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The Afterlife of Holly Chase Kindle Edition
Before I Fall meets “bah, humbug” in this contemporary YA reimagining of A Christmas Carol from New York Times bestselling author Cynthia Hand.
On Christmas Eve five years ago, seventeen-year-old Holly Chase was visited by three Ghosts who showed her how selfish and spoiled she’d become. They tried to convince her to mend her ways. She didn’t. And then she died.
Now she’s stuck working for the top-secret company Project Scrooge—as their latest Ghost of Christmas Past. So far, Holly’s afterlife has been miserable. But this year’s Scrooge is different. This year’s Scrooge might change everything…
The Afterlife of Holly Chase is a witty, poignant, and insightful novel about life, love, and seizing second (or third) chances, perfect for readers who loved Before I Fall or Dash & Lily’s Book of Dares.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarperTeen
- Publication dateOctober 24, 2017
- Reading age13 - 17 years
- Grade level8 - 9
- File size1826 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
Hand has more in mind than just paranormal romance. The exploration of angelic hierarchies fascinates as does the tension built around concepts of free will and divine purpose. Can Clara literally stop an ordained death? Plot points skillfully set up the next book's action, which should be eagerly anticipated by fans.
-- "Booklist"A spunky, modern take on A Christmas Carol...A spirited tale, indeed.
-- "Kirkus Reviews"Hand debuts with an engrossing take on the angel mythos...an engaging and romantic tale with solid backstory.
-- "Publishers Weekly (starred review)"From the Back Cover
On Christmas Eve five years ago, Holly was visited by three Ghosts who showed her how selfish and spoiled she’d become. They tried to convince her to mend her ways.
She didn’t.
And then she died.
Now she’s stuck working for the top-secret company Project Scrooge—as the latest Ghost of Christmas Past.
Every year, they save another miserly grouch. Every year, Holly stays frozen at seventeen while her family and friends go on living without her. So far, Holly’s afterlife has been miserable.
But this year, everything is about to change. . . .
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B06WGP29H4
- Publisher : HarperTeen; Reprint edition (October 24, 2017)
- Publication date : October 24, 2017
- Language : English
- File size : 1826 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Not Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 398 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 0062318500
- Best Sellers Rank: #573,272 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Cynthia Hand grew up in southeast Idaho, just outside the town of Idaho Falls. From as far back as she can remember, she loved books and reading, and wrote her first short story (about a fairy being born in a tulip) when she was around six years old—pretty much as soon as she could write. Her second grade teacher, Mrs. Widdison, told Cynthia that she’d be an author some day, and Cynthia believed her. She kept writing stories all through grade school, most of them wildly fantastical musings on supernatural beings or creatures, none of which ever won the annual short story competition where the writer got to meet Kenneth Thomasma,the author of one of Cynthia’s favorite books, Naya Nuki. Cynthia learned early on that if you wanted to win the writing contest, you should write stories about that time your parents got their car stuck in the snow on the side of a mountain just before dark. You should not write about a group of unicorns fighting to take over an island from an alien invasion. Cynthia kept writing about unicorns anyway.
In middle school and high school, she and her friends formed a writing group that wrote fan fiction about their favorite novels and movies. Each person in the group invented a new character in the decided-upon world (they wrote about Elfquest, Vampire Hunter D, X-Men, Mercedes Lackey's Valdemar series, Anne McCafferty's Pern series, Star Wars, and SeaQuest (anyone remember SeaQuest?) and wrote exclusively from that character’s point of view, sharing their writing as they went, collectively shaping what happened to these characters. Early on Cynthia was appointed the “editor” of their work, meaning that she collected it all, typed it, and edited it. She loved and possibly abused her power with the red pen.
In middle school and high school Cynthia also, on top of all the fan-fic writing, took piano lessons, danced tap and ballet, raced on the Kelly Canyon ski team, acted or teched in every school play and several plays for the community theater, sang in the school choir, took AP classes, and somehow managed to find time to eat and sleep enough to stay alive. There was a period during her junior year when she arrived at school at 5:30 a.m. and didn’t get home until around 10 p.m., five days a week. She took the words insanely busy to a whole new level.
Cynthia went to college at the College of Idaho, where she majored in English (because she still loved to read, dangit) with a pre-law emphasis. She kept writing, as a hobby, she told everybody (especially her dad, who wanted her to have a solid, well-paying job) but focused on classes in constitutional law and international politics. She kept this up until the beginning of her senior year, when one day, neck deep in the law section of the library, she had this thought: I don’t want to be a lawyer. I want to be a writer. So she broke the news to her parents and her advisers, who were all dismayed but tried to be understanding (especially her dad), and started to work on applying to M.F.A. programs in creative writing. Cynthia was lucky enough to get on the wait list of Boise State University.
At Boise State, Cynthia was determined to become a “serious writer,” to the point where she cut up pictures of her favorite literary authors (Hemingway, Virginia Woolf, Alice Walker, Jane Smiley, Harper Lee, Tobias Wolff, Andre Dubus, Rick Bass, Joyce Carol Oates and many others) and taped them to the edges of her computer screen, so that she’d be reminded of greatness every time she sat down to write. No pressure or anything. It was in Boise that Cynthia fell head over heels in love with literary fiction, which she wrote exclusively for the next nine years, and with teaching. Just when she thought she was finally figuring out how to be a writer, she got kicked out (okay, not kicked out, she graduated with an M.F.A. in fiction writing). She wanted to keep studying, so she applied for Ph.D.s around the country, settling eventually on the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. In Nebraska, three hugely important things happened: Cynthia met her future husband, the writer and poet John Struloeff, she published her first short story, which she submitted to try to impress John Struloeff, and she connected with her agent.
Fast forward five years. Cynthia and John have married, graduated with their Ph.D.s, and had a son named Will. John landed a fantastic job as the director of the Creative Writing department at Pepperdine University, where Cynthia also had the pleasure of teaching one or two classes a semester. She has settled into “real life,” but something is missing: writing. She’s just not feeling it. This goes on for a couple years until one fateful night, the night that Unearthly first started stirring in her mind.
It's been a wild ride since then. . .
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Top reviews from the United States
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The characters were hit or miss for me. Holly, who is an awful person at the beginning of the story but gradually evolves into a better person as the story goes on, has a great character arc. When the story skips in time after Holly's death I liked that she was still not a great person, but she had improved some from her pre-death personality. Because I knew I wasn't gong to be able to handle a whole book where the character was that unlikable. I was rooting for Holly, but I didn't love all of her decisions and she often frustrated me. I didn't like Stephanie, or really anyone on Project Lamp. Stephanie was supposed to be a 20 year old college student but she acted way too young. However, I am not sure if this is a writing thing or the narrator's voice for Stephanie. Holly points this out multiple times, so it was purposely, but it drove me a little nuts. Everyone else on Project Lamp were a bit boring for me. Maybe also a bit annoying. I really loved Boz, who was a strict but incredibly soft mentor who I would have loved to be in more scenes. I also would have loved to get to know both Dave and Blackpool more. I found the love interest, Ethan, to be okay but nothing super unique. I liked Holly's connection towards him because of how much she could relate her own past life to his.
The plot had me the most interested. I am typically more of a fan of character drive plots, and though I didn't mind the characters overall, I was mostly motivated to keep reading because I needed to know what would happen next. I was hooked from the get go. I loved the unique idea and how the story in A Christmas Carol is used to make this really cool story idea come to life. I didn't even really mind the romance. It was cute and the dialogue between the two characters Holly and Ethan was witty and often time romantic.
The writing was okay. It didn't blow me away but I fund it to be digestible and easy to fly though. I think it takes a lo to write a Christmas story and have it not dripping with cheese but I think Cynthia Hand did a good job at making it more heartwarming than cheesy. It had it's moments where I felt like it was cheesy but it's a Christmas story so that is to be expected.
Overall, if you're looking for a fun Christmas story to read to hype yourself up for the holidays I highly recommend it. It was so much fun to read and I think anyone could enjoy it.
1. Holly is an idiot. Just like Scrooge, she got a visit from the 3 ghosts, but she didn’t take any of it seriously, and ended up getting hit by a car. She dies and becomes something like a “zombie”, but not in the Walking Dead way, and starts working at an organization called Project Scrooge. It’s a top secret place that strives to rehabilitate the “Scrooges” in the U.S. She worked there for 5 years as a Ghost of the Christmas Present, and YET her mentality hasn’t changed at all! She’s still acting like a bratty seventeen-year-old airhead, even though she’s supposed to be 22 at this time! She hates her job (she even tried running away once!) and yet she hasn’t learned that, “hmmm, maybe if I worked on my stuck-up attitude then I’d actually get outta here”. Needless to say, she irritated me up until the last 3 chapters. I did forgive her in the end.
1. Project Scrooge. The concept of having this secret organization in New York that spies on potential Scrooges and then rehabilitates them is interesting. How are the Scrooges chosen? Hm, it’s an ambiguous process that involves Blackpool. He’s kind of like an oracle who also plays the part of the Ghost of Christmas Future. That confused me. Then there’s the part where human Stephanie is accepted to Project Scrooge and she can SEE the ghosts. “I see dead people” anyone? Oh, and in the book the ghosts can eat, sleep and drink. And they’re given crummy apartments and ride the subway…
PROS: Human Stephanie is my favorite character. She’s organized, hardworking and extremely loyal. Then there’s Grant and Marty; the nerd squad at Project Scrooge. The ending was super cheesy, but it did squeeze a tiny little tear out of my eye. Overall, it’s a fast, fun read. It doesn’t require too much thinking. So your grey cells can go on vacation when you pick up this book.

Reviewed in the United States on January 27, 2021
1. Holly is an idiot. Just like Scrooge, she got a visit from the 3 ghosts, but she didn’t take any of it seriously, and ended up getting hit by a car. She dies and becomes something like a “zombie”, but not in the Walking Dead way, and starts working at an organization called Project Scrooge. It’s a top secret place that strives to rehabilitate the “Scrooges” in the U.S. She worked there for 5 years as a Ghost of the Christmas Present, and YET her mentality hasn’t changed at all! She’s still acting like a bratty seventeen-year-old airhead, even though she’s supposed to be 22 at this time! She hates her job (she even tried running away once!) and yet she hasn’t learned that, “hmmm, maybe if I worked on my stuck-up attitude then I’d actually get outta here”. Needless to say, she irritated me up until the last 3 chapters. I did forgive her in the end.
1. Project Scrooge. The concept of having this secret organization in New York that spies on potential Scrooges and then rehabilitates them is interesting. How are the Scrooges chosen? Hm, it’s an ambiguous process that involves Blackpool. He’s kind of like an oracle who also plays the part of the Ghost of Christmas Future. That confused me. Then there’s the part where human Stephanie is accepted to Project Scrooge and she can SEE the ghosts. “I see dead people” anyone? Oh, and in the book the ghosts can eat, sleep and drink. And they’re given crummy apartments and ride the subway…
PROS: Human Stephanie is my favorite character. She’s organized, hardworking and extremely loyal. Then there’s Grant and Marty; the nerd squad at Project Scrooge. The ending was super cheesy, but it did squeeze a tiny little tear out of my eye. Overall, it’s a fast, fun read. It doesn’t require too much thinking. So your grey cells can go on vacation when you pick up this book.

Melding sci fi and fantasy plus a good dash of contemporary YA fiction and you have all the ingredients required for a cracking seasonal tale.
Holly is the perfect modern Scrooge who sees only her own wants and needs and never anyone else’s but then she has THE VISIT Christmas Eve and unlike Scrooge of literature she ignores the chance to change and then - yep she dies.
She finds herself recruited by Project Scrooge to use the companies technology to find the next Scrooge and get then to change as she did not.
The story has a clever misdirect which readers will either love or hate (I loved it) and it’s a clever conclusion. My only criticism is that the middle of the story feels a little bloated and could have done with being a bit more condensed before that brilliant unexpected ending. Other than that this is a great Christmas story to get into the Christmas Carol vibes with a modern twist.
Top reviews from other countries



Something different and recommendable.

I ended up finishing this in one go. For a take on a classic story it is so unique! The story is about a girl who was visited by the three ghosts of christmas and did not change. It lead to her death and becoming one of the christmas ghosts herself.
From the first line, it got me hooked. Its one of those feel good stories with a Christmas vibe but it felt so new! A bit of found family, a bit of bad boy romance, a redemption arc set in the city of New York. Each character in this book is lovely in their own way.
It was everything magical, urban and ghostly with good dose of romance and friendship. I might just read it again for Christmas♥️
