I've never been able to get the bootable CDs to boot by themselves with Ghost, despite being able to boot from CD with my mobo. I always have to throw in a Ghost boot floppy.
And I agree, Ghost is bombs, but again, you have to fool with it (and get frustrated a bit) before you get it workin' for your system, but once you do your life is easier...
Another thing you can do with Ghost 2002 (if your CD-R/RW drive has trouble being detected) is just make an image of your boot drive (usually C) to either another partition on that same drive, or to another hard drive, if you have one. Then you can simply boot back into windows and burn the image onto CD (provided the image will fit onto one CD, which shouldn't be an issue if you Ghost your drive after a clean install).
Before you buy it, though, make sure your CD burner is supported by Ghost, and I'm pretty sure it doesn't recognize any USB drives as DOS does not recognize USB.