This month's recommendation is: The Gift by Echo Bodine
Each month I will be recommending a book from one of my favorite topics, the paranormal. This could mean ghosts, UFO's, psychic research, etc. and all our in my personal library.
This month's recommendation is: The Gift by Echo Bodine
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I started Historic Haunts Investigations in 2004 for two reasons; I love the paranormal and I love history. I am a historian and a reenactor so since I am recommending paranormal books every month, I figured I should do a history related one too. I hope you will enjoy them.
This month's historic book: Fatal Treasure by Jedwin Smith ~Dr. Jamie Pearce Author/Founder of Historic Haunts Investigations Everyone here at Historic Haunts Investigations wishes you a very Happy Valentine's Day.
~Dr. Jamie Pearce Author/Founder of Historic Haunts Investigations I wanted to do something fun so I thought I would start doing a paranormal movie of the month from some of my favorite spooky movies.
These movies aren't always 100% accurate and many are for entertainment purposes so here we go: This month's Pick: Salem's Lot (1979) ~Dr. Jamie Pearce Author/Founder of Historic Haunts Investigations Jamie Pearce has selected the Locks of Love as the charity of the month for February 2021.
10% of your online purchase will be donated to this amazing non profit. Please shop and also check out their website at www.locksoflove.org and see this charity close to Pearce’s heart. Each month I will be recommending a book from one of my favorite topics, the paranormal. This could mean ghosts, UFO's, psychic research, etc. and all our in my personal library.
This month's recommendation is: Corpses, Coffins, and Crypts by Penny Colman Beginning in 1949 (or possible somewhat earlier), on the night of the anniversary of Poe’s birth (as January 18th becomes January 19th), a mysterious stranger has entered this cemetery and left as tribute a partial bottle of cognac and three roses on Poe’s grave. (A newspaper article from the Baltimore Sun in 1950 includes a minor mention of the visitor leaving such items, conclusively documenting that it began at least in 1949.) Although some early members of the church recalled in the 1970s that it may have started in the 1930s, the year 1949 is more widely accepted, and the date of 1949 would be significant as the 100th anniversary of the year Poe died. (That date, however, would also be a little clumsy as it would necessarily conflate the month and year of his death, in October 1849, with the month of his birth, in January.) The identity of the stranger, referred to affectionately as the “Poe Toaster,” is unknown. The significance of cognac is uncertain as it does not feature in Poe’s works as would, for example, amontillado. The presumption for the three roses is that it represents the three persons whose remains are beneath the monument: Poe, his wife (Virginia Clemm Poe), and his mother-in-law (Maria Clemm). Out of respect, no attempt is made to stop or hinder him. Several of the bottles of cognac from prior years are kept at the Baltimore Poe House and Museum.
The statement occasionally made that the identity must be known by the Poe Society of Baltimore is utterly untrue, no matter how confident may be the tone of the person stating it. Similarly, Jeff Jerome, the curator of the Baltimore Poe House and Museum, has consistently denied having any such knowledge, although he freely admits to having intentionally withheld some minor details about the event for the sake of differentiating between the “Toaster” and would-be imitators. (None of these details are of a nature that might allow for such an identity to be traced back to a person who could then be named.) The fact that even these official entities do not possess such information, of course, inherently complicates any attempt to conclusively assign a name. Thus far, however, none of the suggestions for the identity of this person have fit the recognized details, and he therefore remains unknown, as does his precise motivation for starting — and devotion in continuing — this long-standing mission. A note left for Jeff Jerome in 1993 stated somewhat cryptically that “the torch will be passed,” and another note left in 1999 indicated that the original “Toaster” had died within a few months before the annual event. After 1993, sightings of the visitor suggested two younger persons were exchanging the obligation between themselves, presumably in honor of their father. The annual visitations continued through 2009, the bicentennial of Poe’s birth, but not in subsequent years. On January 19, 2012, after three successive years in which there was no appearance from the “Toaster,” Jeff Jerome officially declared that the original tradition had ended. Various individuals have taken it upon themselves to leave similar tokens, and some have hoped that they might be able to assume the same recognition and continue the tradition, although they have generally been referred to somewhat dismissively as “Faux Toasters.” As there is no authoritative body other than the person who appears to have originated the tradition, and those he has designated, and no such transfer of authority has occurred, all such attempts to restart a new tradition must be taken purely on their own merits. *Taken from www.eapoe.org* Happy 202nd Birthday to my cousin, (a few generations removed) Edgar Allan Poe. My favorite author and master of the macabre. Thank you for always inspiring me.
~Dr. Jamie Pearce Author/Founder Historic Haunts Investigations I started Historic Haunts Investigations in 2004 for two reasons; I love the paranormal and I love history. I am a historian and a reenactor so since I am recommending paranormal books every month, I figured I should do a history related one too. I hope you will enjoy them.
This month's historic book: I am Murdered by Bruce Chadwick ~Dr. Jamie Pearce Author/Founder of Historic Haunts Investigations I wanted to do something fun so I thought I would start doing a paranormal movie of the month from some of my favorite spooky movies.
These movies aren't always 100% accurate and many are for entertainment purposes so here we go: This month's Pick: Hell House (1973) ~Dr. Jamie Pearce Author/Founder of Historic Haunts Investigations |
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November 2024
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