red Sox mascot and has put a hex on the top of
the batting order?”
“They’re already hexed,” Melody says. She eyes me for a long
moment, then screws up her mouth. “I’m concerned.”
Here it comes again. “About my articles? About my bare toes?
Or my collection of metal toys?” I reach across my desk, pick up the Spirit
of St. Louis and fly it back and forth overhead.
Melody puts her hands on her hips and rolls her eyes. “Yes,
all those things, Jeffrey, but in this instance, what I meant was I hate to see
you wasting your talent writing this garbage. You’re the best writer I’ve ever
edited. You deserved that Pulitzer.”
“Which they took back twenty-seven days later.”
“Most journalists would kill to have one for even
twenty-seven days.”
Melody said that with a smile. She says most everything with
a smile. It’s a pretty smile, but sometimes forced, as if she were trying to
make herself happier than she feels. She’s the opposite of Sherwood, who
wallows in gloom and wants to pull everyone down with him.
I say, “You always see the best in every situation.”
“Thanks.”
“It drives me batshit.”
Melody raps her knuckles on my desk. “I need the copy by two
o’clock.” She raps her knuckles on the top of my head. “At the latest.”
I watch her go. I shouldn’t tease her the way I do. Melody’s
not the hard-ass editor she pretends to be. She’s in fact a softy, smart and
thoughtful. Also curvy.
Hiram says, “That young lady has a fine carriage.”
“I hadn’t noticed,” I say and pick up my typing where I left
off:
Space lizards have the ability to slow down fast balls, strip the spin from curves and send knuckleballs off in…
Hiram says, “‘slow down fast balls’ is flabby and clumsy because ‘slow’ and ‘fast’ interfere with each other.”
“Un huh.” I keep on typing.
“Clementine’s coming to visit.”
“Oh?”
“She’s worried about Ebenezer.”
I look up from my keyboard. “What is it this time?”
“He’s missing.”
“Grandpa Ebenezer is always missing,” I say.
“Clementine thinks he’s in trouble.”
I delete ‘slow down fast balls’ and type ‘retard fast balls.
“How can Ebenezer be in trouble? He’s dead.”
“I don’t like that word—and now you’re the one in trouble.”
I look up to see Uncle Sid coming toward me. Two burly guys
walk with him, one on each side, clutching his arms.
My uncle looks scared. I hate to see that. I love the guy.
“Jeff,” he says with a quiver, “these two gentlemen want a
word with you.”
I’ve watched enough local news to recognize the Ramsey
twins—Hank and Freddie. Not gentlemen. Mobsters.
I get to my feet, pull Sid free from the pair’s grasp and
wrap my arm around his shoulders. They’re trembling. “What in hell do you two
want?
Hank steps closer and blows his cigar breath in my face. He
has big ears and black hair combed straight back. At six feet three, he stands
eye-to-eye with me, but he’s half again as wide. He says, “Did you write that
idiotic story?”
“Which idiotic story? I write lots of idiotic stories.”
Freddie says, “Asshole!” and steps forward.
Hank reaches out to hold him back. “Easy.”
Although the two were born identical, no one has trouble
telling them apart because Freddie had the front half of his nose lobbed off in
a knife fight. This gives him a piggy look.
Hank says, “You know what I’m talking about, wiseass. Who
told you about that government prison for space monsters?”
“Who? No one. I made it up.”
“You made it up?”
“I make up everything I write.”
Hank tilts his head back and half closes his eyes. “You made
the story up?”
“Isn’t that what I just said?”
Hank pokes me in the chest. “Then how come it’s true?”
SCORPIO Oct. 23 – Nov. 21
He hovers in the doorway at the far end of the newsroom, his feet not touching the floor. When he spots me, he glides forward, trailing diaphanous versions of himself that become smaller and smaller until they disappear. He wears leather chaps, an oversized black cowboy hat and high-heeled boots that almost bring him up to five feet. He has leathery skin and a drooping gray mustache.
Although local sportswriters puzzle over the inconsistencies of Red Sox hurlers, the shocking truth is that—
“That’s crap, Jeff.”
Late last night, a sharp-eyed Boston Red Sox guard spotted a pack of green, three-eyed space monsters in Fenway Park. Authorities believe them to be the aliens who escaped from the secret government prison first brought to the public’s attention in last week’s Boston Tattler. The guard reported seeing the creatures scrambling up the wall that Red Sox fans have lovingly dubbed ‘The Green Monster.’
Green monsters attracted to a green wall? A coincidence? Unlikely. In fact, experts on the subject of aliens from outer…
“This little piggy—”
Space lizards have the ability to slow down fast balls, strip the spin from curves and send knuckleballs off in…
Hiram says, “‘slow down fast balls’ is flabby and clumsy because ‘slow’ and ‘fast’ interfere with each other.”
Author Bio:
David Gardner grew up on a Wisconsin dairy farm, served in
Army Special Forces and earned a Ph.D. in French from the University of
Wisconsin. He has taught college, worked as a reporter and sold women’s shoes.
He coauthored three programming books for Prentice Hall, wrote dozens of travel articles as well as too many mind-numbing computer manuals before happily turning to fiction.
He lives in Massachusetts with his wife, Nancy, also a writer. He hikes, bikes, messes with astrophotography and plays the keyboard with no discernible talent whatsoever.
Catch Up With David Gardener:
DavidGardnerAuthor.com
Goodreads
Instagram - @davidagardner07
Twitter - @dgardner_author
Facebook - @david.gardner.33483
Thanks so much for the review! Sound like a fun read (I love Boston!).
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