If Alaska fell in love with a zombie and even introduced him to her parents, why then wouldn't Mrs. Muir have her romance with the typical ghost of an uninhabited house?
Everything is a matter of time and form. The moment is waiting to take you even to the fourth dimension without orgasms through or perhaps also with them. Who knows? Because when it comes to love, the only clear thing is that philias, phobias, telekinesis or body possessions can all be caused by the same thing, the need to find that other half here or there. Someone to sit with and watch life (or death) go by When there's nothing better to do A romance novel In the strangest way that could be.
Synopsis
Lucy Muir is a young widow whom everyone considers "very little" despite the fact that she considers herself a very determined woman. Burdened with debt after the death of her husband, she decides to move to Gull Cottage, a small house located in a picturesque English seaside town called Whitecliff.
According to rumors that circulate in the area, the house is haunted, and the spirit of the attractive and surly Captain Daniel Gregg, former owner of the house, roams the place pestering all who dare to disturb his rest. Immune to warnings, Lucy considers finding out for herself if these stories are true. The bizarre yet extremely tender relationship she establishes with Captain Gregg will become a haven for her and a love that defies all laws of logic.
Published in 1945, and the germ of the famous film by Joseph L. Mankiewicz, The Ghost and Mrs. Muir is a delicious and refreshing romantic comedy about the ability of love to break any frontier not only in life, but also beyond is.
You can now buy the novel "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir", by RA Dick, here: