Tar Heel Ghosts

by Sue Harden

Paperback, 1980

Status

Available

Call number

133.1

Genres

Publication

The University of North Carolina Press (1990), Edition: 1, 178 pages

Description

An amazing assortment of twenty-three stories and ten "short shorts" comprise this popular selection. More than merely entertaining, Tar Heel Ghosts captures the "spirit" of North Carolina's past. North Carolina's ghost stories have infinite variety. There are mountainous ghosts and seafaring ghosts; colonial ghosts and modern ghosts; gentle ghosts and roistering ghosts; delicate lady ghosts and fishwife ghosts; home ghosts and ghosts that just want to be noticed. Mysterious signs and symbols appear--small black crosses, galloping white horses, strangely moving lights, floating veils, lifelike apparitions, skulls, dripping blood, and "things that go bump in the night." At least one North Carolina ghost got himself into a court record, and other ghostly phenomena have attracted scientific investigation. These stories have a marked realistic North Carolina flavor. The reader finds mountain cabins and antebellum mansions, Indian trails, water wheels, river steamboats, railroad trains, slave labor on plantations, revenuers and stills in the mountains, a burial in St. James Churchyard in Wilmington, Winston-Salem before the days of Winston, Raleigh in the 1860s, Fayetteville during World War II, and even a new suburb haunted by old spooks.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member wesh
An entertaining read. John Harden's storytelling style is easy, direct, and literate. Each of these could just as easily have been told at a crackling fireside over a fragrant tumbler of whiskey.

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

178 p.; 5.5 inches

ISBN

0807840696 / 9780807840696
Page: 0.3541 seconds