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Ghost: A Novel by Alan Lightman
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Ghost: A Novel

by Alan Lightman

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I liked this book well enough. I thought it was a fun story about epistemology. A man sees a ghost in a funeral home, and most of the story is a fable about various people's reactions. ( )
  ccavaleri | Nov 12, 2009 |
Maybe 2½ stars if I was in a good mood...but I'm tired. I never got interested in any of the characters; they came across as flat and insipid. The hoopla surrounding "I saw something I can't explain" didn't ring true—it was just too much of a reaction for a relatively minor, and common, event. I finished the story but it was absolutely unmemorable for me and I'm glad it was a library book. ( )
  TadAD | Oct 27, 2009 |
David can see better than most - so well that he always gets the last line on the eye chart and he was the first to spot the school bus coming down the road when he was a kid. So when he saw something in the slumber room at the mortuary where he works, it clearly wasn't a problem with his eyes. If not, though, what was it? Alan Lightman's Ghost is about what happens when David, in trying to get a grip on the experience, confides in a few people and word gets out that he's seen a ghost. What results is an interesting story of life and death and how people resolve the fundamental question of our existence - what happens after we die?

Ghost is partly a commentary on the science vs supernatural debate, and is moderately interesting. It's more interesting when Lightman is concentrating on character. Ghost is populated with fascinating people, deeply realized.

Ghost isn't perfect. The plot meanders pretty widely at the end, and I'm not a fan of present-tense perspective. But it's a quick, thought-provoking read that I'll recommend to friends. ( )
  drneutron | Sep 29, 2009 |
Although I finished the book, I had expected much more than I got.
1 vote ckavich | May 12, 2009 |
This book is beautifully written. The prose reminds me of Ian McEwan and the story flows smoothly from start to finish. The ending leaves many questions unanswered but I prefer that in a book. I don't need the plot to be tied up in a neat little bow. I'd rather contemplate my own ending. ( )
1 vote ees4 | May 1, 2009 |
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This book is dedicated to Vanna, Phally, and the young women residing in the Harpswell Foundation Dormitory for University Women in Phnom Penh
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I saw something.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0375421696, Hardcover)

Alan Lightman’s first novel, Einstein’s Dreams, became an international best seller and was hailed by Salman Rushdie as “at once intellectually provocative and touching and comic and so very beautifully written.” His novel The Diagnosis, called “highly original and imaginative” by the New York Times, was a finalist for the National Book Award. Now comes a stunning and disturbing new novel about a man’s encounter with the unfathomable.

David is a person of modest ambitions who works in a bank, lives in a rooming house, enjoys books and quiet walks by the lake. Three months after unexpectedly being fired from his job, he takes a temporary position at a mortuary. And there, sitting alone in the “slumber room” one afternoon at dusk, he sees something that he cannot comprehend, something that no science can explain, something that will force him to question everything he believes in, including himself. After his metaphysical experience, all his relationships change-—with his estranged wife, his girlfriend, his mother--and he grudgingly finds himself at the center of a bitter public controversy over the existence of the supernatural. As David struggles to understand what has happened to him, we embark on a provocative exploration of the delicate divide between the physical world and the spiritual world, between skepticism and faith, between the natural and the supernatural, and between science and religion.

Combining a dramatic story with compelling characters and provocative ideas, Ghost investigates timeless questions that continue to challenge contemporary society.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:10 -0400)

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