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| The Night the DeFeos Died: Reinvestigating the Amityville Murders |
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The Night the DeFeos Died: Reinvestigating the Amityville Murders, finally puts to rest the false myths and misinformation surrounding events that shocked the world more than a quarter century ago. See the author's website here for more information. |
| The Ghost Hunters Handbook |
| The new edition of Troy Taylor's bestselling handbook answers your questions on how to find ghosts and much more! The new handbook is an essential guide to conducting paranormal investigations, written by a real ghost hunter with years of experience in the field. It provides a step-by-step guide to conducting field investigations, plus explains what to look for to decide if a location is haunted. |
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| The Amityville Horror Conspiracy |
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Was it horror or was it hoax? For years, the question went unanswered while everyone who ever glanced at the tabloids in a supermarket knew about the Amityville Horror-a house haunted by the remembered evil of mass murder. For 20 years, parapsychologist Stephen Kaplan and his wife, Roxanne, investigated the phenomenon keeping a detailed diary of everything that happened. This book is the result of that diary. Follow step-by-step and day-by-day as the Kaplans locate witnesses battle rival ghostbusters track down leads and attend an unlikely Halloween party at the Horror House. the result of all this effort? The Kaplans exposed a hoax that was almost as unnerving as the haunting itself. A real page-turner for anyone who is fascinated by things that go bump in the night! |
| Peter Underwood's Guide to Ghosts and Haunted Places |
| With his 41st effort, the Life President of the Ghost Club Society leads us through the world's most fascinating paranormal cases. From the most famous investigations like Borley and Enfield, to the more obscure mysteries of Pumphrey Australia and Little Baldwin Creek in Oregon, Underwood takes us around the world in search of phantoms. It is an exciting tour! Underwood has a personable style that allows him to become friends with most readers. Lots of photos, a bibliography, and a detailed index make this a must for the novice ghost hunter or the most experienced researcher. |
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| Show Me One Soul: A True Haunting |
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When Nancy Stallings and her family found the large "handyman's special" home on Evergreen Avenue it seemed perfect for them. They never suspected that the odd occurrences that took place in the house could be associated with a haunting. It wasn't until her husband Ron dared God to show him just "one soul that could return from the dead" that the haunting began in full force. The haunting affected every member of the Stallings family as well as their friends and neighbors. They coped for ten years with the many "ghosts" that lingered on the property - some benevolent, many malevolent. Show Me One Soul includes actual psychic photographs taken in the haunted house as well as the transcripts of the verification of the haunting by Professor Hans Holzer of the New York Institute of Technology and the New York Committee for the Investigation of paranormal Occurrences. |
| The Complete Book of Vampires |
Lena Lapesan Middleton, Ph. D., Voices From The Vault, Winter 1999
"For years I have been waiting for the perfect non-fiction book about vampires to come along-- and it finally has arrived... Professor Ashley is to be congratulated on breathing new life into an old subject and I recommend without reservation The Complete Book of Vampires to any and all interested in the genre." |
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| Haunted Hotels: A Guide to American and Canadian Inns and Their Ghosts |
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For the jaded traveler who wants a room with atmosphere, for whom vibrant sunsets are old hat, for whom the sound of the surf is passé, Robin Mead has a splendid idea: spend the night with a ghost. His guide to haunted hotels in Canada and the U.S. covers 27 states, 3 territories, and 83 possessed lodgings. |
| Vampires, Burial, and Death: Folklore and Reality |
Personally recommended by NJGHS Vice President.
This book deals with the origins of the vampire myth and is full of information on the scientific facts and superstitions that lead people to believe that the dead weren't really dead. Paul Barber quotes many contemporary sources and first hand experiences, including a fascinating report from a doctor who supervised the exhumation of about 20 suspected vampires in Serbia. Several scientific aspects of decomposition are described in painstaking detail and the author convincingly explains why peasants, who had no knowledge of forensic medicine, believed that these corpses weren't completely dead - and it makes perfect sense. |
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