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"They broke through and found a child's bedroom,
complete with bed, clothes, and dusty toys, all over a century
old. A plague room. No skeleton in the bed, thank heavens, but
the image stayed with me, and when the 'Ghost Whisperer'
contract came my way, I knew I had the perfect plot device."
In "Plague Room" - the third book in the "Ghost
Whisperer" novel series ("The Haunted" and "Revenge" have
already been released) - Melinda has some competition named
Wendy King, another woman who has the ability to see and
communicate with the dead, except Wendy forces them to cross
over.
"It's torture for the spirits, but Wendy doesn't
realize this. Meanwhile, Melinda is hired to handle an estate
sale's worth of antiques. In the old mansion where the antiques
are housed, she comes across a particularly frightening spirit
that can't cross over," said Piziks.
"Wendy unexpectedly shows up and bludgeons the ghost
into the light - except this only makes the problem in the house
worse. Melinda has to deal with Wendy's unwitting cruelty and a
newly-unleashed evil that has the power to devastate the entire
town. And there's a plague room, of course."
Piziks is no stranger to writing novels based on TV
series, such as "Star Trek" Voyager" and "Battlestar Galactica"
(the current series). He's also written movie novelizations of
2003's "Identity" and 2004's "The Exorcist: The Beginning."
One of the challenges he ran into when writing this
book was learning that "Ghost Whisperer" doesn't have the fan
following those other shows have. If Piziks needed to fact-check
something quickly, he didn't find any fan sites on the Internet
with detailed plot summaries of each episode, as he did with
"Voyager" and "Galactica." Instead, he had the DVDs of the
series, particularly the first season which is when his novels
occur, to fall back on.
However, since "Ghost Whisperer" is set in the
present, it made writing it easier.
"I didn't have to explain any science. I didn't have to figure
out why some bit of futuristic technology couldn't solve the
conflict. And the cast of 'Ghost Whisperer' is much, much
smaller.
Melinda, her husband, Jim (played by David Conrad in
the TV series), and Andrea (Aisha Tyler) were the only
characters I had to get 'right,'" said Piziks. "There was less
continuity to worry about, since I was working with the first
season. All the other characters I created myself, which meant
they could do whatever I wanted them to do."
Piziks had to make some tweaks here and there by
request from CBS.
"I called Wendy an exorcist, and they wanted her to
be called a medium instead. And at one point, I had Melinda flee
a house, leaving Jim behind because he was unconscious and too
heavy for her to carry. The studio said Melinda would never
leave Jim behind, no matter what, so I had to come up with a way
to get him out of the house, too," explained Piziks.
One of the best things about writing "Plague Room" is
that Piziks wasn't restricted by a big budget, unlike the show's
writers.
"I was able to use more ghosts, new settings, fun
flashbacks, and some really cool supernatural struggles between
Melinda and Wendy that would have been too expensive or
difficult to do on the show," said Piziks.
"That's always fun - my imagination can go places the TV show
can't, and the readers can come along."
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