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After Life (Nancy Pearl's Book Lust Rediscoveries) [Kindle Edition]

Rhian Ellis , Nancy Pearl
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (98 customer reviews)

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Book Lust Rediscoveries
Nancy Pearl's Book Lust Rediscoveries series
Book Lust Rediscoveries is devoted to reprinting some of the best (and now out of print) novels originally published between 1960-2000. Each book is personally selected by librarian Nancy Pearl and includes an introduction and discussion questions. Browse more novels in Nancy Pearl's Book Lust Rediscoveries series.

Book Description

Naomi Ash was born in New Orleans and raised by her mother, Patsy, a medium who schooled her young daughter in the parlor-trick chicanery of the trade. From Naomi recreating presences with table cloths to providing the voice of the dead by talking through a fan, their act is part theater, part magic, and a little too much playing with the letter of the law. Eventually they must beat a hasty—and forced—retreat from New Orleans, relocating to Train Line, New York.

A sleepy village founded and inhabited by others with a spiritualist bent, Train Line is populated with card readers, table levitators, and crystal-shop owners. Low-rent “Psychic Faires” are held at the local Holiday Inn, and Patsy’s newest creation, “The Mother Galina Psychic Hour,” is on the local radio station. The town is a curious mix between old school “table rappers” and the New Age, and it is here that Naomi comes of age, learns the trade, and falls in love. But love is not only a many splendored thing—it can be dangerous as well. And for a young woman caught between fraud and truth, between the world of the living and the world of the dead, and between the secrets and lies of her youth, the past and present will come together in a rush of truth and consequence.

Hailed as “a study of eccentricities, which rises above the merely quirky to address those issues of life, death, memory, and love that preoccupy us all,” After Life is a stunning first novel of extraordinary suspense and evocative imagery.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

After Life begins with Naomi Ash dragging her boyfriend's dead body down the stairs. Unpleasant, surely, but not, in a culture as numb to violence as ours, especially shocking. The nasty surprise is that we feel every ounce of skinny Peter Morton's weight, that we worry along with Naomi whether the hole she digs to bury him is big enough: "Once when I was a child I tried burying a dead cat in a hole not big enough for it, and I still cannot forget pushing down on it to make it fit, pressing its head with my trowel. Its ears filled horribly with dirt." That last detail is our signal that we have entered a world every bit as visceral as our own, and possibly every bit as mad. Despite the corpse that lies hidden for the first part of the book, After Life is not a whodunit, not even a "whydunit," but some other beast entirely: a tense exploration of the ties between faith, will, and fakery--and between this world and the next.

For Naomi Ash is a medium, and the daughter of a medium, who lives in a town founded and populated entirely by other mediums. From the beginning, she's been privy to all the tricks of her trade. Growing up in New Orleans, she helped her spiritualist mother by faking spirit voices through fans and, in one case, draping herself in a lace tablecloth as the ghost of a dead child. But what begins in fraud, she tells us, has ended "in something at least close to truthfulness":

I, for one, couldn't always disentangle the real from the fraudulent, the truth from its trappings. Sometimes it seemed as if my mother's fakery was just a more interesting and beautiful version of what was real. Sometimes it seemed that the truth needed the lies, as if there wouldn't be any truth without them. At any rate, whatever my mother was doing, it was a rare and powerful thing, perhaps even a form of magic. It enthralled me.
After their move to Train Line, New York, a fairy tale Victorian village run slightly to seed, Naomi and her mother settle into working Psychic Faires and message services. Then Naomi meets Peter Morton, a graduate student on vacation, and falls in love; 10 years later, she's still paying the price.

First-time novelist Ellis produces lovely prose: "A lonely life is a crime without witnesses, it is a movie playing in a locked theater; can you ever really be sure what happens in it? Can you be sure that it happens at all?" At the same time, this author's writing can be willfully unglamorous: her characters have dirty hair and clothes with stains on them, and their world smells like ours, like fried things and wet earth and dirty lake water. In its mix of the mundane and the magical, After Life gets at some fundamental truths about the dead and those they leave behind. You don't have to believe in the spirit world to understand Naomi's final insight as a medium--or to know just how much it hurts: "He would never be completely gone, but he would never, ever be with me." --Greta Kline

From Publishers Weekly

The opening line of Ellis's debut novel, a psychological thriller, engages the reader like tossing a pork chop to a hungry dog: "First, I had to get his body into the boat." The intrigue is anchored and the suspense heightened by recurring themes of mysticism and the supernatural, centered on a complex, finely drawn mother and daughter relationship. Naomi Ash and her mother, Patsy (aka Madame Galina Ash), flee their hometown of New Orleans after Patsy's s éances cause some trouble with the police. They move to Train Line, N.Y., home to America's largest community of mediums and spiritualists, where Patsy hosts a radio show, The Mother Galina Psychic Hour. Patsy's psychic powers are only partly phony, and both she and Naomi give accurate psychic readings to clients. But while the mother often fakes it, Naomi is honestly searching for her true spiritual gifts, trying to determine whether she really has the power to contact the dead. The story alternates between present and past, revealing how Naomi met and fell in love with a graduate student from Oregon, Peter Morton. Details of his death come to light slowly as, 10 years later, in the present, his bones have been found. A police investigation closes in on Naomi, who has done all the wrong things, keeping Peter's personal effects, for instance. The story ends with a spooky calm rather than a bang, Ellis choosing an evocative, poetic and thoughtful denouement to an action-packed showdown. An excellent storyteller, this new author exhibits a gift for subtlety and suggestive understatement even when dealing with such potentially gaudy themes as clairvoyance, necromancy and murder. 5-city author tour. (July)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • File Size: 743 KB
  • Print Length: 306 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: B000H2M4IC
  • Publisher: AmazonEncore; Reprint edition (June 5, 2012)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B006VFZSBO
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #32,891 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

This is one of the best written books I've read in a long while. a reader  |  16 reviewers made a similar statement
I didn't like the main character. Suzanne Petti  |  11 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
56 of 60 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Loved This Book! August 5, 2000
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
As a long-time avid reader, I have read many books but this is the first time I have felt compelled to comment. Ms. Ellis' book is totally captivating. Her main character, Naomi Ash, is so likeable that even though you know from the beginning "whodunit" you keep hoping that the "why" she did it will still enable her to live happily ever after. But as with real life, there isn't always a happily-ever-after for everyone...not during life; maybe not After Life. Ms. Ellis created a setting so picturesque that it made me want to find "Trainline", NY. Surprisingly, I found she did not draw the town from imagination, but from memory. It exists, still, in 2000 and is as amazing as she describes. The town in the novel and the town in Western NY are both places that once visited will never be forgotten.
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41 of 43 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A twist to the mystery tale August 29, 2000
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
This book is about a woman, Naomi Ash, who happened to start life in New Orleans, but her mother, a spiritualist, moves them up to Train Line, NY, a home to a community of spiritualists. And ten years ago, Naomi killed her boyfriend. The day before Labor Day, a construction crew found him.

I ordered this book after I read a review of it in the local paper that included the first line of the book, "First I had to get his body into the boat." I thought, "That's it- I've gotta get this book." I'm not a big mystery reader kinda person, but this was obviously a psychological mystery- Whose body? Why a boat? Did YOU kill him? How'd he die? You slowly learn all the answers to those questions, with the "WHY did he die?" question being answered last. I can't really recall ever reading a book with this approach and it very much intrigued me.

The title "After Life" is really great- Naomi can truly (or maybe truly- she doesn't ever seem to be totally confident) see the spirits of those who have passed on, and even the spirit belonging to the body headed to the boat eventually comes to her. She is dealing with Life After death and not just any death- the death of her boyfriend, a death that we suspect she is responsible for, and she is coping with the responsibility and fear that is associated with the potential of his being discovered (and then, maybe, HER being discovered for his death) and it is a very interesting struggle.

Ellis' ways of describing the world around you is also unique- The mother of the main character Naomi says, "Two people never love each other at the same time. One loves, and the other is in love with being loved. The fun is in guessing which one's you." Or another example- Naomi's first experience with snow, described as follows: "The air smelled different, like water in a tin bucket, and crows flapped in circles over our heads. When I spoke, my voice fell straight out of my mouth, completely swallowed up by snow."

The community of spiritualists is unique, but to me they just seemed like any small town with their own culture and rhythms- only instead of being poultry farmers (like my hometown), they happen to speak to the dead. This is not a criticism- I liked the fact that these people were so real and not romanticized and so matter-of-fact.

The reason for the death at first was (to me) a little disappointing- I thought, "that's IT? " However, the more I think about it, the more I get WHY that's what HAD to happen, and frankly, it just makes Naomi more and more realistic and understandable, and the more of a message there is in the book- again, particularly with regard to the title. You keep seeing how something like that COULD happen.

This is a good book, but it is not a beach book- you will get into it and really think about what you are reading(although I guess you could fly through it, but I think you'd maybe miss the thoughts that it provokes). If you want to read a book to vege out to and be brainless, this ain't it. I definitely recommend this book for it's unique approach to language and to a mystery plot.

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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Terrific writing, plot needed work June 20, 2012
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
According to the somewhat effusive introduction by Nancy Pearl, After Life was first published in 2000. The novel takes place in the fictional small town of Train Line, New York - patterned after the real-life Lily Dale, a town dedicated to the spiritual world and populated by mediums. Naomi Ash has grown up with a medium, and is one herself, although she often feels like a fraud.

After Life is by turns a character study, love story, and sort-of mystery. I found it to be very well-written, but the plot isn't very compelling. Not much happens in Train Line, and Naomi isn't the most interesting of heroines (it isn't easy to make a poorly socialized misfit into a compelling character, although I've seen it done quite well elsewhere). The solution of the mystery (and the situation that opens the novel) is a letdown. Ms. Pearl talks about the relationship between Naomi and her mother Galina as being an important part of the book, but I found Naomi's connection to the child she babysits, Vivian, more interesting. Some of the scenes of seances and readings by the mediums are very good, and Naomi's relationship with her boyfriend Peter is well depicted and believable.

This is the kind of book I wanted to like a lot more than I actually liked. For me, the author is a better descriptive writer than she is a storyteller, which isn't uncommon. I would recommend the book as an example of a fine stylist, and to those with an interest in spiritualism.

On a side note - if you find yourself interested in Lily Dale after reading this book, check out the excellent documentary about it that aired on HBO last year.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars An interesting look at a Lilydale-like community
I have mixed feelings about this book. The author writes well and has a good eye and ear, but when it comes right down to it, Naomi Ash is not someone I can like. Read more
Published 21 days ago by Wanderer
2.0 out of 5 stars Strange
Could never really get into this story and I read it to the end - hoping it would tie together somehow.
Published 27 days ago by Cactus Lil
1.0 out of 5 stars A waste of time
I can't believe I stayed with it till the end. I don't really know why. It was a waste of my time. I'm learning I need to stick with the older author's McCullough, Price,Michener. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Ruth Parkman
3.0 out of 5 stars It's fine
Not the greatest mystery of all time, but it was enjoyable. Great for a rainy afternoon (you can finish the whole thing in a few hours).
Published 1 month ago by Rubylocks
3.0 out of 5 stars A good read....nothing special though
A decent book. Easy read. I mainly kept reading it just to see if anything interesting would happen at the end. Nothing really did.

It was just so-so....kinda slow
Published 2 months ago by booklover
4.0 out of 5 stars Haunting (no pun intended) story
I just love it when I finish a book, and the people and place stay with me long after. The setting for this book brings a whole community of characters to life. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Julie S. Parker
2.0 out of 5 stars Dragging Through Misery
I could not relate to the main character. Written in first person compounded the issue. Because there were frequent little places where I admired the author's talent, I kept... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Unenthused
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting Story
An easy to read, engaging story with a lot of information about spiritualism. It's worth your time to read this.
Published 2 months ago by Shiloh
1.0 out of 5 stars Did not read.
I did not read this book. I borrowed it in error. I am new in Kindle and need to learn to navigate.
Published 3 months ago by Donna Rosselli
3.0 out of 5 stars Compelling story
I really enjoyed this read, it definitely had some unique elements to it and elements of it definitely stayed with me after I had finished. Read more
Published 3 months ago by C. Cooley
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