KN Magazine: Reviews

Ghost Tamer

By Meredith R. Lyons
Review by James L’Etoile


Ghost Tamer
Meredith Lyons

CamCat Books
$27.99
978-0744302790
September 19, 2023

BUY HERE

*Killer Nashville is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. If you purchase a book from the links on this page, Amazon will give Killer Nashville a small percentage of the total sale. Killer Nashville receives zero compensation from publishers who have been selected for the Book of the Day.

Imagine living your best life when everything you know turns upside down and inside out. That’s exactly what happens in Meredith Lyon’s Ghost Tamer. Raely survives of a horrendous commuter train crash , in fact she’s the only one who made it out alive. She’s guided out of the wreckage by a stranger—a stranger she soon learns no one else can see but her. He’s a ghost.

Her spirit, who Raely snarkily names Casper, has been following her for as long as he can remember. Raely only became aware of him after her injuries in the train accident and she’s not at all comfortable with a ghost watching her every move. She soon learns there is another shadow world where ghosts and spirits exist, and she shouldn’t be able to see and interact with them. She questions her sanity and what this new ability means for her. Raely comes to understand she’s actually interacting with ghosts, and some of them aren’t benevolent spirits.

Interacting with ghosts draws the wrong kind of attention from the demon world and now she finds herself on the run. It’s a battle for her life and her soul.

You wouldn’t guess this is Lyon’s debut novel. She has a gift for dialogue, and these characters are well-defined. You immediately care what happens to Raely as she wanders down this paranormal path. The story will keep you glued to the pages and the ending will surprise the reader.

Meredith has agreed to give us a little behind the scenes of Ghost Tamer:

  • Why did you choose to write a story about a snarky protagonist who sees ghosts after her accident?

Honestly, I’m not sure the decision was that well thought out. I had nothing to write and had a nightmare about a train accident and decided to write the nightmare. As far as Raely, I wrote her to say all the things I wish I had the courage to say to people, whether they’re appropriate or not. And banter is fun to write! 

  • Ghosts? You believe they exist?

I’m open to arguments either way, but I do believe I saw a ghost once. When I was very young, I would occasionally wake up to find a girl walking up and down by the foot of my bed talking. In my half sleep state, I never questioned this and just listened, but if I ever tried to comment on anything she said, she would turn, look at me, then vanish. I would go back to sleep. Never thought of it in the morning. Then one night I woke up and she was standing right at my bedside, not at the foot, right beside me. She was looking down at me with a huge smile on her face and she said, “Goodbye!” I asked, “Where ya going?” But she just kept smiling as she faded away. After that I remembered all the other times and never saw her again. Wherever she was off to, I could tell it was someplace she was really delighted about.

  • As a debut novelist, what’s the biggest surprise you encountered in the process?

The rampant insecurity! You'd think that once you cross that milestone from being a writer to an author, you’d attain some new level of confidence, but I'm still floored when someone tells me they loved my book. Which, in a way, is a great feeling, to be genuinely surprised and thrilled every time. I still have to work past a fear of ‘bothering’other authors I know when I ask something, like for a blurb. I force myself to do it, because rationally I know it’s what you do, but it’s like fighting through a beaded curtain of anxiety every time. It’s a lot of fun too, don’t get me wrong, I love going to conferences and events as an actual author, but I still feel like I have a hill to climb. I mean, it’s just one book. I’m not sure when that goes away. Does it go away? 

  • Raely is a fresh, new character with a balance of smarts and snark. What were the influences in creating her character?

First of all, thank you. Raely and I are both blushing. I basically looked at my younger self and made her cooler. And also, much more damaged. I used a lot of my experience in Chicago theatre to build her comedy background and my own experience with loss and crutch behavior to inform what Raely is going through and how she self-destructs. Then I just threw her into a place where she had a ghost following her around and watched what she did! She and Casper wrote themselves.  

  • What’s next for you?

Anxiety spike! I don’t know! I release in September, which is exciting, and I’m trying to line things up for the release event and line events up after that. I’m also on submission with two different books. One to agents, one direct to publishers, which is what I did with Ghost Tamer. Don’t worry, I have spreadsheets for both. And I’m working on the sequel for Ghost Tamer, it’s going slow with everything else that’s happening, but I had so many early readers ask when the sequel was coming out, I was surprised. So, I thought I’d get started and see how it goes. 


Meredith grew up in New Orleans, collecting two degrees from Louisiana State University before running away to Chicago to be an actor. Between plays, she got her black belt and taught martial arts and yoga. She fought in the Chicago Golden Gloves, ran the Chicago Marathon, and competed in the Savate World Championships in Paris. Although she did each of these things twice, she couldn’t stay warm and relocated to Nashville. She owns several swords, but saves all swashbuckling for the page, gardening, visiting coffee shops, and cuddling with her husband and panther-sized cats.

Meredith Lyons’ debut novel is paranormal joyride with well-developed characters you want to care about, and a story about family, heartbreak, and redemption.  You can’t help but wonder after reading Ghost Tamer—are we really alone? I hope we see that sequel soon as Lyons crafted a sizzling pager turner. Highly recommended! I’d give this one 5 Ghosts!

Amazon  Barnes & Noble  Bookshop

Read More

The Ninja’s Oath

By Tori Eldridge
Review by James L’Etoile


The Ninja’s Oath
Tori Eldridge

Agora Books
$27.99
978-1957957319
September 12, 2023

BUY HERE

*Killer Nashville is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. If you purchase a book from the links on this page, Amazon will give Killer Nashville a small percentage of the total sale. Killer Nashville receives zero compensation from publishers who have been selected for the Book of the Day.

In The Ninja’s Oath, the fourth installment of Tori Eldridge’s Lily Wong series, our favorite ninja finds herself enmeshed in international intrigue, warring gang factions, and family secrets. Lily receives an urgent message to help find a missing girl in the rural countryside outside of Shanghai. It becomes more than Lily can handle alone.

Lily’s longtime family friend and former Triad enforcer asks for her help to locate and rescue his kidnapped twelve-year-old niece. The search becomes more complicated by long-standing family feuds and traditions.

Their mission is complicated by a feud between brothers, old resentments, and intrigues entwined with the stunning history of the city itself. Lily gets tangled in a web of Triad violence and finds herself aided by an all too familiar assassin. Pushed to her limits, she faces insurmountable odds and worries about her father’s failing health.

As the story unfolds secrets are revealed about the identity of her ninja teacher—known only as Sensei—and the truth behind why he left Japan. The Ninja’s Oath is the best in this series, and the characters will draw you into a world few will ever experience. Adrenaline-fueled action and a richly drawn plot will make you keep turning pages late into the night. Family, secrets, and fighting against the odds, you best never count Lily out.

Lily’s creator, Tori Eldridge has agreed to talk with us about Lily and the popular series.

Lily is such a great, multi-faceted character. Where did you come up with the idea for a kick-ass protagonist like her?

Lily appeared to me while writing a short story with a ninja twist at the end. I realized immediately that I had written the origin scene for a kick-ass heroine who honors her murdered sister by dedicating her life and martial arts skills to protecting and rescuing women and children from violence. To make Lily Wong as authentic and multi-faceted as possible, I drew from my own Chinese-Norwegian heritage and my experience as a fifth-degree black belt in To-Shin Do ninja martial arts.

The Ninja’s Oath story revolves around Lee Chang and his family, whose history is entwined into the history of Shanghai. How did you go about your research? What came first: the characters, setting, or plot?

Ever since I visited our son and his future Hongkonger wife in Shanghai, I knew I would take Lily to that city, involving her father’s Shanghainese cook. For this reason, I wrote Lee Chang into The Ninja Betrayed (book three) to help Lily with the Triads in Hong Kong. During that process, I established his surprising Hong Kong birth and former enforcer position with the Shanghai Black Scorpion Society.

In order to find the story for The Ninja’s Oath, I researched Shanghai’s history and invented a genealogy for Lee Chang that entwined around the pivotal historical events from the late 1800s to present day that would also overlap with triads and Hong Kong. Since I was fascinated by the renovated apartment my son had rented in a classic shikumen house in the Former French Concession, I made it one of Lee’s rental properties in the FFC and wove his family’s story around a more rustic shikumen house in Old Shanghai. The story emerged from there.

Fun fact: My granddaughter was born in Shanghai!

The Ninja’s Oath is the fourth book in the Lily Wong series. Did you have any specific goals in mind to make this new adventure exciting and fresh? Do readers need to read the previous books?

Since all four books take place within a four-month window of time, I wanted The Ninja’s Oath to act as an exciting conclusion to the set. I brought back J Tran, the enigmatic assassin from The Ninja Daughter (book one), who haunts Lily in The Ninja’s Blade and makes a surprising appearance in The Ninja Betrayed. He’s one of my (and my readers’) favorite characters. He also has unfinished business with Lily that I wanted to resolve. I also wanted to finally tell Sensei’s story, see him in action, and explore the reason he left Japan. That said, new readers can drop straight into The Ninja’s Oath without missing a beat.

You always make me hungry when I’m reading a Lily story. Why is food such an important part of her life?

You and me both! Since Lily and I share the same passion for awesome food and tea, I’ve written many of our favorites into the books. The Haiwanese Chicken Rice restaurant in Shanghai was one of my favorite places to eat during my trip. Now, I prepare it at home. The “Die Die Must Try” slogan in The Ninja’s Oath scene was written in chalk on their board. I write extensively about the food and tea because it serves as a window into Lily’s culture, family, and friends.

The Lily Wong series balances family drama with action and mystery for the same reason. There is no way to properly understand a Chinese-Norwegian character like Lily who is twenty-five years old and finding her way as an adult without framing her within the context of family and how they impact, guide, and interfere with her life.

Ninjutsu isn’t well known by the public at large, yet both you and your protagonist have trained extensively in this martial art. Can you tell us what goes on in the training to become a black belt in this discipline?

You’re very right. Most people think of ninjas as pajama-clad assassins from Feudal Japan, possibly with magical powers, often portrayed as deadly mercenaries in action movies and thrillers. From my decades of involvement, I have found ninjutsu and To-Shin-Do—the contemporary evolution founded by Stephen K. Hayes and Rumiko Hayes—to be an empowering, comprehensive, and benevolent martial art.

Ninjutsu is exceedingly hard to master because it requires the practitioner to apply the appropriate and most effective technique, strategy, and concepts with specific adversaries in an ever-changing moment. Unlike Tang Soo Do (in which I hold a black belt) or kickboxing and Wushu (which I have studied) where the student masters a set of choreographed kata and/or fighting scenarios they can use in sparing or competitive situations, the ninja arts originated for combat, protection, and survival.

My journey was unique in that I trained partially in a dojo, but mostly under the guidance of my own Mr. Miagi-like sensei. Since I had the luxury of not needing to work and possessed the extensive movement background and focus from a previous career in dance, I advanced very quickly. I traveled several times each year to seminars where I could learn from highly skilled teachers from a variety of schools, lineages, and organizations. I also incorporated esoteric and spiritual practices into my lifelong meditation rituals and daily life. When I attained my Godan level in To-Shin Do, I was invited to many states in the USA to teach.

What’s in store for Lily next?

Look for a Lily Wong crossover story in the upcoming JOE LEDGER: UNBREAKABLE anthology, out November 10.


Tori Eldridge is the bestselling author of THE NINJA’S OATH, book four in the Lily Wong thriller series, twice nominated for the Anthony Award, Lefty and Macavity Awards finalist, and winner of the 2021 Crimson Scribe for Best Book of the Year. Her Brazilian dark fantasy thriller, DANCE AMONG THE FLAMES, was inspired by her Academy Nicholl Fellowship semi-finalist screenplay. Tori’s shorter works appear in numerous anthologies, including CRIME HITS HOME and Weird Tales Magazine. Before writing, Tori performed as an actress, singer, dancer on Broadway, television, film, and earned a 5th-degree black belt in To-Shin Do ninja martial arts. She is of Hawaiian, Chinese, Norwegian descent, born and raised in Honolulu, and resides in Los Angeles. Tori's deep interest in world culture has prompted her to visit nine countries, including Brazil, China, and Japan. Learn more about her at www.torieldridge.com.

Read More

Submit Your Writing to KN Magazine

Want to have your writing included in Killer Nashville Magazine?
Fill out our submission form and upload your writing here: