Examines eye-witness accounts and psychical research to discuss the existence of ghosts
In Hauntings, James Hollis considers how we are all governed by the presence of invisible forms-spirits, ghosts, ancestral and parental influences, inner voices, dreams, impulses, untold stories, complexes, synchronicities, and mysteries ...
In this case , however , Mrs . Smith obviously was enjoying her position in the spotlight . We all sat around a large family dining room table . For almost an hour the group plied us with questions . They were all members of the ...
There we met two strangers , Dennis and Phil . They asked about the scratches on my face but were skeptical when we told them what had happened . They said they were familiar enough with the cemetery to know that the route we'd taken ...
A couple stood in the middle of the dance floor, swaying somewhat, mostly rubbing, while swirling light from a beer sign ... This cop knows that every mother's son and daughter in that bar is guilty of something, because all of us ...
The two artists had met briefly, but Thompson was not familiar with Gifford's work [see 'Trees and Meadow', right]. It was only when he visited an exhibition of Gifford's work that he saw the similarity between his new creations and ...
Taylor, who has worked there since the opening of Gabriels at the Old Mill, said that she had seen the ghost of the child one night, and the ghost of Elizabeth on several occasions. Also, one night after closing there were only three ...
Angel had aspirations of political power. In 1850, he was the president of Geneseo, which was the equivalent of mayor today. For eight years, he traveled abroad under Presidents Pierce and Buchanan to China, Hawaii and Sweden.
From clanking and wailing in an abandoned house and strange lights on a Civil War battlefield to eerie voices heard on a tape recorder left on in a cemetery at night, there are thousands of haunted places.
The true stories behind three terrifying local legends—photos included. This book delves into three enigmatic folk legends of New York’s Hudson River Valley: the stories of Sybil Ludington, Chief Daniel Nimham, and George Denny.
She never settles for cheap effects and writes beautifully of relationships between young and old.' The Daily Telegraph. 'This collection... has a depth of emotion that is at times disturbing.