Showing posts with label spooky places. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spooky places. Show all posts

Monday, February 16, 2015

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Rapid City with Elizabeth Bear + Giveaway

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Rapid City with Elizabeth Bear

Come on boys and ghouls!  It's time to hop on Route 666 for a spooktacular Paranormal Road Trip.

This week's stop is Rapid City, the setting of KAREN MEMORY, and our special guide is Elizabeth Bear.

Keep reading for a chance to win Karen Memory by Elizabeth Bear!

Elizabeth is the author of the Eternal Sky series, Jenny Casey series, Promethean age series, Jacob's Ladder series, New Amsterdam series, The Edda of Burdens series, The Stratford Man series, Bone and Jewel Creatures series, and the new steampunk novel Karen Memory.

Elizabeth's Top 5 Spooky Places in Rapid City

I might be cheating a bit here, because Rapid City is a fictional place, and all its spook is spook I made up. But the world of Karen Memory is one where, in the very least, the so-called Creatures of the Lumberwoods (the North American legendary fauna of tall tales and native theology) do exist—so it’s conceivable that Karen could hike up into the hills surrounding Rapid City and have a close encounter with a hodag or a splintercat. (Watch out for the hoopsnakes, Karen. I hear they have a nasty bite!)

So we’ll start with that, in fact.

#5 Spooky place in Rapid City… is actually a short day trip outside of town. It’s the primeval temperate rain forests of the Pacific Northwest: vast, towering, and dripping with moss. Their emerald canopies mean deep, moist shade underneath. Dense undergrowth could hide just about anything from wildcats to sasquatch, and you’ll never know what might be peering at you from within the tangled canes of the nearest blackberry bramble.

#4 Spooky place in Rapid City… the dockyards. Massive air and steamships come and go from this Gold Rush town, relentlessly as the tide. They haul out hopeful men and doomed dogs north to Anchorage for the gold trail; hardwood timber for furniture, flooring, framing houses; machinery and raw materials for foreign need. They haul in silk, spices, and indentured Chinese and Indian immigrants—little better than slaves under the law—to work under brutal conditions in mines, on the railroads, and in the prostitute’s cribs. Towering armatures controlled by stevedores clank and hiss, hauling enormous shipping crates into and out of holds. Men and women—ragged, down on their luck—scavenge or whore.

#3 Spooky place in Rapid City… Bayside Market. You wouldn’t think so to look at the bustling and labyrinthine market it shelters, but this immense shed up on piles at the waterfront—it resembles an airship hangar or a drydock, it’s so vast—is said to be haunted. Eager tourists can wander between the stalls, attracted by heaps of golden melons or bright red onions or glistening, jeweled berries (depending on the season); rummaging around piles of baskets made in India and through stacks of willowware bowls imported from China; stroking silk and fawning over ready-made petticoats; nibbling sweet smoked salmon seasoned with maple syrup—and never know that at night, when the wind creaks the slatted walls and the hissing newfangled electric lights go dark, it’s said that a ghostly, translucent glow can be seen gliding between those same stalls. Those who have witnessed this say they’ve glimpsed the outline of a young woman, always an aisle or two away, slender and obviously distraught, running through the empty paths.

There are conflicting stories about her background—a suicide; a murder victim; a girl who was distracted by grief, slipped down the granite steps outside, and died. (It’s also possible that she’s something cooked up by the Rapid City Board of Tourism: a nice genteel haunting is good for business, after all!)

#2 Spooky place in Rapid City… this doesn’t appear in the book, but I’m contemplating a short story about the Rain City Riverside, a notorious local hotel. The Riverside occupies a good location close to the opera house (Rapid City’s pride, joy, and cultural center). The hotel is Rapid City’s only four-star establishment: fine dining, private baths, and at least one of the steakhouse employees is actually French! (Sadly, it’s the maitre d’hotel, rather than the chef, but on the frontier you have to take what you can get. Nobody’s ever seen a ghost in the Riverside—or if they have, hotel management paid them off handsomely enough that they’ve kept it to themselves.

But while the Riverside caters to mining and logging executives, it’s also popular with those lucky gold miners who come back to civilization with a bag of dust or a few nuggets in their pocket, ready to spend.

The legend is that Old Boston, the owner of the Griswold Claim in Alaska, spent a little too much time out in the wilderness—and by the time when he was finally ready to ship back to Rapid City, he’d gone more than a little mad. Whether the violent deaths of himself, three other miners, one bartender, and a saloon girl in the hotel bar were performed by his own hand (as the hotel still insists) or by the hand of an enraged tommyknocker (a kind of mine gremlin) he’d captured in Alaska and smuggled home in a steamer trunk with the plan of selling it to a traveling exhibition (as the lone survivor of the massacre, the maimed and traumatized piano player, maintans) is not known one way or the other.

If there was a tommyknocker, it was never captured, and no one knows what became of it. Which might be why the hotel denies its existence.

They do have extensive wine cellars, however.

#1 Spooky place in Rapid City… the Underground. As with Boston, Seattle, and a number of other coastal towns, Rapid City has had an ongoing problem with flooding and high tides. So Rapid City adopted the same solution as these other municipalities! Which is a pretty lousy solution while it’s under construction, honestly—it involved building retaining walls along the edges of the streets—leaving sidewalk pathways between street and building so doors are still accessible—and then raising the street with fill to a new ground level. This has the side effect, as you might guess, of providing a terrible, terrifying, dark, narrow well around the ground floor of every single affected building, which you must enter in order to get in or out of those buildings—at least until the streets are finished, and the sidewalks are closed over, and new entrances are cut at the new ground level.

Of course, then those wells remain down there, even darker now with a sidewalk on top! And the wells aren’t connected to one another, so in order to get from one building to the next, you have to scramble up and down ladders. About as much fun in hoop skirts and bustles as a pre-novocaine root canal. And the best side effect is that the wells become havens for all the sorts of things you might not wish to do in a public street—from pissing and furtive sex to muggings, assault, and the disposal of bodies.

Urban planning at its finest, and very, very spooky indeed.


Thank you Elizabeth for giving us such a haunting tour of Rapid City!  

To learn more about Elizabeth Bear and her books, please visit her website.  You can add Karen Memory here on Goodreads.

We are also having a fantastic book giveaway to celebrate the release of KAREN MEMORY by Elizabeth Bear.

Karen Memory Book Giveaway

We are giving away a hardcover copy of Karen Memory to one lucky winner!

To enter, please leave a comment on this post, and include your email address so we may contact you if you win.   This giveaway is open to US and Canada only.  Giveaway ends March 3, 2015 midnight EST.

Karen Memory steampunk novel by Elizabeth Bear Giveaway

Karen Memory by Elizabeth Bear.

“You ain’t gonna like what I have to tell you, but I'm gonna tell you anyway. See, my name is Karen Memery, like memory only spelt with an e, and I'm one of the girls what works in the Hôtel Mon Cherie on Amity Street. Hôtel has a little hat over the o like that. It's French, so Beatrice tells me.”

Set in the late 19th century—when the city we now call Seattle Underground was the whole town (and still on the surface), when airships plied the trade routes, would-be gold miners were heading to the gold fields of Alaska, and steam-powered mechanicals stalked the waterfront, Karen is a young woman on her own, is making the best of her orphaned state by working in Madame Damnable’s high-quality bordello. Through Karen’s eyes we get to know the other girls in the house—a resourceful group—and the poor and the powerful of the town. Trouble erupts one night when a badly injured girl arrives at their door, beggin sanctuary, followed by the man who holds her indenture, and who has a machine that can take over anyone’s mind and control their actions.  And as if that wasn’t bad enough, the next night brings a body dumped in their rubbish heap—a streetwalker who has been brutally murdered.

Bear brings alive this Jack-the-Ripper yarn of the old west with a light touch in Karen’s own memorable voice, and a mesmerizing evocation of classic steam-powered science.

Release Date: February 3, 2015
Genre: Fantasy, Steampunk


What did you think of Elizabeth's picks for spooky places?  Does Rapid City sound like a place you'd like to visit?

Last week on Paranormal Road Trip we visited Louisville with Shiloh Walker.  Next week we'll be traveling to Australia with Cassandra Page.

Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!

Monday, January 26, 2015

Paranormal Road Trip Six Month Recap + $10 Amazon Gift Card Giveaway

Paranormal Road Trip at From the Shadows spooky tours of the world with your favorite authors

Wow!  I can't believe that it has been six months since we began the From the Shadows original blog feature, Paranormal Road Trip.  Time flies by when we're scaring the bejeebus out of you all, right?

Since I'm on vacation this week, I thought it would be fun to do a Paranormal Road Trip recap and see where we've been over the past six months.

Come on and take a ride with us down Route 666!

It all began with a terrifying trip to Savannah...

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Savannah with J.D. Horn.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination New Orleans with Suzanne Johnson.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Manhattan with Melissa De La Cruz.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination San Diego with Eileen Wilks.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Jacksonville with Rinda Elliott.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination San Diego with S.J. Harper.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Austin with Gerry Bartlett.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Tokyo with Steve Bein.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Detroit with Laura Bickle.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Bruges with E.J. Stevens.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Nightshade with Marlene Perez.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Detroit with Amber Lynn Natusch.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination L.A. with Melissa F. Olson.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination South Tom's River, NJ with Shawntelle Madison.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Twelve Acres, Colorado with Teri Harman.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination New York City.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Eden, KY with Sharon Buchbinder.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination San Diego with Jennifer Harlow.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Sydney with Yolanda Sfetsos.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Dublin with Ruth Frances Long.
Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Boston with Skylar Dorset.

*shivers*  Since I live near Boston, that last Paranormal Road Trip gave me chills! 

What do you think of Paranormal Road Trip?  Have you enjoyed letting our favorite paranormal and urban fantasy authors take us on journeys into spooky cities around the world?  Where would you like to travel to next?

Paranormal Road Trip Giveaway

To celebrate six months of Paranormal Road Trip blog posts, we are giving away a $10.00 Amazon Gift Card!


To enter, leave a comment on any of the Paranormal Road Trip posts linked above.  Receive an entry for EVERY Paranormal Road Trip post you comment on!  Leave us a comment on this post to let us know which Paranormal Road Trip posts you commented on.  This giveaway is INTERNATIONAL (if you cannot use an Amazon gift card, you may choose a book from The Book Depository with a value up to $10.00).  Giveaway ends February 9, 2015 midnight EST.

Good luck!

Next week we'll be back to our regularly scheduled weekly Paranormal Road Trip.  We'll be traveling to Banff with Nancy Baker.

Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!

Monday, January 19, 2015

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Boston With Skylar Dorset

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Boston With Skylar Dorset author of Otherworld series

Come on boys and ghouls!  It's time to hop on Route 666 for a spooktacular Paranormal Road Trip.  This week's stop is Boston, Massachusetts and our special guide is Skylar Dorset, author of the Otherworld young adult paranormal series.

The Otherworld series is set in Boston so it seems fitting that our guide for this week's Paranormal Road Trip be author Skylar Dorset.  Let's see what terrifying places Skylar has planned for our tour.

Boston's Top 5 Spooky Places

North Grove Street

North Grove Street is spooky for what used to be there: Harvard Medical College. The school has since relocated, although North Grove Street is still the home of Massachusetts General Hospital. But why is this place spooky? Because it was the site of one of the most high-profile murders in history, which led to the so-called trial of the nineteenth century. The murder was so famous that the crime scene was the first place Charles Dickens asked to be brought when he came to Boston. But we don’t talk about it much anymore, so here’s the super-grisly story:

George Parkman was a wealthy Boston Brahmin (as Boston aristocrats were known). He actually donated the land on North Grove Street that Harvard Medical College was built on, and the street adjacent is still called Parkman Street. Later, it would supposedly become the scene of his death.

Parkman was known for lending money around town (a character right out of Dickens!). He was a well-known figure in Boston, where he was often seen walking the streets, collecting his debts (he was too cheap to own a horse!). The last time he was ever seen, it was going into Harvard Medical College, where one of his debtors, Harvard Med School Professor John Webster, had arranged a meeting with him.

Parkman’s worried, wealthy family reported him missing and launched a citywide hunt for him, papering the city with “missing” posters, dragging the Harbor and the Charles River, etc. The police also searched Harvard Medical College, but found nothing.

In the meantime, though, Ephraim Littlefield, a janitor at Harvard Medical College, decided to take matters into his own hand (there was a large reward being offered for information about Parkman’s disappearance). Littlefield knew that Webster had been in debt to Parkman, had met with him on the day of his disappearance, and had been questioned by the police. Webster, according to Littlefield, had a suspicious conversation with Littlefield about what Littlefield had witnessed, and later presented Littlefield with…a Thanksgiving turkey. (It was that time of year.)

Littlefield took the turkey home to his wife and they enjoyed a pleasant Thanksgiving dinner while Littlefield mused upon Webster’s odd behavior. But what could he be hiding? The police had searched the school building and turned up nothing. Littlefield remembered that the day before, though, Webster’s furnace in his laboratory had been burning all day. Curiouser and curiouser, Littlefield persuaded his wife to go to the school with him on Thanksgiving and keep watch while he broke into Webster’s lab. The privy in Webster’s suite of rooms emptied into a pit that hadn’t been searched by the police, and Littlefield focused his actions there, chiseling away at the brick wall (it was a time of strongly built buildings!). It was tough going, as you can imagine, and it was a holiday, so Littlefield gave up after a couple of hours and went to a dance. (True story.)

The next day, however, was no Black Friday shopping as we would have today. Littlefield went back to work, resumed his chiseling, broke through to the pit, and spotted human remains. He called for the police, who in turn arrested Webster, who in turn tried to commit suicide almost immediately. The police resumed their searching of Webster’s lab, which apparently had been totally half-hearted before, because now they found body parts, partially burned, in the furnace as well as in other hiding places around the lab. (Amazing detail: Parkman’s wife identified his body based on very personal parts of his body.)

There was a trial, so well attended that they had to hand out tickets and cycle groups of people in and out of the courtroom, and Webster was found guilty and sentenced to death. He later wrote a confession, claiming to have killed Parkman in self-defense. Webster was hanged…or so some people say. Others say he was never killed and was instead smuggled out of Boston. Still others thought Parkman himself hadn’t died and had simply fled the city. Sightings of both men happened all over the world for years afterwards. To this day, the whereabouts of Webster’s body is mere conjecture, because it was kept secret for fear of grave-robbing. (Or because he hadn’t died, if you believe the rumors.)

At any rate, who knows if either one of those tragically linked men ever left the spot of their final altercation?

(This story owes a debt to Cleveland Amory’s The Proper Bostonians, which was the first time I had ever heard of it.)

Langone Park in the North End

You might think that this is just a normal park, but, before it was a park, it was the site of a huge tank that stored molasses. Yes. Molasses. Which are basically a thick byproduct of the refining of sugar that you can use for a lot of stuff, and that was heavily used back in the beginning of the twentieth century. At that time also the North End was said to be the most densely populated area of the entire country, heavily packed with people.

In January 1919, the molasses storage tank, which had been poorly maintained by its owners, cracked open, possibly spurred by the stress of a sudden rise in temperature in the city’s weather. Molasses spilled into the North End at a speed of 35 miles per hour. A car can’t even reach 35 miles per hours these days in the narrow, clogged North End streets. The molasses plowed over crowds of people who couldn’t get out of the way quickly enough, killing 21 of them.

There are lots of historical ghosts in the North End, a very old part of the city that holds the famous Old North Church. But the molasses spill haunts more than anything else. On very hot days, the story goes, you can still smell the sticky sweet scent in the air.

Boston Massacre location outside the Old State House

In March 1770, a group of British soldiers fired into a crowd of Bostonians that had gathered in protest outside of the Old State House, killing five of them. Later, John Adams defended the soldiers and actually won acquittals for almost all of them, but the event was seared in the colonial memory as the Boston Massacre and helped spur the revolution that would come a few years later.

The victims are buried in the nearby Granary Burying Ground. The Granary Burying Ground and the Kings Chapel Burying Ground, also nearby, are both said to be haunted by plenty of unknown groups, but it’s the site of the Massacre itself that I find creepiest. It’s a round circle of bricks in front of the Old State House, now surrounded on all sides by very busy streets. In the midst of all the cars whizzing past, you can hear the chaos of that winter night that caused the frightened soldiers to fire into the crowd, and you can stand on the spot where the first five casualties of the American Revolution lost their lives.

Boston Common

Boston Common is the huge public park in the middle of Boston. In the beginning of Boston’s life, it was used for grazing cows. And for hanging people who upset the populace. These days, it’s just a park, but it’s said to be haunted by ghosts, both of those who lost their lives there and those who just loved the place and hate to leave it. You never know which kind you’ll meet!

Salem

This might be cheating, because it’s technically outside Boston, but it’s not very far, and no discussion of creepy goings-on in Boston is complete without remember the Salem Witch Trials of the late seventeenth century, in which an entire town was seized with panic and ended up gruesomely killing some twenty people accused of nothing more than being witches. Salem is full of witch trial linked attractions, but there is an official Witch Trials Memorial, adjacent to an old burying ground, that can raise chills as you read the words the poor victims pleaded in their defense.

Bonus Outside Boston Trip!

Medfield State Hospital: Formerly an asylum, this now-vacant hospital campus is open to the public daily for them to wander, but not many of them ever go. On the day we went, we were alone among the empty buildings where so many unfortunate, unhappy patients lived. Spooky and sad. And, if you want to see it, you should go now, because apparently they have begun demolishing the buildings

Thank you Skylar for giving us such a haunting tour of Boston!  

To learn more about Skylar Dorset and her books, please visit her website.  You can add the Otherworld series here on Goodreads.

The Boy with the Hidden Name otherworld young adult paranormal novel by skylar dorset on Paranormal Road Trip Destination Boston


Have you visited Boston, Massachusetts?  Ever experience anything of the supernatural kind in and around Boston?

What did you think of Skylar's picks for spooky places?

Last week on Paranormal Road Trip we visited Dublin, Ireland with Ruth Frances Long.  Next week we'll be doing a six month Paranormal Road Trip recap. Has it really been six months?  Wow!  The following week we'll be traveling to Banff with Nancy Baker.

Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!

Monday, January 12, 2015

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Dublin, Ireland with Ruth Frances Long

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Dublin, Ireland with Ruth Frances Long author of fantasy A Crack in Everything

Come on boys and ghouls!  It's time to hop on Route 666 for a spooktacular Paranormal Road Trip.  This week's stop is Dublin, Ireland and our special guide is Ruth Frances Long, author of A Crack in Everything.

A Crack in Everything is set in Dublin so it seems fitting that our guide for this week's Paranormal Road Trip be author Ruth Frances Long.  Let's see what terrifying places Ruth has planned for our tour.

Dublin's Top 5 Spooky Places

Dublin is a city rich in history and spooky stories. When writing "A Crack in Everything" I wanted to link in to that. The city dates from the 9th century, when the Viking settlement at Woodquay was founded. Throughout its long history, Dublin has been a turbulent place. Witchcraft, murder, secret societies, even whispering mummies, this city has seen it all. The atmosphere makes for an amazing addition to an urban fantasy. Here are some of my favourites.

Hellfire Club & Killakee House
Founded in 1737, the Hell Fire Club quickly became notorious for its evil antics. The former meeting ground is said to be haunted by some of these dark deeds.

The lone building known today as the Hellfire Club, perched on top of Mont Pelier hill, was built as a Hunting Lodge by one William Connolly, the Speaker of the Irish House of Commons in 1725. He was one of the richest men in Ireland. When the lodge was built, however, the builders used stones from the stone cairn, which would have been known locally as a fairy fort. Disturbing one is considered very unfortunate and bad luck always follows their destruction. The slate roof blew off the building in a storm and a massive arched roof of stones was built to replace it, the flat stones from the cairn incorporated into this, further compounding the sin. Connolly didn’t get much use from the lodge. He died in 1729.

The lodge was let to the Hell Fire Club, headed by Richard Parsons, the Earl of Rosse, and became the haunt for a number of Dublin rakes, notorious for drunkenness, debauchery, orgies and occult activities. Parsons was known as The King of Hell, and presided over the meetings. Perhaps it attracted some occult attention of its own. Stories began to grow about the club. Like the story of Loftus Hall, the devil is said to have arrived one night to play cards with the members, beating all there until someone discovered his cloven hooves, whereupon he vanished. A large black cat was also associated with the area, an evil creature which appeared to be at the centre of the occult activities. Stories vary as to whether this cat was part of a ritual gone wrong or a demon in feline form, but the cat has been seen there and in nearby Kilakee Stewards house. A young man who went to investigate the revels was found the following morning wandering the hillside in shock, unable to speak or hear for the rest of his life.

According to legend, the building burnt down when an unfortunately footman spilled brandy on "Burn-Chapel" Whaley's coat, who retaliated by dousing the man in brandy and setting him alight. The resulting fire killed many members of the club and left the lodge a ruin. That didn’t stop the members of the Hellfire Club, who relocated to Kilakee Stewards House, where they reportedly kidnapped, murdered and ate a local farmer’s daughter.  A number of apparitions still linger around the Stewards House, the spectoral black cat, and a pair of nuns who were said to have taken part in black masses at the lodge. The sound of bells, and poltergeist activity has also been reported, and a small, misshapen figure has been seen sometimes with the cat. A skeleton was found in 1971 by workmen, described as being that of a child or a dwarf murdered by the Hellfire Club.

Darkey Kelly
The notorious Darkey Kelly was burnt as a witch in 1746 after she accused the Sherriff of Dublin, Simon Luttrell, of fathering her child. Dorcas Kelly was keeper of the Maiden Tower brothel in Copper Alley, off Fishamble Street and that she tried to blackmail Luttrell by threatening to reveal not just his illegitimate child, but also his membership of the Hellfire Club. The story says he took the child from her, killed it in a Satanic ritual and accused her of witchcraft. However, new evidence found in the newspapers of the time in the National Archives,  has suggested that she was accused of murdering a shoemaker John Dowling and on investigation, the bodies of five other men were found in the vaults under the brothel.  Following her trial and execution the prostitutes rioted for days in Copper Alley.

The Green Lady, a famous Dublin ghost frequenly seen near St Audeons Church and in the streets near Christchurch Cathedral (streets once known as Hell), is said to be Darkey Kelly.

St. Michan’s Church
On the site of a Viking chapel, dating from 1095, the current church dates from 1686. Handel is reputed to have composed The Messiah on the organ here. But the church is best known for the vaults beneath it. The vaults are famous for their mummies, the limestone in the building drying the air and helping to preserve the bodies. Among those preserved are the 400 year old body of a nun, a man thought to have been a crusader and the Sheares brothers who took part in the rebellion of 1798. The warm, dry air which preserves their bodies makes the reports of icy fingers touching the backs of visitors’ necks even stranger. Others say they have heard disembodied voices whispering from the shadows or feel a cold, clammy presence as they look upon the dead.

Marsh’s Library
The ghost of Narcissus Marsh , Archbishop of Dublin, is said to haunt the library he founded, next to St. Patrick’s Cathedral.  By night, he wanders the shelves, browsing through the books, searching for something. Marsh founded the library in 1707 as the first public library in Dublin and it is still in use today, unchanged for three centuries, many of the books on the same beautiful dark oak shelves allocated to them by March and Elias Bouhéreau, the first librarian.

The popular story of the ghost concerns Marsh’s niece Grace, who acted as his housekeeper and who, at 19, eloped with Charles Proby, the vicar of Castleknock. It is said that Grace left a note for her uncle in one of the books before they eloped, but he did not find it in time and is still looking for it (Although they must have made up as Grace returned to nurse her uncle in his old age) . The ghost is said to haunt the inner gallery, which was his private collection, moving in and out of the shelves, taking down books and sometimes throwing them on the desks in anger or frustration, although he always leaves the library in perfect order when he’s done.

Boyd’s Dog
On the 8th February, 1861, the worst storm ever recorded in the Irish Sea sank 135 vessels, 13 in the area around Dun Laoghaire Harbour. The crew of the coastguard ship, the Ajax, were among those searching the wreckage, under Captain John McNeill Boyd, trying to rescue the men of the stricken ship the Nepture, which had hit the rocks off the East Pier. Heavily dressed for cold weather, the men found ropes, lashed themselves together and hurried out onto the rocks off the East Pier when a large wave, said to be as high as a mountain, crashed over the, sweeping them all into the sea.  Boyd and five of his men were lost. Their bodies were not found for several days and Boyd himself was not found for several weeks. In the meantime the lifeboat from the Ajax continued to patrol, searching for them, with Boyd’s faithful black dog in the prow of the boat.

The crew were buried in the graveyard at Carrickbrennan in Monkstown, near Dun Laoghaire. Boyd was buried in the grounds of St. Patrick’s Cathedral, with a memorial to him erected inside the Cathedral itself.  It was reported to be one of the biggest funerals ever seen in Dublin and the Captain’s dog walked behind the hearse. It guarded his body while it lay in state in the Cathedral and lay on top of the grave, refusing to move in spite of attempts to entice it away or feed it, until it died.

The ghostly form of a large black dog is still frequently reported at Boyd’s grave, at the foot of the memorial in the Cathedral  and crossing the road to the now closed Carrickbrennan graveyard in Monkstown where the rest of the crew lie.

Thank you Ruth for giving us such a haunting tour of Dublin!  

To learn more about Ruth Frances Long and her books, please visit her website, and don't miss our Q+A with Ruth Frances Long here at From the Shadows.  You can add A Crack in Everything here on Goodreads.

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Dublin, Ireland with Ruth Frances Long author of fantasy A Crack in Everything


Have you visited Dublin, Ireland?  Ever experience anything of the supernatural kind in and around Dublin?

What did you think of Ruth's picks for spooky places?

Last week on Paranormal Road Trip we visited Sydney, Australia with Yolanda Sfetsos.  Next week we'll be traveling to Boston, Massachusetts with Skylar Dorset, author of the Otherworld series.

Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!

Monday, January 5, 2015

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Sydney, Australia with Yolanda Sfetsos

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Sydney, Australia with Yolanda Sfetsos author of Seirra Fox Urban Fantasy series

Come on boys and ghouls!  It's time to hop on Route 666 for a spooktacular Paranormal Road Trip.  This week's stop is San Diego, California and our special guide is Yolanda Sfetsos, author of the Sierra Fox urban fantasy series.

The Sierra Fox series is set in Sydney, Australia so it seems fitting that our guide for this week's Paranormal Road Trip be author Yolanda Sfetsos.  Let's see what terrifying places Yolanda has planned for our tour.

Sydney's Top 5 Spooky Places

Hi! It’s great to be here today. Although I set my Sierra Fox series in my city of Sydney, because it actually takes place in an alternate history where ghosts have rights, I decided to set it in a fictional suburb called Serene Hills. Serene Hills is a combination of the many suburbs I’ve lived in.

So, here are the spookiest places:

5. Bayview Cemetery is the local cemetery. As a spook catcher, it’s also a place that Sierra tries not to visit too often. There are always too many wandering spirits trying to get her attention.

4. The Hocking House is situated in Serene Hills East, the more expensive part of town. It’s where a whole lot of demonic trouble starts after an amateur who had no business conjuring any kind of demonic entity raises one that wreaks havoc inside this lovely house. Serious trouble that ripples throughout the entire series.

3. The Haunted House is only a five minute drive from Sierra’s home and is a ‘hotspot for chaotic spook activity’. It’s also a place from Sierra’s childhood—where she spent a horrifying night trapped with a girl called Jackie and the horrors trapped inside. The results changed her young life. After that night, Jackie spread hurtful rumors about Sierra and made her school life miserable.

Later in life it becomes an address she visits constantly to remove one spook after another. Ultimately, this house becomes a place where something devastating happens to someone she cares about.

2. Spook Catcher Council Tower is located on Sussex Street in the CBD. Sussex Street is the name of an actual street in Sydney. And the building I imagined actually stands exactly where I situated this Tower, near an overpass that leads to the motorway. But it’s not called SCCT, and it’s certainly not the chaotic hub that I created in Sierra’s world.

The Spook Catcher Council is a terrible place that always makes Sierra feel physically ill. That’s because misbehaving/dangerous spooks are deposited here before sentencing. But as she eventually finds out…there is something a LOT worse hidden beneath.

1. The abandoned part of town is located in North Serene Hills, and there are many reasons why this is the spookiest, most haunted place in Sierra’s world. Not only because it’s been abandoned for decades, with imprints of people from long ago still caught in a cycle. There’s also a magical power grid situated here, as well as a three-pronged crossroads fit for a Goddess. It’s where the hunters meet with the mysterious Tailor from the Patch Watchdog once a month.

Yet, as creepy and filled with paranormal activity as this location is, it’s deeply connected to Sierra. For many otherworldly reasons.

Thank you Yolanda for giving us such a haunting tour of Sydney!  

To learn more about Yolanda Sfetsos and her books, please visit her website, and don't miss our Q+A with Yolanda Sfetsos here at From the Shadows.  You can add the Sierra Fox urban fantasy series here on Goodreads.

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Sydney, Australia with Yolanda Sfetsos author of A Stitch on Time a Seirra Fox Urban Fantasy series novel


Have you visited Sydney, Australia?  Ever experience anything of the supernatural kind in and around Sydney?

What did you think of Yolanda's picks for spooky places?

Last week on Paranormal Road Trip we visited San Diego with Jennifer Harlow.  Next week we'll be traveling to Dublin with Ruth Frances Long.

Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!

Monday, December 29, 2014

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination San Diego with Jennifer Harlow

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination San Diego with Jennifer Harlow Author of F.R.E.A.K.S urban fantasy

Come on boys and ghouls!  It's time to hop on Route 666 for a spooktacular Paranormal Road Trip.  This week's stop is San Diego, California and our special guide is Jennifer Harlow, author of the F.R.E.A.K.S Squad Investigation urban fantasy series.

Death Takes a Holiday is set in San Diego so it seems fitting that our guide for this week's Paranormal Road Trip be author Jennifer Harlow.  Let's see what terrifying places Jennifer has planned for our tour.

San Diego's Top 5 Spooky Places

Though the F.R.E.A.K.S. Squad travels the country investigating and capturing preternatural perps, only one town holds telekinetic Special Agent Beatrice Alexander’s heart: her home town of San Diego.  Let's see what terrifying places Jennifer has planned for our tour.

San Diego. Known for it’s year-round sunshine, sandy beaches with clear blue water, and being the home of Geek Mecca aka Comic Con. But like every town under the glossy veneer lies a past with more than a few skeletons in its closet, ones who just won’t stay dead. Here are the five such closets:

Whaley House: Both Life magazine and The Travel Channel’s America’s Most Haunted have called this house “the most haunted house in America.” Built over a cemetery near a gallows site, several people have died (and seemingly come back) inside its wall, including the owners Thomas, Anna and the suicide of sister Violet. Cold spots, objects, including a cleaver, moving on their own, and sightings of hanged gambler Yankee Jim Robinson and a child’s apparitions moving around the house.

Horton’s Grand Hotel: In 1986, a psychic detected the ghost of Roger Whitaker, a gambler who was gunned down and left to die in an armoire in Room 309 after claims of lights turning on and off, the sounds of a paranormal poker game, cold spots and even playing cards suddenly appearing. You can rent the room. If you dare.

Star of India Sailing Ship: This floating museum was built in 1863 and eventually made its way to the San Diego Harbor where it became a museum in the 1970s. After sailing around the world as a cargo vessel it picked up some permanent inhabitants—an officer who committed suicide, a young boy who fell from the mast, and a Chinese fisherman crushed by the anchor chain.

Hotel Del Coronado: Ask for Room 3502. In 1892, a young woman checked into the Hotel Del Coronado to meet her estranged husband for Thanksgiving. He never arrived, and a few days later, she was found dead on the hotel steps near the ocean. Since then, guests and staff of the Hotel Del Coronado have noticed strange breezes, ghostly noises and the pale figure of a young lady walking in a black lace dress. Within room 3502, more than 37 abnormal readings were taken by parapsychologists in a single day. Say hi to Kate Morgan for me.

Pioneer Park: In 1870, this ten acre plot of land became the final resting place for 1,650 souls. Then in 1968, since it was in such disrepair, the tombstones that were illegible were recycled while others were placed in a corner as a memorial. Trees were planted, playground equipment installed and an elementary school was built next door. The graves themselves were never moved. Ghostly lights are reported here. Didn’t we learn anything from the movie Poltergeist?

Thank you Jennifer for giving us such a haunting tour of San Diego!  

To learn more about Jennifer Harlow and her books, please visit her website, and don't miss our Q+A with Jennifer Harlow here at From the Shadows.  You can add the F.R.E.A.K.S Squad Investigation series here on Goodreads.

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination San Diego with Jennifer Harlow Author of Death Takes a Holiday a F.R.E.A.K.S Squad Investigation urban fantasy


Have you visited San Diego?  Ever experience anything of the supernatural kind in and around San Diego?

What did you think of Jennifer's picks for spooky places?

Last week on Paranormal Road Trip we visited Eden, Kentucky with Sharon Buchbinder.  Next week we'll be traveling to Sydney, Australia with Yolanda Sfetsos, author of the Sierra Fox series.

Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!

Monday, December 22, 2014

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Eden, Kentucky with Sharon Buchbinder

Paranormal Road Trip: Spooky Places in Eden, Kentucky with Sharon Buchbinder

Come on boys and ghouls!  It's time to hop on Route 666 for a spooktacular Paranormal Road Trip.  This week's stop is the fictional town of Eden, Kentucky and our special guide is Sharon Buchbinder, author of Kiss of the Silver Wolf.

Eden, Kentucky. Sounds idyllic, doesn’t it? On first blush, it seems like a trip to a golden age of America. A small town with friendly people who produce some of the finest apples in the United States. Take a moment. Look at that delicious red apple you’re about to bite into. Where did it come from? Perhaps it came from one of the eeriest orchards in the country.

Eden, Kentucky's Top 5 Spooky Places

The Orchards: Apple orchards abound in Eden, providing income to the close-knit community. They also serve as playgrounds for the pack at night on full moons, where pups and elders can doff their human bodies and revel in their werewolf forms. If   hunters would leave them alone, it would be perfect.

The Mine: Homeland Security Special Agent Eliana Solomon is hot on the trail of a jinni portal, and the energy signature is coming from an abandoned mine. She sends a scout down the shaft to get more data—and hauls up a corpse with a warning carved into his forehead.

The General Store: A wrap around porch invites you to sit a spell and sip some coffee or cider while you pass the time chatting with neighbors about the apple crop. Inside, a variety of goods await you that would seem fine—if you were living in the 1800’s and drove a horse-drawn buggy. This is no backdrop in an amusement park for ambiance. This store serves the entire town of Eden and surrounding rural areas. There is no ordering online. There is no “online” in Eden. There are no cell phones, no televisions, no modern electronic devices, at all. Due to interference from the jinn, nothing modern works in this particular corner of the world. 

The Hollow: When Charlene Johnson takes a bus driver job to supplement her apple orchard income, she works for the beguiling, silver-haired Zack Abingdon. After extensive training, he warns her repeatedly to get the kids home before sundown. She worries about communication, since her cell phone doesn’t work in Eden. Zack tells her to use the radio, but sometimes in the hollows and near the mining camp, it won’t work. One day, while driving the children home from school, a thick green fog mist blankets the road in the hollow and a pack of black dogs runs in front of the bus. Charlene swerves to avoid hitting them and the bus crashes. When she comes to, it is sundown, and the reason why the kids are supposed to home before dark is revealed.

The Woods by the Mine: The only place worse than the mine is the forested area around it. The evil jinni is intent on wreaking revenge against the Carter pack for killing a member of his clan. He wants Charlene and lures her to the woods with his whispers. Can Zack arrive in time to save her?

Thank you Sharon for giving us such a haunting tour of Eden!  

To learn more about Sharon Buchbinder and her books, please visit her website, and don't miss our Q+A with Sharon Buckbinder here at From the Shadows.  You can add Kiss of the Silver Wolf here on Goodreads.

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Eden, Kentucky with Sharon Buchbinder author of Kiss of the Silver Wolf

What did you think of Sharon Buchbinder's picks for spooky places?

Last week on Paranormal Road Trip we visited New York City.  Next week we'll be traveling to San Diego with Jennifer Harlow, author of the F.R.E.A.K.S Squad Investigation series.

Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!

Monday, December 15, 2014

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination New York City

Paranormal Road Trip List of New York City's Top 5 Spooky Places

Come on boys and ghouls!  It's time to hop on Route 666 for a spooktacular Paranormal Road Trip.  This week's stop is New York City.

For this week's Paranormal Road Trip, we're doing something a bit different.  This week I'll be visiting NYC for a few days, so I thought it would be fun to check out some spooky places listed online, and to revisit a previous Paranormal Road Trip post.

My List of New York City's Top 5 Spooky Places

North Brother Island:  An abandoned island that once housed Riverside Hospital, a hospital specializing in treating diseases that required quarantine—a subject all the more poignant in today's Ebola frenzied social climate.  Riverside Hospital became a prison for Mary Mallon, the famous Typhoid Mary, who was quarantined here for three decades.  Mary died here after years of living in isolation.  Some say she never left.

Chumley's:  This pub is rumored to be haunted by the ghost of Henrietta Chumley, who owned the establishment in its days a speakeasy.  Henrietta is said to have rattled glasses and knocked bottles from the shelves.  Unfortunately, the pub is currently closed due to the collapse of its chimney, a problem probably due more to the passage of time than Henrietta Chumley's mischievous ghost.

Landmark Tavern:  Another haunted drinking establishment, Landmark Tavern makes this list for it's two resident ghosts.  The tavern is said to be haunted by a confederate soldier, who was shot here in a bar brawl, and a young girl who died here from typhoid fever.  The girl is said to haunt the third floor, and the soldier haunts the second floor which still houses the bathtub where the man bled out.

Washington Square Park:  The site of a former potter's field, Washington Square Park sits on the unmarked graves of over twenty-thousand corpses.  Many of the people buried here were victims of the 19th century yellow fever epidemic, and their bones have surfaced during construction and when the park was used as military parade grounds.  Have these disturbances of their final resting place caused disturbances of a very different kind?  You decide.

Hangman's Elm:  Hangman's Elm, or The Hanging Tree, is located just off Washington Square Park.  This tree, the oldest in Manhattan, has a ghoulish reputation for being the haunt of ghosts rumored to have been hung here.  City records provide no documented proof of the tree being used in public hangings, though a hanging is recorded to have occurred nearby.  Perhaps the sightings are of the park's other ghostly residents...

I was planning on doing a bit of sight seeing while in NYC, but, on second thought, perhaps I'll just hide in my hotel room.  Searching the internet for spooky sights may have been a bad idea.  Are you scared yet?

Also, don't miss Melissa de la Cruz' picks for the top 5 spookiest places in Manhattan.


Manhattan's Top Five Spooky Places

Manhattan is a city full of history and haunted places. A few of my favorite places to ghost-bust, below.

Hotel Chelsea
222 West 23rd St. 

The famous hotel in Chelsea was the site of many deaths. Poet Dylan Thomas, who wrote of the “dying of the light” and died there is said to haunt near room 206. Doomed punk couple Sid Vicious and Nancy Spungen are said to haunt the lower floors. Sid killed Nancy in a drunken, drugged out fight, and he died of a heroin overdose before he could stand trial.

White Horse Tavern
567 Hudson St.
One of my favorite bars downtown, and related to the Chelsea Hotel. Dylan Thomas reportedly drank 18 whiskey shots here before collapsing and being brought back to his room at the Chelsea. It’s said he haunts his usual table at the tavern from time to time.

One If by Land, Two If by Sea

17 Barrow St.


One of the most romantic restaurants in Manhattan, it is also the former home of Alexander Hamilton and his daughter Theodosia, who have supposedly never left. Diners are said to have experienced being shoved by them, lights flicker, and women’s earrings disappear. Staffers insist the ghosts are friendly, but maybe a little cheeky?

Edgar Allen Poe’s Abode
85 West 3rd Street

“Nevermore” author Edgar Allen Poe lived here for eight months in 1845 and 1846, and wrote “The Raven” here. The house has been demolished for NYU dorms but students say they’ve seen the haunted and haunting writer climbing the banister, the only remaining part of the original house.

Mark Twain House
14 W 10th St between Fifth and Sixth Aves

The practical and down to earth writer born Samuel Clemens lived in Greenwich Village from 1900-1901 and reportedly haunts this domain. He was skeptical of ghosts, so it’s hard to believe he became one upon his death.

You can read Melissa's entire Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Manhattan guest post here.


What did you think of our picks for spooky places?

Last week on Paranormal Road Trip we visited Twelve Acres, Colorado with Teri Harman.  Next week we'll be back to our regularly scheduled Paranormal Road Trip, and we'll be traveling to Eden, Kentucky with Sharon Buchbinder.

Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!

Monday, December 1, 2014

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination South Tom's River, NJ with Shawntelle Madison

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination South Tom's River, New Jersey with Shawntelle Madison

Come on boys and ghouls!  It's time to hop on Route 666 for a spooktacular Paranormal Road Trip.  This week's stop is South Tom's River, New Jersey and our special guide is Shawntelle Madison author of the Coveted series.

The Coveted series is set in South Tom's River so it seems fitting that our guide for this week's Paranormal Road Trip be the amazing Shawntelle Madison.  Let's see what terrifying places Shawntelle has planned for our tour.

South Tom's River's Top 5 Spooky Places

The cozy borough of South Toms River, New Jersey was incorporated in 1927.  Before that point, the place had been the home to colonists from overseas and all sorts of spooky inhabitants.

Road Trip Stop #1:  Bend of the River Flea Market

The Bend of the River Flea Market, or The Bends, as the locals call it, happens to be a hot spot of paranormal activity. Most citizens go about their business, unaware that between the Victorian furniture and antiques ghosts and other ghouls roam the hallways.

According to the Fire Witch who works at the cash registers, there is a ghostly gentleman in 1940s attire who visits the back docks every morning. She leaves a lit cigarette for him in the morning, and by the afternoon when her shift ends, the cigarette is nothing but a stub.

The locals say every once in a while, during the red hunter’s moon, they see a goblin-like man sneaking on and off the property. Also, the place makes strange noises at night. The sound is loud as if someone is stacking coins into a monstrous pile.

Road Trip Stop #2:  Archie’s Burgers and Fries

If you asked anyone in South Toms River if Archie’s was haunted, they’d laugh at you. And for good reason. Archie’s has the best burgers in the area. From over a mile away you can practically taste the fresh fries and hear the sizzle of the burgers on the grill. But locals have said during the full moon they see large four-legged creatures roaming the parking lot. For some reason, Animal Removal Services refuses to drive in the neighborhood during the full moon.

Road Trip Stop #3:  Smiling Sammy’s Bait and Tackle

Right off the town marina, Smiling Sammy’s Bait and Tackle is a haunted hot spot. Compared to most bait and tackle establishments, Sammy Burnell’s place always seems strangely tidy and smells like confectionaries. It’s almost as if someone shows up nightly and cleans up any of the cigarette butts or litter left along the curb. According to city records, in the 1950s the building used to be a candy shop and a bait & tackle establishment. As you can imagine, most folks didn’t want to buy their Charleston Chews with a bucket of stinky, squirmy worms. The earthy smell inside the store confused most folks, too.

After winning the state championship, high school students once took a box of toilet paper, double-layered with extra softness, and tee-peed the place. The next morning, the owner showed up to find a free box of toilet paper and a rusty, old can of Beer Nuts at his door step.  Some citizens whisper that the candy store owner, who passed away after choking on a box of month-old, rock-hard Milk Duds, is determined for bait shop to become a candy store again.

Road Trip Stop #4:  Family Bargain Video and DVD Super Store

This place isn’t haunted per se, but well, the store is always empty. The owner says VHS and LaserDisc tapes are gonna make a comeback, but the shelves seem to be fully stocked. An investigation from a local paranormal activity group came out with inconclusive results. There seems to be a VCR that rewinds on its own…

Road Trip Stop #5:  Mr. Greg Jacobson’s Field

There’s a field not too far from a small cottage to the south of town. The illusive woman who lives in the cottage nearby didn’t have much to say about the strange field, but an investigation did reveal there’s something weird about Mr. Greg Jacobson’s cornfield. There’s a large, peculiar rock in the center of one of the fields that Mr. Jacobson refuses to remove.

“It’s weird as hell, but the crops grow well around it,” he says. He shrugs and gives a toothy grin. “My wife says I got fairies or something loco like that, but I have a feeling the neighbors are letting their cows take a dump in that field. Pure gold cowpies, I tell ya!”

If you took the time to head over there, the rock is strange to the touch. A bit warm, even on a crisp fall day. There’s a bit of a hum to it, too. Almost as if something is vibrating inside.

Want to explore more of the Coveted universe in South Toms River, NJ? Check out the Coveted series books: Coveted (Book #1), Kept (Book #2), and Compelled (Book #3).

Thank you Shawntelle for giving us such a haunting tour of South Tom's River!  

To learn more about Shawntelle Madison and her books, please visit her website, and don't miss our Q+A with Shawntelle Madison here at From the Shadows.  You can add the Coveted series here on Goodreads.


Paranormal Road Trip: Destination South Tom's River, New Jersey with Shawntelle Madison author of Compelled a Coveted Novel

What did you think of Shawntelle Madison's picks for spooky places?

Last week on Paranormal Road Trip we visited Los Angeles with Melissa F. Olson.  Next week we'll be traveling to Twelve Acres, Colorado with Teri Harman.

Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!

Monday, November 24, 2014

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination L.A. with Melissa F. Olson

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination L.A. with Melissa F. Olson spooky places in Los Angeles

Come on boys and ghouls!  It's time to hop on Route 666 for a spooktacular Paranormal Road Trip.  This week's stop is Los Angeles, California and our special guide is Melissa F. Olson, author of the Scarlett Bernard series.

The Scarlett Bernard series is set in Los Angeles so it seems fitting that our guide for this week's Paranormal Road Trip be the amazing Melissa F. Olson.  Let's see what terrifying places Melissa has planned for our tour.

L.A.'s Top 5 Spooky Places

5. Downtown at night

Downtown Los Angeles is a hive of commerce during the day, but when it gets dark (and there aren’t any movies being filmed) the streets get a sinister, desolate vibe. It’s not just dangerous; it’s completely spooky—especially in the Toy District, where you might theoretically see abandoned pieces of doll parts in the gutters. Just saying.

4. The Griffith Park Zoo

The history of Griffith Park is a complex saga, complete with plenty of suspicious deaths and even a rumored curse. It’s tough to separate the actual facts from the fantastical gossip, especially in a town as unabashedly invested in self-promotion as LA. But here’s what we know for sure: 1.) Before the Los Angeles Zoo was built, there used to be a small zoo in Griffith Park. 2.) It was abandoned, but many of the structures were left in place. 3.) Because of the Griffith Park Observatory, this is one of the only parks in LA open after dark. 4.) I will never be visiting.

3. The abandoned south campus of Rancho Los Amigos Hospital

Everyone has their thing that terrifies them most. For some people it’s clowns, or small spaces, or demonic possession. Me, I have a thing about abandoned psychiatric facilities. Particularly creepy, abandoned thirty-years-ago kind of places like the former psychiatric wing of the Rancho Los Amigos.

Founded in 1888 as the County Poor Farm, the southern campus of the still-operating Rancho Los Amigos Hospital once served the impoverished, the diseased, and yes, the mentally ill. The earthquake-damaged southern campus was eventually abandoned in the late 1980’s, and used for law enforcement training.  It’s pitch-black in there, the floors are unstable, and of course, rumor has it there are ghosts. To up the creep factor even further, in 2006 one of those training groups found a freezer full of human limbs. They’d just been forgotten.

2. Hollywood Forever Cemetery

Los Angeles is all about selling: selling yourself, selling an image, selling a dream, selling an experience. When your attitude is that entrepreneurial, you don’t balk at things which other towns might consider taboo…like organizing movie outings in the middle of a cemetery. Hollywood Forever takes its name very seriously, hosting concerts and film screenings among the graves -yes, this includes horror movies. Watching a scary movie while surrounded by the dead? Undeniably creepy.

1. The Cecil Hotel (Now the Stay on Main)

Shirley Jackson’s novel The Haunting of Hill House raises the possibility that some places are just created bad: malevolent, insidious, and just plain wrong.  LA’s answer to this concept has got to be the Cecil Hotel, the location of a number of murders and suicides, plus the inevitable haunting rumors. In 2013, for instance, a 21-year-old Canadian student disappeared from the Cecil. Days later, after hotel residents complained that the tap water tasted funny, the student’s corpse was found floating in the rooftop water tank. The investigation concluded that her death was accidental, but elevator security footage shows her having a passionate argument on the way to the roof – with an invisible force.

Thank you Melissa for giving us such a haunting tour of L.A.!  

To learn more about Melissa F. Olson and her books, please visit her website.  You can add the Scarlett Bernard series here on Goodreads.


Paranormal Road Trip: Destination L.A. with Melissa F. Olson author of Hunter's Trail Scarlett Bernard

What did you think of Marlene's picks for spooky places?

Last week on Paranormal Road Trip we visited Detroit, Michigan with Amber Lynn Natusch.  Next week we'll be traveling to South Tom's River, New Jersey with Shawntelle Madison.

Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!

Monday, November 17, 2014

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Detroit with Amber Lynn Natusch


Come on boys and ghouls!  It's time to hop on Route 666 for a spooktacular Paranormal Road Trip.  This week's stop is Detroit, Michigan and our special guide is Amber Lynn Natusch, author of the Unborn series.

The Unborn series is set in Detroit so it seems fitting that our guide for this week's Paranormal Road Trip be the amazing Amber Lynn Natusch.  Let's see what terrifying places Amber has planned for our tour.

Detroit's Top 5 Spooky Places

1) Heidelberg Project
2) Masonic Temple
3) Michigan Central Station
4) Lee Plaza Hotel
5) United Artists Theater


Thank you Amber for giving us such a haunting tour of Detroit!  

To learn more about Amber Lynn Natusch and her books, please visit her website.  You can add the Unborn series here on Goodreads.



What did you think of Amber's picks for spooky places?

Want more information about spooky places to visit in Detroit?  Don't miss Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Detroit with Laura Bickle.

Last week on Paranormal Road Trip we visited Nightshade, California with Marlene Perez.  Next week we'll be traveling to Los Angeles, California with Melissa F. Olson.

Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!

Monday, November 10, 2014

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Nightshade with Marlene Perez

Paranormal Road Trip

Come on boys and ghouls!  It's time to hop on Route 666 for a spooktacular Paranormal Road Trip.  This week's stop is Nightshade, California and our special guide is Marlene Perez, author of the Nyx Fortuna series.

The Nyx Fortuna series is set in Nightshade so it seems fitting that our guide for this week's Paranormal Road Trip be the amazing Marlene Perez.  Let's see what terrifying places Marlene has planned for our tour.

Nightshade's Top 5 Spooky Places

My Dead Is series features the Giordano sisters, three psychic teens who solve mysteries in the paranormal town of Nightshade, California.

5) Slim's Diner- Daisy Giordano works there. Order of Slim's amazing cinnamon rolls and try to get a glimpse of him. The owner is invisible, need I say more?  Or drop a quarter into the jukebox and get a cryptic clue from Lil in a song. 

4) The Wilder estate is the perfect place to impress a date.  After dinner, take a stroll in the maze, but watch out for werewolves.

3) a bonfire on the beach is a perfect summer time activity, but you may see a ghostly white horse galloping on the beach. If you listen closely, you might hear a mermaid sweetly singing.

2)  Nightshade City Council meets at midnight. Mr. Bone, the mild-mannered funeral home owner is also the head of the council, but he has a few secrets. If you prefer, cheer on the Nightshade High football team, but don't let any thirsty cheerleaders get you alone.

1) The morgue. Not all the dead bodies there are exactly dead. This is both spooky and sweet since it is the location of Daisy and Ryan's first kiss. In the last book in the series, the morgue is also the location of a big moment in Daisy and Ryan's life.


Thank you Marlene for giving us such a haunting tour of Nightshade!  

To learn more about Marlene Perez and her books, please visit her website, and don't miss our Q+A with Marlene Perez here at From the Shadows.  You can add the Nyx Fortuna series here on Goodreads.


Destination Nightshade with Marlene Perez

What did you think of Marlene's picks for spooky places?

Last week on Paranormal Road Trip we visited Bruges, Belgium with E.J. Stevens.  Next week we'll be traveling to Detroit, Michigan with Amber Lynn Natusch.

Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!

Monday, November 3, 2014

Paranormal Road Trip: Destination Bruges with E.J. Stevens


Come on boys and ghouls!  It's time to hop on Route 666 for a spooktacular Paranormal Road Trip.  This week's stop is Bruges, Belgium and our special guide is E.J. Stevens, author of the Spirit Guide, Ivy Granger, and Hunters' Guild series.

Hunting in Bruges, the first novel in the Hunters' Guild series is set in Bruges, Belgium so it seems fitting that our guide for this week's Paranormal Road Trip be E.J. Stevens.  Let's see what terrifying places E.J. has planned for our tour.

Bruges' Top 5 Spooky Places

The charming medieval city of Bruges, Belgium may seem like an unusual setting for an urban fantasy novel.  The city is known for its tranquil canals, historic buildings, and romantic vistas.  But the moment I saw a picture of Bruges, my mind began populating its cobblestone streets with bloodthirsty vampires, flesh eating ghouls, monstrous fae, and wailing ghosts.

Imagine my surprise when I discovered that there really was something sinister in the city's bloody history.  My research into Bruges began in earnest, and last year I completed my book research with a trip to Belgium.  The pictures included with this post are from that research trip.  These photos are taken during daylight hours, but I can assure you that the atmosphere becomes decidedly spooky when the sun goes down over West Flanders.  Do ghosts walk the streets of Bruges?  I will let you decide.

The Canals
The canals play an important part in my novel, Hunting in Bruges.  Jenna Lehane, a Hunter with a troubled past, arrives in Bruges to discover that something is killing humans and disposing of their bodies in the canals.  Not only are the canals filling with corpses, but there are supernatural horrors that call the canals their home.  While I was visiting Bruges, the canals were the watery grave for more than one unfortunate creature.  Did these ducks, pigeons, and small mammals die from natural causes, or is there something deadly lurking within these dark waters?

Jerusalem Church (Jeruzalemkerk)
I have to admit that I was completely unprepared for the experience I had within the stone walls of Jerusalem Church.  The macabre altarpiece and tomb were ghoulish, but the truly terrifying part of this church lay in a crawlspace in the vaulted chapel in the back.  A cloth wrapped body is on display, and though I've read that this is a replica of Christ's tomb, there is something chilling about that small chamber.  My travel companion bolted out the door...and I wasn't far behind.  (Note: No pictures came out of the rear tomb.  The photos were completely black.) 

Beguinage (Begijnhof)
Beguines were lay sisters who lived and dressed as nuns, but did not take vows.  The Beguinage continues to be a place of silence within the bustling city--a silence that can seem downright eerie.  During my trip, the courtyard was filled with a field of wilting daffodils.  Beauty with an edge of decay seemed to be the common theme of this place.  One house has been preserved in its original rustic state and visitors can wander the maze of tiny rooms filled with antique furniture and aging lace to see the way in which the Beguines lived.  I swear that someone, or something, was watching me during my entire visit.  With every creak of the old wooden floors, my unease grew and I made a hasty retreat to Minnewater Park.


Basilica of the Holy Blood (Heilig-Bloedbasiliek)
12th century basilica located on Burg square in the heart of Bruges.  The church houses the relic of the Holy Blood.  The Holy Blood is venerated daily, and is paraded through the streets of Bruges during the Procession of the Holy Blood on Ascension Day.

Saint John's Hospital (Sint-Janshospitaal)
This place is not for the faint of heart.  The 11th century hospital is one of the oldest in Europe and contains the often grotesque artwork of Hans Memling, as well as many antique surgical implements.  The artwork and objects of torture are absolutely horrifying and the depictions of nuns in their traditional garb had me jumping at my shadow. 

A few other notable places to add to any ghost tour of Bruges are the Spookhuis, Retsin's Lucifernum, Sint-Salvator Cathedral, Belfort, Stadhuis, Blind Donkey Alley, Church of Our Lady, and a viewing of Heironymous Bosch's haunting triptych The Last Judgement at the Groeningemuseum.



To learn more about E.J. Stevens and her books, connect through Goodreads, Twitter, and sign-up for her newsletter.  There is an interesting article about Hunting in Bruges in the Belgian newspaper Het Nieuwsblad.  Hunting in Bruges releases November 11th and is available for pre-order on Amazon.  You can add the Hunters' Guild series here on Goodreads.


Hunting in Bruges urban fantasy by E.J. Stevens vampire demon monster hunter


Readers, was this your first visit to Bruges, Belgium?  Have you experienced anything supernatural in and around Bruges?

What did you think of E.J. Stevens' picks for spooky places?

Last week on Paranormal Road Trip we visited Detroit with Laura Bickle.  Next week we'll be traveling to Nightshade, California with Marlene Perez.

Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!