Episode Forty Nine

A ghost with a deadline. A people pleaser with a past. A Christmas Carol framework that dares to ask whether love can rewrite the rules. We dive into Good Spirits by BK Borison and unpack why this holiday romance feels tender, funny, and surprisingly cathartic. From the opening meet-cute to the late-game goodbye that nearly broke us, we trace how the book balances cozy predictability with real emotional stakes, and why that combo is exactly what many of us crave this time of year.

We also explore the book’s sly worldbuilding: an afterlife that runs like a slightly exasperated office, reapers with missing paperwork, and a boss whose accent paints a picture before we get the backstory. Think Beetlejuice bureaucracy meets Spirited’s cheerful existentialism. The panel shares personal reflections on people pleasing, boundary setting, and how Harriet’s growth feels painfully familiar in the best way. Add in a very opinionated cat, on-point spice, and a romance that builds through conversation and care, and you’ve got a seasonal standout.

Beyond the review, we detour through folklore with a lidérc deep dive, gush over special editions in the Grishaverse, and chat about the growing crossover between sports events and book fandoms. We close with recs for holiday retellings and audiobooks with memorable performances, plus our favorite Christmas Carol adaptations that shaped how we read stories like this one.

Good Spirits by B.K. Borison
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Our Thoughts

Our Thoughts on Good Spirits

“There’s comfort in in the lack of surprise. Yeah. There’s enough going on in the world. I really liked the book too.”
“I liked it.  I thought it was a polite book. Kind of like it gave me a lot of like hallmark vibes”
“I knew I liked the idea of a Christmas Carol type story, but I also knew that I didn’t always like the tropes that this author used, so I wasn’t sure what to expect. But I really enjoyed this book.”
“enjoyed it. I thought it was a good book. I think it was, you know, somewhat predictable, but so it was a hallmark movie.”