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GHOST FLIGHT by Eva Asprakis

GHOST FLIGHT

by Eva Asprakis

Pub Date: May 6th, 2025
ISBN: 9781036918910
Publisher: Self

Asprakis’ novel follows four intertwined 20-somethings in 2004 Cyprus.

After seven years abroad in London, Aristos returns to Cyprus with his new girlfriend, Wendy. Soon they are settling in, living in an apartment owned by Aristos’ father and connecting with the childhood friend group that Aristos left behind. His best friends, Petros and Melina, are recently engaged, and his former girlfriend, Agathi, does not seem to be entirely over him. The story begins with a tight focus on Aristos but soon expands as the narrative alternates between the perspectives of the major characters (aside from Agathi). Giving each character their own attention and weight, Asprakis fills in their complicated backstories and shows how their pasts have shaped their present. Melina must decide whether or not she really loves Petros and if their engagement is something she will see through all the way to marriage. Wendy, as the outsider, serves as a reader surrogate as she experiences Cyprus, detailing her experiences on the island with the fresh eyes of a newcomer. Like the other characters, she is also confronting issues from her past—in her case, a less-then-ideal stint in art school. As she reflects at an evening church service, “People are beaming and linking arms, not one of them lonely. Not one of them free. So many times in her young life, Wendy has feared that art would not work out—and then what would she do?” Interspersed throughout the story are historical details about Greece (and Cyprus in particular), including references to the 1974 Greek takeover of Cyprus and the Turkish invasion. Every so often, the narrative is interrupted by Accident Investigation reports for airplane crashes, leading to the deadliest airplane crash in Cyprus history. Readers unfamiliar with this particular incident may find the reports jarring, disconnected as they are from anything else in the story. Still, the dark cloud they generate has its intended effect, even if readers do not know what’s coming.

A sharp and well-observed portrait of lives at the crossroads.