On the surface a classic reluctant hero tale with some witchery and ghouls, Ghost Days quickly becomes more than that--a love letter to the Appalachians and the various peoples that made their homes there. The stories are tied together by a timeline and main hero, but tonally and thematically they flow together in a way that makes you forget they're actually separate tales. The sheer amount of research and care behind each bit of folklore, each set piece, each character is incredibly impressive--Ghost Days is a collection of stories that clearly took work, but combine into seemingly effortless prose and a captivating tale.
Anna O'Brien herself is one of my favorite fictional leads: equal parts terrified, determined, curious, exasperated, tragic, naive, and (there's no other word for it) cool. The ghouls range from enigmatic and ominous to fairly horrifying (Night on the Bald in particular will haunt my dreams for a while, I think), and the magic and witchery feels real and grounded, unfamiliar and yet like a natural part of the setting.
Asher Elbein's skillful storytelling sucks you into the world of ghosts and ghouls and Tiffany Turrill brings it dramatically to life with stunning and haunting illustrations. Combined, they create stories that promise to stick in the imagination for years to come.