



#interview with the vampire#iwtv#the vampire armand#assad zaman

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...for he subscribes to the notion that it is places (like houses, residences, and public buildings) that are the scenes of hauntings... my own position is that in most instances of reported hauntings, whether by ghosts or poltergeists, it is people rather than places who are haunted. This was also the position of George and Iris Owen, Canada's most widely respected "ghost hunters". Indeed, Iris was known to say, "Parapsychology is people." Without a person present there is no ghostly presence. Perhaps it takes a person and a place to raise a ghost.
Tomes of Terror: Haunted Bookstores and Libraries by Mark Leslie (foreward by John Robert Colombo)
Soon other staff and patrons began to see the ghostly Grey Lady. Sometimes she wandered halls with books, other times she perched on stairways, and in the most terrifying cases, she appeared in the elevator where the living had no escape and could only wait until they reached the appropriate floor. Her presence was often preceded by a heavy perfume. She occasionally played tricks on library visitors by turning faucets on and off, making lights flicker, and, most egregiously, by misshelving books.
But who could the Grey Lady be? Is she a remnant of Louise Carpenter, still enraged at her lack of inheritance? Is she the soul of a local woman who drowned? Or is she simply someone who loved books enough that she couldn’t leave them, even in death?
We may never know the Grey Lady’s true identity, but the people at Willard Library encourage patrons to keep an eye out for her nonetheless.
https://bookriot.com/2017/10/25/ghost-in-willard-library/
Haunted Libraries: Echoes of Literature's Past - A Journey Through the Silent Halls
Haunted libraries offer a fascinating glimpse into the spectral world, where the echoes of literature’s past resonate through time. These storied halls, steeped in history and mystery, serve as the perfect backdrop for tales of the paranormal. The Allure of Haunted Libraries Libraries are not just repositories of knowledge; they are sanctuaries of history, often housed in buildings that have…
Haunted History of the Richard Nixon Library
The haunted history of the Richard Nixon Library is both intriguing and eerie. This iconic site in Yorba Linda, California, is not just a repository of presidential artifacts but also a hotspot for paranormal activity. Visitors and staff have reported numerous ghostly encounters, making it a place of historical and supernatural significance. The stories surrounding this location add a chilling…
"My child is fine."
Ma'am, I fantasize about roaming an aged library, coffee in one hand as the other traces the shelves as I walk freely. The specters of patrons from decades before haunt the spaces between the shelves, between the books. When I finally stop, it is because there is one book demands recognition. I pull it gently from the shelf the same way you pull a flower for a bouquet. Through the empty space, I lock eyes with the most beautiful stranger I have ever seen; thus, they mark the beginning of my end.
I am not okay. I am in a library hundreds of years old and haunted by the scholars who were infected with an bottomless drive to consume every page within that library.
Top 8 Haunted US Libraries
We’ve done some searching and have rounded up a list of 8 incredibly haunted libraries in America, according to Encyclopedia Britannica. Check them out below and read a more detailed account of the top four!
Willard Library, Evansville, Indiana
Saline County Library, Benton, Arkansas
Bernardsville Library, Bernardsville, New Jersey
Sacramento Public Library, Sacramento, California
Amelia Gayle Gorgas Library, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama
A.B. Safford Memorial Library, Cairo, Illinois
Millicent Library, Fairhaven, Massachusetts
New Hanover County Public Library, Wilmington, North Carolina
Image credit: “Willard Library at Night” photo by Greg Hager. Used with permission.
We asked the staff if they had any library-related ghost stories or experiences. Here’s what they said:
Yes:
“I do believe the building is haunted.”
“Yes floors creak on the second floor late at night.”
“Floors creak especially on the second floor.”
“Once, one minute before the library closed I was convinced I saw an adult run into the youth graphic novel section. I turned around and they were gone and I had goosebumps on my arms. Spooky...”
“I think the desk drawer [in the Reader Services department] is haunted. It opens by itself on a regular basis.” Note: I have seen the haunted drawer firsthand and will verify this claim
“Yes, but I'd rather keep them to myself so I don't scare everyone away from the library.”
“Once I was working while the power was out, so I had to use a flashlight in the stacks to find materials!”
No:
“Nope”
“No, unfortunately.”
“Happily, no.”
“No! And I'm glad I don't!”
“Sadly, no.”
“Sadly, no.”
“No”
Not here but at my other library...
“The last library I worked at was supposedly haunted since the land it was built on used to be a farm that was a stop on the Underground Railroad. Maintenance and cleaning staff would say they heard strange noises at night and one even saw an apparition.”
“We had a ghost at New Lenox. A gentleman that always wore a fedora and a coat. He often sat outside my office and sometimes in the Friends book sale.”
“I once returned the movie Hocus Pocus so late that my library thought I lost it. (mostly joking, but I was pretty scared when I realized how much money I owed)”
Do you have any library-related ghost stories or experiences (either here or at another library)?