
Her recently released novel, The Ghost Women, follows a series of deaths at a mysterious art academy in the woods, a deck of ancient tarot cards, and a centuries-old secret. On a hot August morning in 1972, the body of Abel Montague, a student at St. Luke’s Institute of the Arts, is found hanging from a tree in the forest. His body has been positioned into the exact pose illustrated on the Hanged Man tarot card found in his pocket. When Detective Lola Germany arrives at St. Luke’s, she believes they are dealing with a ritualistic murder. When more students are found dead, each body arranged like a tarot card, Lola realizes she is trapped in a web of power and ambition that spans centuries.
Here Murphy dreamcasts an adaptation of The Ghost Women:
I often consider directors while I’m writing a novel. For me, the director shapes a movie’s entire ambiance and tone. In contrast, I rarely dreamcast characters. I have a picture of each character in my mind before I start writing. I suppose you could say that I write a novel inside out. I know the characters, the setting and the general story itself before I create the actual plot. In this way, the characters I’ve imagined walk into a place that is fully formed and, in this story at least, feels like it has been there for centuries. So for this exercise, I specifically considered directors that could build an eerie, dark, and forested landscape, complete with rituals and magic, that includes a secret art academy located in an ancient monastery and centers on a series of student murders. And I searched for actors that fit the images of the characters I imagined in my mind.Visit Jennifer Murphy's website.
Director
Given the current caliber of TV mini-series, I considered how The Ghost Women might be adapted into either a movie or a mini-series. If a movie, Guillermo del Toro, is the perfect fit for director. Known for his mastery of dark, atmospheric Gothic fairy tales, del Toro would excel at creating a deep, scary, emotional, and mystical world while also capturing a sense of fairy tale magic. His ability to blend beauty with decay fits the story’s ghostly ambiance. Additionally, del Toro has a personal history with tarot cards, having learned to read them from his mother as a child. He uses tarot symbolism to inform the visual design and narrative structure of his films. He also authored the forward and oversaw design of his own tarot deck called Tarot del Toro.
While I believe del Toro could also direct a fine mini-series, there are a few other directors whose artistic approaches I admire and believe could capture TGW’s world.
These include Cary Joji Fukunago (True Detective Season 1), Karyn Kusuma (Yellowjackets), and Ryan Murphy (American Horror Story: Coven)
Actors
These actors come closest to matching the look, feel, and attitude of the characters I created in my mind:
Lola Germany (Waverly Island’s lead detective, previously danced for the New York City Ballet) – Elisabeth Moss
The Weird Sisters (a group of students that engage in witchery):
Pearl Calhoun – Emma Laird
Karla Gardyn – Anya Taylor-Joy
Esme Li – Lana Candor
Hazel Donovan – Sadie Sink
Abel Montague (the first victim, but present through flashbacks) – Harris Dickenson
Colin (Lola’s sidekick) – George MacKay
Alice Landry (the art academy dean) – Ana de Armas
Monty Montague (Abel’s father and the school founder) – Cillian Murphy
Q&A with Jennifer Murphy.
--Marshal Zeringue











