True Irish Ghost Stories

by St. John D. Seymour (Editor), Harry L. Neligan (Editor)

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Description

Settle in for a series of real-life scares from the Emerald Isle. Compiled by a long-time researcher of supernatural phenomenon, these creepy tales come straight from the mouths of the Irish people who experienced the ghostly encounters themselves or who had first-hand knowledge of them. It's a gripping read that just may prompt you to leave the light on.

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4 reviews
Actually a holdover from my 2013 reading list, I am just getting around to logging this book. A reprint of a work originally published in 1916, True Irish Ghost Stories is fairly dry reading, since it is a series of collected letters, wherein people recount their encounters with allegedly supernatural events. Most of the works take the form of “Mrs. S____ of County B____ recalls . . .”

I came across this book in one hotel’s “Take One / Leave One” library, and being a fan of ghost stories swapped this for a book I was carrying for just such a purpose. At first I was severely disappointed: I was looking to add to my collection of Ghost Stories. After a while, I realized I had some good source material here to help create my own show more versions of these tales. It also took a while to get past the dated syntax and colloquialisms, but in the end, I found it worth more than the price I paid, but not a truly superior find. (Yes, it has influenced my writing style as well!)

I would not go out of my way to seek this book out, but if you come across it, at least try it. It may be more to your liking than mine and does have some stories you just can’t find anyplace else. I’ll elevate this to three stars because of the curiosity factor.
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It took me so much longer than I wanted to read this one, but I finished it. I have mixed feelings about it. I started out reading it with my daughter, but it was just a very dry reading overall, so I ended up just recording the rest for her to listen when she wants later. I don't know why I was expecting something much more lively, but I was. So it was a bit disappointing. However, that being said, the experiences themselves were interesting and it's obvious that the author put a lot of work into collecting and compiling the stories, which he did fairly well in the greater scheme of it all. I kind of wish Goodreads would allow half stars, because it's closer to a 2.5 for me, but it doesn't, so I'm going with 3.
Though the stories are not necessarily chillers, this book's value lies in its history. Seymour's piecing together of these stories and insistence upon their authenticity, based upon what would today be the shoddiest of proof, makes this an entertaining read and an interesting anthropological insight.
Book Description: Bristol: Parragon, 1998. Trade Paperback. Very Fine/No Jacket. 335pp - 1st Parragon Edition. Paperback. 8vo - over 7" - 9¾" tall.

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Editor
9 Works 627 Members
Editor
1 Work 439 Members

Some Editions

Lord, Michael (Introduction)

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1914
Important places
Ireland

Classifications

Genre
Horror
DDC/MDS
133.109415Philosophy and PsychologyParapsychology & occultismSpecific topics in parapsychology and occultismApparitionsEurope
LCC
BF1472 .T78Philosophy, Psychology and ReligionPsychologyOccult sciencesGhosts. Apparitions. Hauntings
BISAC

Statistics

Members
438
Popularity
69,712
Reviews
4
Rating
½ (3.29)
Languages
English, German
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
50
UPCs
1
ASINs
13