Tuesday 8 September 2020

Blog Tour: The Reckless Afterlife of Harriet Stoker: Lauren James shares her best ghost characters in fiction




I am absolutely thrilled to have author Lauren James on the blog today sharing her best ghost characters in fiction. Lauren has written some of my favourite books ever including The Loneliest Girl in the Universe and the Quiet at the End of the World. Her imagination and storytelling blows me away every time. Her latest book is The Reckless Afterlife of Harriet Stoker which I am half way through and I know so many readers are going to love. In honor of the book, read on for Lauren's ranking of the best ghost characters in fiction. I agree with so many of these.



A definitive ranking of ghosts in fiction



In my new novel The Reckless Afterlife of Harriet Stoker, my main character dies in the first chapter and becomes a ghost. She immediately meets a whole society of ghosts, who all have different powers. Harriet is determined to become the most powerful of all.

My ghosts have magical powers, based on their personality and heritage. These powers can be anything from shape-shifting and hypnotism to clothing manipulation, so some are more useful than others. Harriet finds out exactly which powers are best when she struggles to defeat the other ghosts.

I love ghosts as a trope because they’re so unpredictable - there are no rules in how to write them, and every story does something different. There are thousands of cultural myths about ghosts from all around the world, so writers can draw on many sources of inspiration in creating unique ghosts. The hardest part for me was picking which ideas I couldn’t use.

I wanted to share some of my favourite ghosts in fiction, and rank them to see who would win if they had to face off against my villainous Harriet in a battle for power.

Casper (1995)

Casper (1995) - simonprior.com
 
I must have watched this film over a hundred times when I was little. Casper is a bit of wuss in this film, more interested in romance than battling other ghosts. He has some pretty decent powers – he can touch objects, shape-shift and fly - but he mainly uses those powers to flirt and tie shoelaces together. Harriet would probably beat him (sorry, Casper!).

Likelihood Harriet could beat him in a fight: 8/10


Annie from Being Human (2008)

Annie Sawyer | Being Human Wiki | Fandom
 
This TV series featured a vampire, werewolf and ghost living as housemates. It was a huge inspiration for my novel, which started out being called Ghost House, because it’s about ghost housemates. In the series, Annie is a young, insecure murder victim who is very protective of her living friends.
Annie can teleport (!), touch objects and read minds, but only in heightened states of emotion. In the show, she has defeated other ghosts and closed the door to death – she isn’t to be messed with.

Likelihood Harriet could beat her in a fight: 2/10


Noah from The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater

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This contemporary YA series features a group of friends searching for the burial site of a Welsh King – while also driving around in cool cars and flirting a lot. One of the Raven gang is Noah, the ghost of their dead classmate. He is very mild and shy, with a ‘smudgy’ appearance. He tends to disappear if people aren’t paying attention to him - though, disconcertingly, he does re-enact his own death occasionally.

I love Noah immensely – he’s a very endearing character - but Harriet would absolutely destroy him. Sorry, pal.

Likelihood Harriet could beat him in a fight: 9/10


Betelgeuse in Beetlejuice (1988)

Happy 25th Birthday, Beetlejuice! 11 reasons we still love it
 
In this classic cult film, a pair of newlywed ghosts hire a freelance ‘bio-exorcist’ ghost to chase the living people who have moved into their house, so they can have some peace and quiet.
Chaotic and crude, Betelgeuse has a whole host of powers, which he mainly uses to harass the living. He can fly and shapeshift, teleport and summon objects, possess people and influence their minds. He can also be summoned (or removed) by saying his name three times, which seems as if it could be strategically useful in a battle scenario. He’s also just really mean – I don’t think Harriet stands a chance; he’d probably make her cry within seconds.

Likelihood Harriet could beat him in a fight: 0/10


Makepeace in A Skinful of Shadows by Frances Hardinge

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In this historical YA novel, Makepeace is a living teenage girl who has a group of ghosts living in her head – one of whom is a bear. Angry and vicious, she has to control her own emotions as well as the animalistic desires of the ghosts possessing her. I think Harriet would have a hard time defeating her, as the ghosts in Makepeace’s head have amassed centuries-worth of wisdom. But Makepeace is still human, which makes her vulnerable.

Likelihood Harriet could beat her in a fight: 5/10


The Skull in a Jar in Lockwood & Co. by Jonathan Stroud

 

The skull in this paranormal action YA series is possessed by a ‘type 3’ ghost, who is witty, murderous and – occasionally – helpful to a group of teenage ghosthunters. While stuck inside the jar, it can’t do much except be rude, but when unleashed it can create spirit-wind stronger than an explosion.

Likelihood Harriet could beat it in a fight: 4/10


The gang in BBC Ghosts
 
Filming underway on Ghosts Series 2 - News - British Comedy Guide
This silly comedy series about a group of ghosts from different eras living in an old dilapidated mansion is so much fun – especially because all the ghosts are utterly inept and foolish. They’re more interested in bickering than fighting, and Harriet would probably be too disdainful to even engage them in battle.

Likelihood Harriet could beat them in a fight: 8.5/10


The Nadja doll in What We Do in the Shadows

Chosen One of the Day: Ghost Doll Nadja in What We Do in the Shadows
 
In this mockumentary, the group of ancient vampire housemates get to meet their own ghosts, since they technically ‘died’ the moment they were turned into vamps. The 700-year-old badass Nadja keeps her ghost around for company, possessing a doll. These ghosts can release projectile (?) ectoplasm (?) vomit (?) which is kind of icky, but not definitively dangerous. I’m also not clear on the strength of their ghost-on-ghost powers. Harriet probably stands a good chance here, I’d say.

Likelihood Harriet could beat her in a fight: 6/10


A huge thank you to Lauren to sharing her favourite fiction ghosts and the likelihood Harriet would beat them.

The Reckless Afterlife of Harriet Stoker is out now


Lauren James is the twice Carnegie-nominated British author of many Young Adult novels, including The Loneliest Girl in the Universe and The Quiet at the End of the World. She is also a Creative Writing lecturer, freelance editor and screenwriter.

Her books have sold over a hundred thousand copies worldwide, been translated into five languages and shortlisted for the YA Book Prize and STEAM Children’s Book Award.
Her other novels include The Next Together series, the dyslexia-friendly novella series The Watchmaker and the Duke and serialised online novel An Unauthorised Fan Treatise. Her upcoming release is The Reckless Afterlife of Harriet Stoker.

She was born in 1992, and has a Masters degree from the University of Nottingham, UK, where she studied Chemistry and Physics. Lauren is a passionate advocate of STEM further education, and all of her books feature female scientists in prominent roles. She sold the rights to her first novel when she was 21, whilst she was still at university.

Her writing has been described as ‘gripping romantic sci-fi’ by the Wall Street Journal and ‘a strange, witty, compulsively unpredictable read which blows most of its new YA-suspense brethren out of the water’ by Entertainment Weekly. The Last Beginning was named one of the best LGBT-inclusive works for young adults by the Independent.

Lauren lives in the West Midlands and is an Arts Council grant recipient.  She has written articles for numerous publications, including the Guardian, Buzzfeed, Den of Geek, The Toast, and the Children’s Writers and Artist’s Yearbook 2021. She teaches creative writing for Coventry University, WriteMentor, and Writing West Midlands, providing creative writing courses to children through the Spark Young Writers programme.





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