Ghostwritten
Written by Ronald Malfi
Narrated by Joe Hempel
4/5
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About this audiobook
BOOKS CAN BE DEADLY
In The Skin of Her Teeth, a cursed novel drives people to their deaths.
A delivery job turns deadly in The Dark Brothers' Last Ride.
In This Book Belongs to Olo, a lonely child has dangerous control over an usual pop-up book.
A choose-your-own adventure game spirals into an uncanny reality in The Story.
Full of creepy suspense, these collected novellas are perfect for fans of Paul Tremblay, Stephen King, and Joe Hill.
Ronald Malfi
Ronald Malfi is the award-winning author of several horror novels, including the bestseller Come with Me. He is the recipient of two Independent Publisher Book Awards, the Beverly Hills Book Award, the Vincent Preis Horror Award, the Benjamin Franklin Award, and his novel Floating Staircase was a finalist for the Bram Stoker Award. He lives in Maryland, US.
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73 ratings5 reviews
What our readers think
Readers find this title a mixed bag, with some novellas maintaining suspense till the end while others lose steam in the middle. Overall, it's worth a read for fans of the author, though some may find it disappointing compared to his other works.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5
Nov 6, 2023
After being such a HUGE Malfi fan.....this was just a big disappointment. With the 3rd of the 4 novella's only being a 2.5 star rating.....I would say 'Skip It'. Read his 'Little Girls' for a MUCH better read. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Nov 6, 2023
Four novellas centered around books and stories. I found them to be a mixed bag, two of them are very well done and the suspence is maintained to the end. The other two are good but lose steam in the middle. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Jun 23, 2025
A collection of four novellas by Ronald Malfi. Each of these stories were pretty solid. I've found some of Malfi's works to be slow moving but these all had perfect pacing. I was pleasantly pleased with the collection. Not that I was expecting bad, but each story was hitting the right points and creeping me out when they were supposed to. Mentally I was telling the characters to leave it alone and don't touch and run. The final story in the collection, "The Story", was a perfect end to the book.
"The Skin of Her Teeth" - A book wants to stay untouched.
"The Dark Brothers' Last Ride" - Brothers takes a hidden path across the United States to deliver a book.
"This Book Belongs to Olo" - A story that is reminiscent of Twilight Zone's "It's a Good Life" but at the same time, not really. This one has less power and less awareness of what he's doing.
"The Story" - My favorite of the bunch. The choose-your-own-adventure aspect resonated with me. Then it was gritty and creepy in all the right spots. It just hit all those right marks internally. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Nov 7, 2023
So I actually finished this Thursday, but finally posting about it. 4 novellas, connected together in some odd ways, written to perfection. Such a fun read. Malfi keeps getting better every time I read his work! Mr. Malfi has the ability to become the next Mr. King. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Mar 24, 2023
My exploration of Ronald Malfi’s works continues with this collection of four short stories that are loosely linked to each other through the mention of an element present in the previous one and also through the common denominator of books, since all four of them revolve around a book in some way.
THE SKIN OF HER TEETH focuses on the frantic attempts of book agent Gloria to bring to completion a movie script adapted from a successful novel. Not having heard any news from the writer, McElroy, she decides to visit him in his remote retreat and here she finds the man well beyond the verge of madness because he’s convinced that the original book possesses an evil will of its own and does not want any of its narrative details to be changed. With the deadline looming ever closer, Gloria decides to take the matter into her own hands, only to discover that probably McElroy was not crazy at all….
Cursed books are nothing new in fiction, but The Skin of her Teeth (the fictional book that gives this story its title) is something quite different, and the way it manages to assert its own will is both creepy and intriguing, although I have to admit that I was even more appalled by Gloria’s attitude toward any obstacle on her path and the way she manipulates people with little or no though about their feelings, particularly where her life partner is concerned.
For me the true horror in this story did not come from the “things that go bump in the night”, although there is a good measure of that in here, but rather from the callous way in which Gloria goes about in life practically steamrolling over other people - and here I have to admit that I would not have minded seeing her getting her just deserts….
THE DARK BROTHERS’ LAST RIDE was a weird, almost psychedelic experience: it tells the story of Danny and Tommy Drake, petty criminals who are hired to deliver a rare, precious book to a mysterious client in a remote location, following a precise - if circuitous - itinerary. The warning they receive about not opening the briefcase containing the book, ever, does not agree with Tommy, the more volatile of the two, so that when he finally gives in to the temptation things start going from bad to worse for the two of them, transforming the trip into something of a journey to hell.
Where the strange, freaky places visited and events witnessed by the two brothers are the “meat” of this story, its backbone is represented by the exploration of Danny and Tommy’s personalities and of their shared past, which also includes a drug-crazed, abusive father who still looms like a specter just out of the corner of the eye. The relationship between them is not an easy one, what with Tommy always being on a short fuse and often compromising their “jobs”, and with Danny who does care for his wayward brother but still feels like his weight is dragging him down. There is a poignant quality in this relationship that at times feels more important than the actual task at hand and the oh-so-outlandish discoveries the brothers make on the journey.
THIS BOOK BELONGS TO OLO focuses on the creepiest kid I even encountered on my bookish travels: Bartholomew (“Olo”) Tiptree is a 10-year old child clearly suffering from the neglect of his super-busy parents and left to fend for himself in the vastnes of Helix House. When he approaches other kids at a nearby park inviting them to his birthday party, we understand immediately that something is terribly wrong with Olo and with the strange “book” he put together himself. It’s therefore surprising to see a good number of these children accepting the invitation, and the atmosphere becomes all the more disturbing thanks to the strange mannequins adorning Olo’s lawn and the news about the recent disappearance of his at-home teacher. What happens during the birthday party, however, takes on the shades of a veritable nightmare.
I must confess I struggled with my feelings about Olo’s character because if on one side I could sympathize for his loneliness and the detached way his parents interacted with him, on the other his actions are those of a consummated psychopath who turned his loneliness into a form of self-centered absorption that left me thoroughly chilled - not to mention claustrophobic: read the story and you will understand why…
THE STORY does not focus on an actual book like its predecessors, but rather on the concept of storytelling - although in a unique way. Taking inspiration from the famous “choose your adventure” games it takes main character Grady into a spiral of disorientation and madness as his life seems to unravel before his very eyes. An unexpected call informs Grady that his friend Taryn took her own life: trying to understand what happened to her to bring her to such an extreme act, Grady discovers her involvement into The Story, a sort of real-life game where the players’ choices impact the reality of their existence; determined to understand what happened during Taryn’s last days, Grady enters the game as well (or rather, the Story finds him…) with unpredictable results.
It’s impossible to say more about this story without incurring in spoilers, but it’s one of the mind mind-bending tales I happened to read, one where you end up questioning the fabric of reality and the worth of personal choices - provided that such a thing exists… ;-)
Another demonstration of Ronald Malfi’s creative skills, this collection is an incredible journey through the fantastic and the scary, blended with some intriguing human elements. To be sure, not the last of my forays into this author’s production.
