Mason, a struggling writer, comes in from the cold after five years of drifting. His childhood friend, Chaz, a small-time gangster, loans him an apartment and finds him a job selling hotdogs. But instead of getting his act together, Mason drinks too much, does too many drugs and loses too much money at poker, digging himself even more deeply in debt to Chaz, who also happens to be his drug dealer. Talk about a vicious circle.
Then Mason has a bright idea. He'll find the cash to pay Chaz back by becoming a ghostwriter of suicide notes, a fitting use of his talents. The trouble is that Mason is hard-wired to rescue people, and no one needs rescuing more than the suicidal. Except maybe the woman he is falling in love with - Willy, a wheelchair-bound, heroin-smoking beauty.
What happens when someone already wrestling with his own demons immerses himself in the tragedies of other people's lives? In this case, a lot: a hotdog cart is totalled, a convict sprung, a funeral faked, a head scalped, a horse stolen. Terrible secrets are brought to the light and suicide morphs into murder. Then, just when it looks like Mason is finally going down, he faces the biggest test of all. He'll either become the death-defying hero of his own dreams or lose everything and everybody he's ever loved.
From the Hardcover edition.
Shaughnessy Bishop-Stall's first book was an account of the year he spent in deep cover, living with the homeless in Toronto's infamous Tent City. Down to This: Squalor and Splendour in a Big-City Shantytown was nominated for the 2005 Pearson Writers' Trust of Canada Non-Fiction Prize, the Drainie-Taylor Biography Prize, the Trillium Award and the City of Toronto Book Award. The following year, he was awarded the Knowlton Nash Journalism Fellowship at Massey College and also played the role of Jason - a bad-mannered, well-dressed journalist - on CBC-TV's The Newsroom. He currently teaches writing at the University of Toronto's School of Continuing Studies. Ghosted is his first novel.
Show moreMason, a struggling writer, comes in from the cold after five years of drifting. His childhood friend, Chaz, a small-time gangster, loans him an apartment and finds him a job selling hotdogs. But instead of getting his act together, Mason drinks too much, does too many drugs and loses too much money at poker, digging himself even more deeply in debt to Chaz, who also happens to be his drug dealer. Talk about a vicious circle.
Then Mason has a bright idea. He'll find the cash to pay Chaz back by becoming a ghostwriter of suicide notes, a fitting use of his talents. The trouble is that Mason is hard-wired to rescue people, and no one needs rescuing more than the suicidal. Except maybe the woman he is falling in love with - Willy, a wheelchair-bound, heroin-smoking beauty.
What happens when someone already wrestling with his own demons immerses himself in the tragedies of other people's lives? In this case, a lot: a hotdog cart is totalled, a convict sprung, a funeral faked, a head scalped, a horse stolen. Terrible secrets are brought to the light and suicide morphs into murder. Then, just when it looks like Mason is finally going down, he faces the biggest test of all. He'll either become the death-defying hero of his own dreams or lose everything and everybody he's ever loved.
From the Hardcover edition.
Shaughnessy Bishop-Stall's first book was an account of the year he spent in deep cover, living with the homeless in Toronto's infamous Tent City. Down to This: Squalor and Splendour in a Big-City Shantytown was nominated for the 2005 Pearson Writers' Trust of Canada Non-Fiction Prize, the Drainie-Taylor Biography Prize, the Trillium Award and the City of Toronto Book Award. The following year, he was awarded the Knowlton Nash Journalism Fellowship at Massey College and also played the role of Jason - a bad-mannered, well-dressed journalist - on CBC-TV's The Newsroom. He currently teaches writing at the University of Toronto's School of Continuing Studies. Ghosted is his first novel.
Show moreSHAUGHNESSY BISHOP-STALL is a teacher, actor, author, and Canadian journalist whose work has been published in dozens of magazines. His works include Down to This: Squalor and Splendour in a Big-City Shantytown, Ghosted, and Hungover: The Morning After and One Man's Quest for a Cure. He has been nominated for the Trillium Award, the City of Toronto Book Award, the Pearson Writers' Trust of Canada Non-Fiction Prize, and the Amazon First Novel Award.
"This master of immersion journalism . . . turns his attention to
fiction with this novel about a young man who makes a living
writing suicide notes. Yes please."
—National Post
“Lean and mean and with a surprising amount of heart. Make no
mistake, Ghosted is for real.”
—Ray Robertson, author of David
“Ghosted is not for the faint of heart—in places it’s an
unflinching exploration of depravity. But it is, above all, an
often funny, always optimistic parable of victory over demons of
despair, the ghosts of our failed selves.”
—Linden MacIntyre, Scotiabank Giller Prize–winning author of The
Bishop’s Man
“Bukowski craggy and Hornby sweet, Shaughnessy Bishop-Stall’s
Ghosted is a smart book about smart guys who can’t stop from acting
dumb. The real pleasure, though, is in the lines: funny sad, funny
strange, and funny zing! A hell of a first novel.”
—Andrew Pyper, author of The Killing Circle
“A harrowing and spellbinding tour through the world of addiction
that combines elements of Infinite Jest with Silence of the
Lambs.”
—Don Gillmor, author of Kanata and To the River
“The unique voice heard throughout Ghosted is so heartbreakingly
authentic. . . . A terrifying but moving and life-affirming paean
to love, friendship, devotion, determination and all those other
characteristics that make human beings such wonderfully fascinating
creatures in real life and in richly imagined novels like
Ghosted.”
—Ottawa Citizen
“A savage, heartfelt, exhilarating first novel. . . . Ghosted is,
in a nutshell, a book about a guy who becomes a ghostwriter of
suicide notes. What makes this high-concept premise work is the
book’s a) heart, and b) voice. Which may, in the final analysis, be
one and the same thing.”
—TOROmagazine.com
“Absolutely exhilarating. . . . Bishop-Stall is a major talent. . .
. [He] has an unarguably unique voice, urgent and impossible to
ignore.”
—NOW (Toronto)
“Inventive first novel. . . . Ghosted crackles. . . . Impressive,
ambitious and exhausting, Ghosted is a novel for those who don’t
scare easily.”
—The Globe and Mail
"This master of immersion journalism . . . turns his attention to
fiction with this novel about a young man who makes a living
writing suicide notes. Yes please."
--National Post
"Lean and mean and with a surprising amount of heart. Make no
mistake, Ghosted is for real."
- Ray Robertson, author of David
"Ghosted is not for the faint of heart-in places it's an
unflinching exploration of depravity. But it is, above all, an
often funny, always optimistic parable of victory over demons of
despair, the ghosts of our failed selves."
- Linden MacIntyre, Scotiabank Giller Prize-winning author of
The Bishop's Man
"Bukowski craggy and Hornby sweet, Shaughnessy Bishop-Stall's
Ghosted is a smart book about smart guys who can't stop from
acting dumb. The real pleasure, though, is in the lines: funny sad,
funny strange, and funny zing! A hell of a first novel."
- Andrew Pyper, author of The Killing Circle
"A harrowing and spellbinding tour through the world of addiction
that combines elements of Infinite Jest with Silence of
the Lambs."
- Don Gillmor, author of Kanata
"The unique voice heard throughout Ghosted is so
heartbreakingly authentic. . . . A terrifying but moving and
life-affirming paean to love, friendship, devotion, determination
and all those other characteristics that make human beings such
wonderfully fascinating creatures in real life and in richly
imagined novels like Ghosted."
- Ottawa Citizen
"A savage, heartfelt, exhilarating first novel . . . Ghosted
is, in a nutshell, a book about a guy who becomes a ghostwriter of
suicide notes. What makes this high-concept premise work is the
book's a) heart, and b) voice. Which may, in the final analysis, be
one and the same thing."
- TOROmagazine.com
"Absolutely exhilarating. . . . Bishop-Stall is a major talent. . .
. Bishop-Stall has an unarguably unique voice, urgent and
impossible to ignore."
- NOW (Toronto)
"Inventive first novel. . . . Ghosted crackles. . . .
Impressive, ambitious and exhausting, Ghosted is a novel for
those who don't scare easily."
- Kevin Chong, The Globe and Mail
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