Recent Release Review: Sky’s Guide to Getting His Man & Banishing Ghosts (Dreamwalkers #1) by Sammi Cee

Reviewed by: Sue Eaton

 

TITLE: Sky’s Guide to Getting His Man & Banishing Ghosts

SERIES: Dreamwalkers #1

AUTHOR: Sammi Cee

PUBLISHER: Self Published

LENGTH: 170 pages

RELEASE DATE:  August 19, 2025

BLURB:

Skylar Reign’s life has been epic since moving to the small town of Willowhope.

His bestie is a psychic medium.

His mentor, a clairvoyant.

And his new interior design business kicked off with a bang.

All he’s missing is for Kingston Porter, his large, grumpy and completely oblivious friend, to realize that he wants to climb him like a tree.

The problem is, Kingston’s dream walking has gone from exploring the creepier parts of their little beach town to being drawn inside the mansion of a man he’s never met before, and it’s starting to consume his every waking thought.

Skylar’s nothing if not an optimist, and he isn’t ready to give up hope. He’s just not sure fate is still on his side.

There’s something more sinister going on than the two men realize, and it’ll take them working together to save the souls being tormented in their dreams.

But with the help of their meddlesome family, a handful of friendly ghosts, and a psychopomp or two, Kingston and Skylar are on the road to becoming the protectors they never knew they were destined to be.

 

REVIEW:

In the sleepy, supernatural town of Willowhope, where dreamwalking is as common as gossip and ghosts linger like nosy neighbors, Sammi Cee conjures a tale that’s equal parts heartwarming romance and spectral mystery. Sky’s Guide to Getting His Man and Banishing Ghosts is a paranormal romance that glows with charm, wit, and emotional resonance, especially in the slow-burn, soul-deep connection between Skylar Reign and Kingston Porter.

Skylar, the ever-optimistic interior designer with a flair for color and chaos, is the emotional heartbeat of the story. His longing for Kingston, his grumpy, stoic, and frustratingly oblivious friend, is palpable from the first page. Sky doesn’t just want Kingston’s attention; he wants to be seen, understood, and chosen. Kingston, meanwhile, is haunted, literally and figuratively. His dream walking pulls him into eerie mansions and tormented souls, but it’s his emotional detachment that poses the real barrier.

Their relationship begins with a quiet ache, Sky wants more, Kingston doesn’t know how to give it. The tension simmers as Kingston is pulled into a haunting that mirrors his inner turmoil. Sky, ever determined, refuses to let Kingston face it alone. He pushes, he comforts, he challenges. And slowly, Kingston begins to see that love isn’t a liability, it’s the lifeline he didn’t know he needed.

The emotional wall Kingston builds is thick with grief, guilt, and the weight of his supernatural burden. He’s drawn into a mansion that consumes his thoughts, and the haunting isn’t just spectral, it’s symbolic. He’s stuck in a place that doesn’t belong to him, and it’s Sky who offers the way out. Their breakthrough comes not in grand declarations, but in quiet moments of trust, shared danger, and the slow realisation that love isn’t a distraction, it’s the anchor.

By the end, their bond is forged not just through romance, but through resilience. Kingston doesn’t just fall in love, he learns how to stay, how to fight for joy, and how to let someone truly see him. And Sky? He finally gets his man, not by chasing, but by being the light Kingston needed to find his way home.

With meddling family members, cheeky ghosts, and a psychopomp or two, the story never loses its playful edge. But beneath the banter and ghostbusting, there’s a tender exploration of what it means to choose someone, not just romantically, but spiritually. Kingston doesn’t just fall for Sky; he learns to fight for him.

 

RATING:

BUY LINKS: 

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