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The Ghost Orchid: A Novel Kindle Edition
For more than one hundred years, creative souls have traveled to Upstate New York to work under the captivating spell of the Bosco estate. Cradled in silence, inspired by the rough beauty of overgrown gardens and crumbling statuary, these chosen few fashion masterworks–and have cemented Bosco’s reputation as a premier artists’ colony. This season, five talented artists-in-residence find themselves drawn to the history of Bosco, from the extensive network of fountains that were once its centerpiece but have long since run dry to the story of its enigmatic founder, Aurora Latham, and the series of tragic events that occurred more than a century ago.
Ellis Brooks, a first-time novelist, has come to Bosco to write a book based on Aurora and the infamous summer of 1893, when wealthy, powerful Milo Latham brought the notorious medium Corinth Blackwell to the estate to help his wife contact three of the couple’s children, lost the winter before in a diphtheria epidemic. But when a séance turned deadly, Corinth and her alleged accomplice, Tom Quinn, disappeared, taking with them the Lathams’ only surviving child.
The more time she spends at Bosco, the more Ellis becomes convinced that there is an even darker, more sinister end to the story. And she’s not alone: biographer Bethesda Graham uncovers stunning revelations about Milo and Corinth; landscape architect David Fox discovers a series of hidden tunnels underneath the gardens; poet Zalman Bronsky hears the long-dry fountain’s waters beckoning him; and novelist Nat Loomis feels something lingering just out of reach.
After a bizarre series of accidents befalls them, the group cannot deny the connections between the long ago and now, the living and the dead . . . as Ellis realizes that the tangled truth may ensnare them all in its cool embrace.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBallantine Books
- Publication dateJanuary 31, 2006
- File size1.4 MB
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
The Lake of Dead Languages
“A wonderfully eerie sense of place . . . deeply atmospheric.”
–Los Angeles Times Book Review
“Like Donna Tartt’s A Secret History or a good film noir . . . [This book will] keep readers hooked.”
–People(Page-turner of the week)
The Seduction of Water
“Truly a seductive reading experience . . . grabs the reader on the first page and holds on for the entire journey.”
–The Denver Post
“Like the best mysteries, The Seduction of Water offers puzzles and twists galore but still tells a human story.”
–The Boston Globe
The Drowning Tree
“Deftly plotted and certainly intriguing . . . infused with the sinister aura of its setting . . . The Drowning Tree has its twists and shudders.”
–New York Daily News
“[A] captivating literary mystery of secrets old and new.”
–Publishers Weekly
From the Hardcover edition.
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
I came to Bosco for the quiet.
That’s what it’s famous for.
The silence reigns each day between the hours of nine and five by order of a hundred-year-old decree made by a woman who lies dead beneath the rosebushes—a silence guarded by four hundred acres of wind sifting through white pines with a sound like a mother saying hush. The silence stretches into the still, warm afternoon until it melts into the darkest part of the garden where spiders spin their tunnel-shaped webs in the box-hedge maze. Just before dusk the wind, released from the pines, blows into the dry pipes of the marble fountain, swirls into the grotto, and creeps up the hill, into the gap- ing mouths of the satyrs, caressing the breasts of the sphinxes, snaking up the central fountain allée, and onto the terrace, where it exhales its resin- and copper-tinged breath onto the glasses and crystal decanters laid out on the balustrade.
Even when we come down to drinks on the terrace there’s always a moment, while the ice settles in the silver bowls and we brush the yellow pine needles off the rattan chairs, when it seems the silence will never be broken. When it seems that the silence might continue to accumulate—like the golden pine needles that pad the paths through the box-hedge maze and the crumbling marble steps and choke the mouths of the satyrs and fill the pipes of the fountain— and finally be too deep to disturb.
Then someone laughs and clinks his glass against another’s, and says . . .
“Cheers. Here’s to Aurora Latham and Bosco.”
“Here, here,” we all chime into the evening, sending the echoes of our voices rolling down the terraced lawn like brightly colored croquet balls from some long-ago lawn party.
“God, I’ve never gotten so much work done,” Bethesda Graham says, as if testing the air’s capacity to hold a longer sentence or two.
We all look at her with envy. Or maybe it’s only me, not only because I didn’t get any work done today, but because everything about Bethesda bespeaks confidence, from her slim elegant biographies and barbed critical reviews to her sleek cap of shiny black hair with bangs that just graze her perfectly arched eyebrows—which are arched now at Nat Loomis, as if the two of them were sharing some secret, unspoken joke—and set off her milk-white skin and delicate bone structure. Even Bethesda’s size—she can’t be more than four nine—is intimidating, as if everything superfluous had been refined down to its essential core. Or maybe it’s just that at five nine I loom over her and my hair, unmanageable at the best of times, has been steadily swelling in the moist Bosco air and acquired red highlights from the copper pipes. I feel like an angry Valkyrie next to her.
“Magic,” says Zalman Bronsky, the poet, sipping his Campari and soda. “A dream. Perfection.” He releases his words as if they were birds he’s been cupping in his hands throughout the day.
“I got shit-all done,” complains Nat Loomis, the novelist. The famous novelist. I’d had to stop myself from gasping aloud when I recognized him on my first day at Bosco—and who wouldn’t recognize that profile, the jawline only slightly weaker than his jacket photos suggest, the trademark square glasses, the hazel eyes that morph from blue to green depending (he once said in an interview) on his mood, the tousled hair and sardonic grin. Along with the rest of the world (or at least the world of MFA writing programs and bookish Manhattan), I had read his first novel ten years ago and fallen in love—with it, with its young, tough, but vulnerable protagonist, and with the author himself. And along with the rest of that little world I’d been immersed in these last ten years, I couldn’t help wondering where his second novel was. Surely, though, the fact that he’s here is a favorable sign that it’s only a matter of time before the long-awaited second novel is born out of the incubator of silence that is Bosco.
“It’s too quiet,” Nat says, now taking a sip of the single-malt scotch that the director, Diana Tate, sets out each night in a cut-glass decanter.
David Fox, a landscape architect who I’ve heard is writing a report on the gardens for the Garden Conservancy, holds up a Waterford tumbler of the stuff, the gold liquor catching a last ray of light as the sun impales itself on the tips of the pines at the western edge of the estate, and proposes a toast, “To Aurora Latham’s Sacro Bosco—a sacred wood indeed.”
“Is that what the name means?” asks one of the painters who’ve just joined us on the terrace. “I thought it was a funny name for an artists’ colony—isn’t it some kind of chocolate milk housewives made in the fifties?”
The other artists, who are just now straggling in from their out- lying studios and cabins like laborers returning from the fields, laugh at their cohort’s joke and grouse that the writers, as usual, have taken all the good chairs, leaving them the cold stone balustrade. One can’t help but notice that there’s a class system here at Bosco. The writers, who stay in the mansion, play the role of landed gentry. Nat Loomis and Bethesda Graham somehow manage to make their identical outfits of black jeans and white T-shirts look like some kind of arcane English hunting wardrobe. Even unassuming Zalman Bronsky, in his rumpled linen trousers and yellowed, uncuffed, and untucked dress shirt, looks like the eccentric uncle in a Chekhov play.
“She named it after the Sacro Bosco garden in Bomarzo—near Rome,” I say, my first spoken words of the day. I’m surprised my vocal cords still work, but, after all, my book—my first novel—is set here at Bosco, which is why I know that the estate isn’t named for a bed- time beverage. I address my remarks to David Fox, though, because the other writers, especially Bethesda Graham and Nat Loomis, still scare me.
Just remember, the director told me on the first day, never call Nat Nathaniel, or Bethesda Beth. I smiled at that evidence of vanity on their parts, but then I remembered that I’d been quick enough to modify my own name to Ellis when I published my first story. After all, who would take seriously a writer called Ellie?
“She saw it on one of the trips she and Milo Latham took to Italy,” I add, “and was inspired to create her own version of an Italian Renaissance garden here on the banks of the Hudson.”
We all look south toward where the Hudson should be, but the towering pines obscure the view. Instead we are looking down on crumbling marble terraces and broken statuary—statues of the Muses, whose shoulders are mantled with the gold dust of decaying pine needles and whose faces (at least on the statues who still have their heads) are cloaked in shadow and green moss. The hedges and shrubbery—once clipped and ordered—have overgrown their neat geometry and now sprawl in an untidy thicket across the hill. The fountain allée, with its satyrs and sphinxes who once spouted water from their mouths and breasts, leads to a statue of a horse poised on the edge of the hill as if it were about to leap into the dark, overgrown boxwood maze—Aurora Latham’s giardino segreto—at the bottom of the hill. Somewhere at the center of the maze is a fountain, but the hedges have grown too high to see it now.
“Actually, the garden’s closer in design to the Villa d’Este at Tivoli,” Bethesda Graham murmurs, sipping her mineral water. “The idea of all these fountains and the springs running down the hill into a grotto and then out to the main fountain and from there to the river and finally to the sea . . . Aurora wrote in her Italian journal that she wanted to create a garden that was the wellspring of a fountain like the sacred spring on Mount Parnassus.” Bethesda pronounces Aurora’s name as if she were a contemporary who’d only moments ago quit the terrace. Of course, I remember, she’s writing a biography of Aurora Latham. Bethesda’s the expert here.
“The whole hill is a fountain,” David Fox says. “One might even say the entire estate. Pumps draw the water up from the spring at the bottom of the hill and then pipes funnel the water down the hill though a hundred channels. On a night like this we would have heard the water cascading down the terraces like a thousand voices.”
Zalman Bronsky murmurs something. I lean forward to ask him to repeat himself, but then the words, half heard and still lingering in Bosco’s perfect silence, sound clearly in my head.
“ ‘The eloquence of water fills this hill,’ ” I repeat. “How lovely. It’s iambic pentameter, isn’t it?”
The poet looks startled, but then he smiles and takes out of his jacket a piece of paper that has been folded in quarters and begins to write down the line. When he sees it’s too dark to, he gets up to go inside. The artists have already gone inside for dinner, their manual labors having given them keener appetites.
“What happened to the fountains?” I ask David Fox, but it’s Bethesda who answers.
“The spring dried up,” she says, taking another careful sip from her glass.
“Not a particularly good omen for those who’ve come to drink at the wellspring of the Muses,” Nat says, downing the last of his scotch. “We might as well go inside for dinner.” He looks in...
From AudioFile
Product details
- ASIN : B000FCKNRS
- Publisher : Ballantine Books
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : January 31, 2006
- Language : English
- File size : 1.4 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 368 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-0345490902
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #805,956 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #3,995 in Mystery, Thriller & Suspense Literary Fiction
- #4,812 in Ghost Mysteries
- #6,680 in Contemporary Literary Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Carol Goodman is the author of twenty-three novels, including The Widow’s House and The Night Visitor, which won the 2018 and 2020 Mary Higgins Clark Award. Her books have been translated into sixteen languages. She lives in the Hudson Valley with her family and teaches literature and writing at The New School and SUNY New Paltz.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers enjoy this novel's compelling mystery with parallel stories and relatable characters. Moreover, the book features mythological elements, with one customer highlighting Native American references, and another noting statues of Greek figures. Additionally, customers praise the writing quality, with one describing how the author draws readers into their poetic style, while another appreciates the beautiful cover design. The book receives positive feedback for its readability, pacing, and creative approach.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers enjoy the novel's compelling mystery and fascinating narrative, featuring parallel stories that incorporate elements of mythology and intrigue.
"...The author's vivid description fits the late-19th century setting and provides the atmosphere without distracting the reader...." Read more
"I love Carol Goodman's peculiar style of snooty but accessible fiction...." Read more
"...I gave this book three stars because though I thought her story a very good one, I did have to occasionally stop and be certain I was correctly..." Read more
"I loved this book! It is replete with mythology and mystery. The author has a way of writing that draws you into her streaming flow of poetry...." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, finding them relatable, with one customer noting the author's ability to weave characters and plots together effectively.
"...Characters are either overeducated or just creative and brilliant, and they are all articulate to a point that impresses but still seems believable...." Read more
"...The parallels between the past characters and current characters wavers back and forth, flowing gently in and out of dream state...." Read more
"...An eerie atmosphere is compellingly built up with complex, conflicted characters, and luminous prose." Read more
"...The characters are multi-dementional and easy to believe. Even the main characters are not without their flaws." Read more
Customers find the book readable, with one mentioning that the first part was engaging.
"...book stumbles a bit at the end, then, but as a whole it is still well worth a read." Read more
"...very early in your reading of this book that she's clearly a very well read and well educated author who enjoys her research as much as her writing...." Read more
"I loved this book! It is replete with mythology and mystery. The author has a way of writing that draws you into her streaming flow of poetry...." Read more
"...Still, the first part of the book was engaging...." Read more
Customers find the book enjoyable to read, with one mentioning the fun themes and another noting the intriguing concept.
"...past and present, especially in this rich physical setting, is fascinating until the last fifty pages or so...." Read more
"...An eerie occult atmosphere is built up to an exciting denouement. The plot has many exciting twists and turns...." Read more
"...The concept is intriguing and keep the reader guessing. The story includes much of the supernatural told in a believable manner...." Read more
"...Having read many of her books, it's fun to recognize themes that unfold throughout her books. I'm hooked on her writing." Read more
Customers appreciate the creativity of the book, with one noting its refreshing style and another praising its beautiful cover.
"...As a minor point, the cover is one of the most beautiful I've seen, I may look for the photo to purchase...." Read more
"...Characters are either overeducated or just creative and brilliant, and they are all articulate to a point that impresses but still seems believable...." Read more
"...book wasn't one of my favorites, but Carol Goodman's style is always refreshing and intriguing...." Read more
Customers appreciate the mythology in the book, with one mentioning Native American references and another noting statues of Greek figures.
"...hedge mazes and secret passages and fountains and statues of figures from Greek mythology..." Read more
"...could be left to the reader's imagination, and there were so many mythological references, possibly too many.... All clearly written with the best..." Read more
"...cultural themes, in this case Italian garden design and Native American mythology. (Trust me, though it sounds random, the combo works.)..." Read more
Customers appreciate the pacing of the book, with one describing it as well crafted and another noting it arrives in perfect condition.
"...The book is brand new and in perfect condition." Read more
"...atmospheric of settings and her descriptive abilities are rare and impressive. I mean really impressive...." Read more
"Well crafted..." Read more
Customers praise the author's writing style, with one noting how it draws readers into the narrative's poetic flow.
"...mythological references, possibly too many.... All clearly written with the best of intention to give grounding and substance to the characters and..." Read more
"...It is replete with mythology and mystery. The author has a way of writing that draws you into her streaming flow of poetry...." Read more
"Carol Goodman, the author, is a very fine writer and this book is a great example of her suspenseful style. You will be glued to this book as was I!..." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on August 27, 2006Good night! Ms. Goodman has a triumph here. A real good old-fashioned leave-the-bathroom-light-on all nighter of a ghost story. The author's vivid description fits the late-19th century setting and provides the atmosphere without distracting the reader. The two simultaneous plots, one running in 1893 and one in the present, intertwine perfectly. Fans of Jodi Picoult's Second Glance and Sarah Blake's Grange House and Beth Gutcheon's More than You Know are going to love this one. And the action keeps right on rolling. Carol Goodman must have had an out-of-body experience, because the ones that she describes Corinth Blackwell having are one hundred percent accurate. This is going to be one of my top books of the year. Ms. Goodman's husband, who wrote the poetry for the character of Zalman, did a great job as well. As a minor point, the cover is one of the most beautiful I've seen, I may look for the photo to purchase. If you liked The Lake of Dead Languages, you've seen nothing at all until you've seen this story!
- Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2010I love Carol Goodman's peculiar style of snooty but accessible fiction. I started with the Drowning Tree, where there's a murder at a pretentious women's college and the protagonist's knowledge of Greek mythology and 19th century stained glass techniques are the only way to save the day. In this, Goodman's next book, the characteristics I loved are still there. The setting is a fever dream of a liberal arts major, as chapters alternate between 1893 and the present day at a luxurious mansion with hedge mazes and secret passages and fountains and statues of figures from Greek mythology (not just the big names, either: Muses and queens and minor gods abound). Characters are either overeducated or just creative and brilliant, and they are all articulate to a point that impresses but still seems believable. In a few meta scenes, some of the more serious authors deride genre novels like historical romances and supernatural thrillers, and I can't tell if Goodman identifies more with the critics or the victims of their criticism. Overall, in this book, Goodman shows again and again that she loves her craft and her education, and that she's probably smarter than you, but she has the goods to back it up and lead me to buy more of her work.
As far as the content of the novel goes, the interplay between past and present, especially in this rich physical setting, is fascinating until the last fifty pages or so. Goodman has a masterful pace, dropping subtle clues here and there to give the reader a sense of what secrets were buried in 1893, but after a while, the clues become unnecessary, and the reader just follows along as the characters catch up. At that point, the supernatural aspects take over, and while Goodman never loses the reader's interest, the climax is still a bit anticlimactic after the meticulously planned mysteries that preceded it. The book stumbles a bit at the end, then, but as a whole it is still well worth a read.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2008This was my first experience with Ms. Goodman's writing and I have to begin by saying that you'll recognize very early in your reading of this book that she's clearly a very well read and well educated author who enjoys her research as much as her writing. A Two-Fer for a reader who appreciates this extra effort made on the reader's behalf. Goodman has taken great pains to construct the most atmospheric of settings and her descriptive abilities are rare and impressive. I mean really impressive. I gave this book three stars because though I thought her story a very good one, I did have to occasionally stop and be certain I was correctly making the past to present connections between the characters.I realize the intention was to establish a very vital continuity and build tension, but every time I had to pull myself out of the storyline to fact check myself,(and believe me you will need to do this too) I was irritated. I was also often reminded of Henry James and The Turn of the Screw, and King's The Shining. Goodman herself mentions her fondness for these two writers. More than anything else though,I couldn't help but think of Julie Harris and Claire Bloom's performances in The Haunting, the 1963 film of Shirley Jackson's book The Haunting of Hill House. Claire (Theo) with ESP and an agenda of her own and Julie Harris as Eleanor, looking for a life of her own who slowly surrenders and finally becomes a part of the house itself. A well recognized classic because there was no need for the obvious murder, blood or roving midnight maniac. Watch this film, first to see Harris' memorable performance and then read The Ghost Orchid. Remarkable similarities between the film's house and this book's garden! I believe you'll appreciate even more Ms. Goodman's obvious talents.
Goodman provided such vivid descriptions that very little could be left to the reader's imagination, and there were so many mythological references, possibly too many.... All clearly written with the best of intention to give grounding and substance to the characters and their setting. Really though, in my opinion, nothing is so horrifying as the unseen, the unsaid, and the slow unfolding of truths and terrors that characters hide even from themselves, when eventually revealed. In the end, I felt as though I'd been fed such a rich variety of morsels in plot twists, and turns, and in clues and minute detail throughout the book that the ending couldn't help but leave me with the feeling that it was overblown or at the very least that I had been overindulged. Over the top. All dots connected and loose ends tied. Not sure I really needed to be that satisfied, especially when some loose ends,unexplained happenings or unanswered questions allow for an afterglow of disturbance that makes supernatural thrillers so enjoyable. I'll certainly be back for more though and will look forward to reading Carol Goodman's other books. She is a very talented writer to be sure!
- Reviewed in the United States on July 17, 2011I loved this book! It is replete with mythology and mystery. The author has a way of writing that draws you into her streaming flow of poetry. The parallels between the past characters and current characters wavers back and forth, flowing gently in and out of dream state. I couldn't wait to read it and hated when it was finished. Good stories like this are hard to find.
There is one thing I would have liked,and that is a better description of the gardens which are the setting for the story, or a picture or map in the front of the book. I like to follow the characters as the story unfolds from place to place. I am always analysing whether this or that is possible and I don't feel that the author adequately described the logistics of the setting.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 24, 2022Great to receive the book at the beginning of the delivery window rather than having to wait longer. The book is brand new and in perfect condition.
Top reviews from other countries
Jan ErlamReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 29, 20205.0 out of 5 stars Great Mystery, Great Story
My first ever Carol Goodman book and I loved it. A story told in two time lines, Bosco is now an artists retreat but has age old secrets. Ellis is writing a book that relates to a séance held many years ago at the strange house. The séance ended in tragedy and the house has some very deep secrets, Ellis tries to unravel the past along with her fellow artists. What did happen to the medium who hosted the séance and the remaining child who lived at Bosco? Three children already dead. I loved the mystery of this novel and will read more by this author.
Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 14, 20114.0 out of 5 stars great read!
Just finished this book- initially i found it hard to get into, but stuck with it. Glad I did actually, as once i did i couldnt put the book down! Its the first i have read by this author, and i was impressed enough to order another of hers! she is descriptive in such a way that you actually feel the atmosphere and emotion. I liked this book because its something a bit different from the usual chick-lit types of books which seem to be around in abundance. im not adverse to stories involving women/love/relationmships etc, as long as they have that 'extra' something, which is different, and thought provoking. This book has it!! i loved the way the book went from the past to the present and vice- versa. Stick with this book- snuggle down next to the fire and enjoy! A good winter read.
Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 22, 20113.0 out of 5 stars Not bad
I nearly didn't make it through the first two chapters of this book, because the language and style just kept screaming "Mills & Boon". The cliches were piled on thick and fast. Shoulders were "creamy", profiles "Grecian", and the dialogue written for an Italian character, was just classic "Ello, Ello" style (every sentence punctuated with "how you say").
I didn't have anything else to read however, so I did persevere. I'm glad I did, because the style improved, and the plot was quite well put together. It's a moderately good ghost story, fairly engaging, and okay for a light undemanding bit of entertainment.
Kindle CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on July 26, 20103.0 out of 5 stars The Ghost Orchid
Found this book to be slow going at first but it soon picked up. A very atmospheric and chilling tale.
Brett HReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 5, 20152.0 out of 5 stars Not Up To Carol Goodman's Usual Standard
I have read most of Carol Goodman's books and really enjoy her style of writing. The stories are not fast moving, but the narrative is normally beautifully crafted and typically fascinating as echoes of the past brush with the present, generally with supernatural overtones.
Hence The Ghost Orchid was a surprising disappointment. Set in the present day, the Bosco Estate is a sanctuary for creative writers. Ellis (female) is writing a book on the strange events which occurred on the estate in 1893 which included deaths and the unexplained disappearance of Alice, the child of the house. Gradually these events come to dominate the present day as their secrets are revealed amidst a crescendo of spooky happenings.
I think that less is usually more with ghost stories and it is best to leave most to the imagination of the reader. Here the converse rather proves the point. It does not help that after a slow start, the central revelation is fairly clearly telegraphed by the middle of the book. I would rate the book as being at least 100 pages too long as the story, and indeed the reader, are submerged under a welter of revelations, hauntings and improbable coincidences.
Overextending books and having too much going on are often mistakes of novice authors so with three successful books under her belt it is really surprising that Goodman fell into these traps. She remains one of my favorite authors, but had The Ghost Orchid been the first of her works I had read it would likely have also been the last.





