Telling the Story That Haunts You

November 12, 2020 | By | 1 Reply More

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Telling the Story That Haunts You

I told my first ghost story in the fall of 2015 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, at the annual Women’s Fiction Writers Association Retreat. I was embarrassed at first, because the truth was, I believed it. I really did. 

I heard them. 

I saw them.

At a writing workshop run by Kimberly Brock, award-winning author and founder of Tinderbox Workshops, I told my table of fellow writers about the chilling weeks and months after a plane crashed on my residential corner in New York City. 

Unable to sleep in my own bed, I slept for weeks on my living room sofa, where I was wakened night after night by the sound of Spanish-speaking guests entering the room, running up and down the steps of my home, seemingly trying to wake me. The 260 passengers on the plane who died outside my front door had been headed to the Dominican Republic, many of them natives or relatives of natives of the Spanish-speaking country. One night, my then husband called out to me from our bedroom – “Are you ok? Why are you running up and down the stairs?” 

Ah, I thought. So they are visiting him too.

That the ghosts of the passengers of Flight 587 continued to visit me after the crash was only mildly unsettling. That I was alive and they were not? Much more so. 

I had been home, alone, at the time of the crash. I was supposed to be miles away in my Times Square law office that morning, but I had taken the day off, and so I was standing at my window only a few yards from where the plane went down at the moment of impact. 

In Albuquerque, fourteen years later, Kimberly talked to us about using our ghost stories to inspire – to unlock – the stories within us. My story had been locked inside for over a decade. The story of living for a long time in between. Of trying to honor what had happened without drowning in survivor’s guilt. After the crash, I was – by all accounts – just like my home – unscathed. I returned to life as “normal.” My scars were hidden and silent. Even if the ghosts were not. 

But by the day Kimberly Brock encouraged us all to tell our ghost stories out loud, I had my own story – a new novel – nearly ready for the world. A story I was petrified to share as it was in fact a ghost story – one that arose from all the loss and love and life I experienced that day of the plane crash – November 12, 2001 – and during the months and years afterward.  I became a first-time mother 2 years after the plane crash; two more babies arrived in rapid succession over the next few years. I struggled against the fears that threatened to drown me – as I continued to raise children with a tattered heart that had survived both 9/11 and the tragic residential plane crash just 2 months afterward. When I left my corporate litigation career in 2010, and poured all of my dreams into a risky writing career, I worried about my legacy to my children.  

I shared none of my fears with anyone. I kept my worries as secret as my ghosts. Until that day in Kimberly Brock’s workshop. When I told my first ghost story out loud. 

And I realized that day. 

It was time. Time to finally tell the story that haunted me. 

The story of survival. And of hope.

Shortly after that writing workshop with Kimberly Brock, I finished the grueling editing process with my developmental editor, Caroline Leavitt (With or Without You) and my agent sent my second fiction manuscript – Secrets of Worry Dolls – out on submission in early 2016. I was joyful by the quick and enthusiastic response of Wyatt-Mackenzie Publishing who bought it and scheduled it for immediate publication in December 2016.

It is, indeed, a fictional tale of loss and redemption, but for me, it has always been the tale whispered to me by the ghosts who visited me after the plane crash on November 12, 2001, on my quiet Belle Harbor, New York corner. 

Secrets of Worry Dolls is my own way of honoring both the victims of that day. 

And the survivors.

Xo

Amy

P.S. Do you have a ghost story to share? I’d love to hear it.

Amy Impellizzeri is a reformed corporate litigator, former start-up executive, and award-winning author of fiction and non-fiction. Amy’s latest novel, I KNOW HOW THIS ENDS, released March 2020 and Foreword Reviews says “its density evokes Dickens” while BookTrib calls it “Perfect for fans of THIS IS US.” Amy is a Tall Poppy Writer, a past President of the Women’s Fiction Writer’s Association, a 2018 Writer-In-Residence at Ms-JD.org, recipient of Ms. JD’s Road Less Traveled Award, faculty member in Drexel University’s MFA in Creative Writing Program, and a frequently invited speaker at legal conferences and writing workshops across the country. Connect with Amy at www.amyimpellizzeri.com.

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SECRETS OF WORRY DOLLS

According to Mayan tradition, if you whisper your troubles to the Worry Dolls, they will do the worrying instead of you—therefore, it follows that Worry Dolls are the keepers of a great many secrets . . . On the eve of the end of the world—according to the Mayan calendar—Mari Guarez Roselli’s secrets are being unraveled by her daughter, Lu. Lu’s worry dolls are at-capacity as she tries to outrun the ghosts from her past—including loved ones stolen on 9/11—by traveling through her mother’s homeland of Guatemala, to discover the painful reasons behind her own dysfunctional childhood, and why she must trust in the magic of the legend.

“A truly original book – told with grace and style.”-Sarah Pekkanen, Co-Author of the instant NYT Best-seller, The Wife Between Us

“[A] story of redemption and rebirth in the midst of loss. Author Impellizzeri creates a haunting story of the past that can bind and the courage to break free.”-Booklist

“Secrets of Worry Dolls finds its way to an earned ending true to its characters, and to the world events that exact influence on them. Impellizzeri does well with the small details that make her characters feel like real people.
This is a strong and memorable work of fiction.”
-Foreword Reviews

“Complex layers … fast-paced … A novel of grief, love, and truth.”
-Kirkus Reviews

“Spanning decades and continents, Secrets of Worry Dolls is a heartbreaking story about the ripple effect of our choices and the sometimes tragic consequence of survival. Mari and Lu will capture your imagination and your heart, and with Impellizzeri’s signature magical touch, keep you flipping pages well into the night.”-Kate Moretti, New York Times best-selling author of The Vanishing Year

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Category: Contemporary Women Writers, On Writing

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  1. Amy, you are made of sterner stuff than I am. After reading about your horde of stair-climbing ghosts, I had to read this sentence a few times to believe it: “That the ghosts of the passengers of Flight 587 continued to visit us after the crash was only mildly unsettling.”

    Bully for you, and I admire the sentiments of the context you put it in, but … holy crap!

    I have never seen a ghost, knock wood, but if I’m remembering this right, my grandfather saw or heard or somehow sensed his eldest son appearing to him while my grandfather was at sea as a Merchant Marine during WWII. Richard had just died after being liberated from a POW camp in Germany and it would take some time for the official news to make it them, but my grandfather said he already knew he was dead.

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