Lads, this one got me.
Peter Shaughnessy is cursed to see the dead and wander eternally far from home. After two hundred years, he has outlived everyone he's ever loved. He serves the only penance he can: helping unhappy ghosts move on to an afterlife he'll never see. After each haunting, he moves to the next, before he can get to know his neighbors, or worse, get attached. He follows a local legend to a small town in Ohio, where he inserts himself as the cemetery's groundskeeper. But the lingering anger there is stronger and more mysterious than Peter expected. As his work draws out, he grows dangerously close to the town's inhabitants and what haunts each of them.
This is a book about loss and all the tangled emotions that come with it: grief, anger, guilt, defensive fear. It's about how we react, and how we can move on when it feels like the whole world. As such, this book stabs you in the heart multiple times. I DID cry, which is very rare for me!!
Peter is a gruff old Irishman with a knack for plants, enough guilt to kill a mortal man, and an unlikely, sometimes awkward instinct to comfort people. In other words, he's one of the most charming characters I've ever read, and an excellent choice to carry a book. The neighbors he meets along the way are ordinary people with ordinary problems that are nonetheless treated with gravity. They're all delightfully colorful and unique, often stressed but trying to make it through. The ghosts don't speak but have their own personalities. I liked that they felt like remnants, with less and less left of them depending on how long they had lingered. They were a clever way to reveal more about the living characters.
This isn't a fast or action-packed book, as well it shouldn't be. The contemplative pace and small conflicts fit the tone of the story. I enjoy when books with small-town settings are content to settle into the feeling of those places. Everything builds up nicely so that when the book stabs you, you feel it. It explores the loneliness of immortality and the strange homesickness of changing times.
Some conversations could get a little therapy-speak, BUT this is set in the modern day and people are going to therapy. It's far less bothersome than in a fantasy book. The writing was clear, and very fond of its subject. An easy read writing-wise, harder emotionally. Had a great and terrible time. Would recommend.