Today, HJ is pleased to share with you Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka’s new release: Seeing Other People
Two people haunted by their exes find that love isn’t dead in this new contemporary romance from the beloved authors of The Roughest Draft.
Morgan is being ghosted by her ex. No, really. It’s sad Zach died and became a ghost. But Morgan and Zach only ever went on the one date, and now she’s being haunted by him. Zach has no desire to spend eternity with Morgan, but he can’t recall his past and doesn’t know how to move on.
At a support group for humans and their haunters, Morgan and Zach run into Sawyer, whose fiancée-turned-ghost has started to fade. Unlike Morgan, Sawyer isn’t ready to part ways with his ghost. Although they face opposite issues, Morgan and Sawyer decide to work together to solve their problems.
As Morgan and Sawyer try to solve their paranormal conundrums together, they find something even more surprising—a tender, growing affection between them that threatens any unfinished business they’re seeking to close. The ghosts of their past might be there in spirit, but the connection between Morgan and Sawyer is as alive as anything they’ve ever felt.
Enjoy an exclusive excerpt from Seeing Other People
MORGAN
I know what’s coming. I knew what was coming when I brought Kyle-or Lyle, or something-to my bedroom, only for him to claim my sheets were trying to suffocate him. I knew what was coming when Lee insisted he saw a shadow in my rearview mirror sitting in my Honda’s back seat.
“This place is haunted and I can’t stand it anymore. I’m going to go stay with my parents. If you haven’t exorcised your ghost by the end of the month,” she declares, “I’m moving out.”
Panic shoots through my tardiness worries. My roommate’s constant, reasonable complaining is one thing. But moving out? “Savvy. Please.”
I use our oldest nickname, hoping to win friend points. We were roommates when I transferred to UNC for my last year of college, way before my lovely little haunting. I never forgot how decidedly cool she was when I dropped out. When I shared my plans in our junior-year dorm room, I expected maudlin sympathy or judgment or, if I was lucky, complete carelessness.
Instead, Savvy hugged me and said, “You’re awesome. You’re going to be fine,” and it was the last conversation we had on the subject. It was kind of perfect. Naturally, we kept loosely in touch, leading me to hit her up when I was figuring out my LA plans.
“I can’t afford this lease on my own,” I remind her. “Seriously. And how am I supposed to get a new roommate when”-I swallow- “when . . .”
Savvy looks smug.
“When you’re haunted?” she finishes.
Not cool. My shoulders slump in defeat, and her wild-eyed expression softens.
“I’m really sorry, Morgan. But, like, this shit is scary,” she explains. “I can’t live like this.”
My heart starts to pound in a way not even rattling hangers or poltergeisted rearview mirrors can provoke. You know what’s spooky? Ghosts. You know what’s scary? Rent in Los Fucking Angeles.
“I know,” I say softly. “I get it.”
I really do. The truth is, I can’t live like this, either, but I can’t escape it. I wish my romantic failures or my roommate’s computer were the only haunted parts of my life. Instead, the paranormal follows me everywhere. When I go to work or the grocery store or the spicy noodle restaurant three blocks down from my building-where I’m no longer welcome on soy-sauce-eruption-related charges. Even the dentist. When the water tube squirted on poor Dr. Parsekian three times unprompted, I knew what was up.
Savannah-whose friendly nickname I revoke, the traitor-smiles sympathetically. “Thanks,” she says. “I really hope you find a way to get rid of . . . it.”
I nod in defeat. Me too.
While she grabs her laptop and keys and hastens out the door, I sink onto my bed. With miserable timing, my phone hums once more in my leggings. Whatever. Dan will have to wait one more minute while I wrestle with my misfortune.
I’m fucked, honestly. I cannot afford my rent without Savannah’s half, and I can’t get out of my lease for five more months. My parents can’t help me. They haven’t been able to retire due to still living paycheck to paycheck.
No, that’s . . . not true. They do live paycheck to paycheck. But they would help me.
Which is exactly why I can’t beg them to. I’ve imposed much, much too much on Ellen and Steven Lane of Jefferson City, Missouri. Or finally of Jefferson City. My dad worked in “location surveying and management” for most of my life, only retiring last year. Yearslong contracts would move our entire family from city to city, state to state, where he would coordinate land contracting, construction, and ongoing maintenance for new hotels or superstores.
The everywhere-and-nowhere upbringing earned me my itch for never sitting still. Which earned me my itch for . . . dropping out of college. I spent my freshman year studying social anthropology, then switched to video production for my sophomore year. Then, for my junior year, I switched from University of Colorado Boulder to University of North Carolina, where I met Savvy.
The whole while, I felt this . . . pressure mounting. To become someone. To know who I was. To make decisions that would lead me or force me to stop making decisions. My mental health suffered. Until one day, I worked up my courage or my selfishness and called my parents with my decision. To my enormous guilty surprise, they supported me. Three years of tuition, hard-scraped from my dad’s moderate salary, just . . . gone.
I promised them I would get myself together. I would be independent. Established. Adult. The words people use for not your problem.
Then there was the whole shit with Michael. I didn’t plan on breaking our engagement, obviously. I just got in over my head. I was desperate to prove I’d dropped out for the right reasons, to prove I was self-sufficient, to prove I was on my own path-which, funnily enough, were the wrong reasons for overcommitting myself to Michael Hanover-Erickson, who was seven years my senior.
It took my panicky retreat from the life I planned with him for me to understand what I know now. When I commit, other people get hurt. Keeping my relationships casual isn’t just fun or easy. It’s mercy.
When I fucked everything up with Michael, my parents were there. Despite everything they put into my happiness, the promises I made them-the promises I made everyone-when I needed to run, they understood, or pretended they did. They were ready to waste more money and effort and compassion on me.
It’s enough to make a girl feel like a living, breathing problem instead of a daughter. Enough to keep her from visiting home very often, which ironically-or helpfully-only makes her feel even less entitled to demand more help from people she’s burdened plenty. If I could pay for therapy, I’d go. But I’d start with paying rent first.
I close my eyes, exhausted. The weight of my housing problem quietly overwhelms me. I literally don’t know what I’m going to do.
Which is when I feel the familiar tingling sensation of someone’s hand hovering over my shoulder. Except I know there’s no one. My room-my entire apartment, unfortunately-is completely empty.
Sort of.
I shiver. “Can you please just try to be less creepy?”
Opening my eyes, I know what I’m going to find.
He’s seated next to me on my bed, leaving my floral comforter undisturbed by his weightless presence. He’s maybe six one, stocky, sort of boyishly handsome, with floppy chestnut hair he flips from side to side and unshaven stubble. Forever unshaven, now. I doubt he cares.
Next to me in my empty room sits the ghost of the last man I went rock climbing with.
“I prefer spooky to creepy,” Zach says. “It’s not like I watch you when you sleep.”
He doesn’t sound indignant despite my characterization. If there’s one minuscule silver lining in my haunting situation, it’s this. I have, somehow, wound up with the chillest ghost in the history of hauntings.
Obviously it’s a small comfort when his incessant shenanigans have cost me my dating life, my favorite noodle restaurant, and now, my roommate and my financial stability. “Why were you tormenting Savannah?” I demand.
Whenever Zach feels an emotion, his entire face responds. Right now, indignant incredulity rounds his blue eyes and shoots his eyebrows up. “I wasn’t!” he insists. “I swear. You know I can’t control this stuff. I love Savannah,” he says to me about the woman who’s never spoken to him because she never knew him in life. “Even if it stung when she called me ‘it,'” he complains. “I’m not an ‘it.'”
“You’re so an ‘it,'” I shoot back in frustration.
“That hurts, Morgan. That cuts me deep.”
“Nothing cuts you deep. It would go right through you.”
Amused by my admittedly good comeback, Zach grins.
I groan. “Could you just go haunt someone else? I mean, we had a nice enough first date, but I wasn’t even planning to go on a second date with you. No offense,” I add.
Zach shrugs with equanimity.
Our first and only date was three months ago. We went rock climbing. I wore the shoes in my closet without fretting over supernatural phenomena. Imagine that! I made out with him in my car afterward, but I never felt the need to see him again.
I doubt he did, either, but I suppose we don’t know for sure, because apparently, he died shortly thereafter. Shortly after that, he appeared in my bathroom mirror and scared the holy living fuck out of me.
“There have to be people who knew you better who you could spend your afterlife with,” I press him.
Now Zach looks petulant in the fake way he does, like frustration never fully reaches his happy-go-lucky vibe. “Like I want to spend eternity with you!” he shoots back. “But for whatever reason, we’re stuck together. Our shitty date is the only thing I can remember. If you had bothered to learn my last name, then maybe we could look me up and find my family.”
I wilt. Okay, Zach has me there.
Excerpted from Seeing Other People by Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka Copyright © 2025 by Emily Wibberley. Excerpted by permission of Berkley. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Giveaway: 1 finished copy of SEEING OTHER PEOPLE (U.S. only, 18+)
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Meet the Author:
Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka met and fell in love in high school. Austin went on to graduate from Harvard, while Emily graduated from Princeton. Together, they are the authors of several novels about romance for teens and adults. Now married, they live in Los Angeles, where they continue to take daily inspiration from their own love story.


Diana Hardt
I liked the excerpt. It sounds like a really interesting book.
Debby
I enjoyed the excerpt and hope to read more. Thanks and posted on X
Daniel M
looks like a fun one.
Amy R
What did you think of the excerpt spotlighted here? Sounds good
Mary C
Sounds good – added to my TBR list.
cherierj
Shared on Twitter. Sounds unique. I am intrigued by the excerpt.
Nancy Jones
I enjoyed the excerpt and shared on X.
Bonnie
Great excerpt. I’d love to read more.
bn100
intriguing
erahime
Sounds interesting. Thanks for the excerpt, HJ.
X: https://x.com/ecdilaw/status/1998647157964894541
Michelle Schafer
Sounds interesting. Shared on fb.