Tag Archives: ghost stories

Kanopy: BBC Christmas Ghost Stories

26 Mar
Image showing a single lit white candle on a dark table, its wax dripping, with blurred bookshelves in the background. The text reads “BBC – A Ghost Story for Christmas.”

BBC’s Christmas Ghost Stories on Kanopy are ‘snuggle into your armchair,’ oral folklores that let the ghosts come through the quiet, not the loud. We’re in a cozy inn or country home, under the lamplight of a study, in the official capacity of authority and tenured procedure, or in the storytelling intimacy of public radio. These stories present fright as if they’re a three part/pint story told against a pub’s fire. 

(You can watch these stories any time. Christmas, in fact, has very little do with them, and in most cases none).

Each episode begins with a tea-time beginning that introduces us to the characters and establishes the whispers of their confusion or animosity in piecing their current situation together – the job they have, the move their making, their qualms with society, or the injustice on them no one in their rationality believes

There are seven 30-minute episodes available on Kanopy. These are the four I enjoyed the most:   

Woman of Stone – A woman recounts the chilling tale of newlyweds settling into a small cottage in a quiet village and how the couple soon finds themselves overshadowed by superstitious warnings of the legend of two marble tomb effigies who are said to rise each year and walk. The husband dismisses this as mere folklore. The wife does not, and one night she is all alone…

The Dead Room – The tale of a long-running radio horror series where a veteran presenter of the series and renowned celebrity of sorts for his voice and oratory skills finds he must adapt to changing times and tastes of radio listeners and digesters of horror stories. He asks, “Whatever happened to the classic ghost stories and the good old days?” 

Be careful how much of the past you want to revisit.  

The Mezzotint (A very intensive process where a picture’s lines are intended to hold ink) – A curator of a small university museum who specializes in topography of the British Isles is baffled when an art dealer sends him details of an interesting engraving of an old country house. It’s ordinary though…at first, until the curator sees a figure where there was none before. With every viewing, it has moved, getting closer and closer to the house. Rationality falls to the impossible drawing closer in the picture and eventually until it knocks. 

Martin’s Close – An adaptation of a ghost story by MR James. 1684. Someone is on trial for his life and he’s facing the infamous ‘hanging judge’. However, this is not a cut-and-dried murder case and the unexplainable cannot be explained (or at least believed by judge and jury).

The Mezzotint and The Dead Room were my favorite because both presented the supernatural and strange as an inconvenience and a break from reality that logic just couldn’t define. The fear is quiet and suspicious, presented in a way that you believe the character is challenging his own rationality, and even when others challenge them. Dread pushes through – the tap, tap, tapping, if you will – and slowly drives them mad until their psyche is too mushed to defend against the horror revealing itself in form before their eyes.  

The terrifying and supernatural find their voice through the quiet and uncertainty and not the characters giving it to them, which is something wonderfully distinctive to the British way of telling ghost stories. There is a deep questioning quality to the investigation of what exactly is happening that drags us along as if we were standing right beside the actor or actress. They ramble through their broken logic and spin a yo-yo of logic while desperately grasping pieces together. 

Additional episodes include:

Kanopy can be accessed with your Hoboken Library Card and episodes streamed with your complimentary tickets (you get 60 per month-each of these individual episodes is between 1-2 tickets).

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Written by:
Sean Willey
Information and Digital Services Assistant

Haunted Houses: The Supernatural Enhancements and The Hawley Book of the Dead

15 Apr

Now that the weather is finally getting warmer you may be planning to go camping.  What better book to bring with you then something suspenseful.  If you are looking for something slightly spooky, but not the typical horror fare here are two uncanny stories about haunted houses with a twist. 

The Supernatural Enhancements, by Edgar Cantero.

supernatural-enhancements

Edgar Cantero was born in Barcelona and this is first novel written in English.  I read The Supernatural Enhancements during the week leading up to Halloween last year.  It has spooky elements of horror, but contains so much more.  The Supernatural Enhancements refers to the unusual attributes of Axton House, inherited by the Irish protagonist of the novel A. from a distant wealthy relative living in Virginia.  The novel unfolds in a variety of ephemera that were collected during A.’s inhabitance of the house along with his younger, mute punk companion, Niamh; these include entries from dream journals, letters, advertisements, transcripts of security video footage and more.  Fans of more traditionally structured works may find the structure of The Supernatural Enhancements frustrating, but I was charmed by Cantero’s quirky sensibilities.  Since the novel is told through scraps of different things it has the added mystery of things that are hinted at but not said.  The Supernatural Enhancements is compelling enough that it could have been told without the unusual format, but I felt due to the nature of the tale it felt well suited to it and it kept the structure from feeling purely gimmicky. The title and format immediately put me in mind of the found footage horror movies such as Paranormal Activity.  Part One of the book seems like a classic haunted house tale where the foolish inhabitants are more curious than afraid of the ghost, however, as the novel progresses it turns into a much more complex and unusual tale.  I was surprised by, but happy with the direction the novel took in the end.

The Hawley Book of the Dead, by Chrysler Szarlan.

hawley-book-of-the-dead

The Hawley Book of the Dead is Chrysler Szarlan’s first novel, and the beginning of a quartet of books.  Like The Supernatural Enhancements, it takes the idea of a haunted house and magic and takes it in unexpected directions.  This book’s ominous title seemed like the perfect choice for this past March’s Friday the 13.  However, it is more akin to Deborah Harkness’s Discovery of Witches than a horror novel.  The Hawley Book of the Dead is the story of Reve (Revelation) Dyer, a magician along the lines of Criss Angel.  I liked how Szarlan used her own experience as a magician’s assistant in the creation of the book.  Reve and her husband live happily in Vegas where they perform together and raise their three daughters.  But one night Reve shoots her husband on stage with a gun that should have contained only blanks, which leads her to realize that she is being stalked.  She flees across country to Hawley Five Corners, an old New England town that her family helped found and the locals believe is haunted.  Reve (whose nickname is the French word for dream) and her daughter have nightmares that seem to be portents.  All the women in Reve’s family have unusual abilities such as healing or her ability to disappear.  The Hawley Book of the Dead is mostly told from Reve’s point of view, but also includes chapters of third person narration about her youngest daughter, and texts sent between her two teenaged twins.  I found The Hawley Book of the Dead hard to put down and found myself always wanting to read just one more chapter before I went to bed.  The novel feels self-contained in that it has a satisfying ending, but there are several subplots that seem likely to pop up in future novels, which I’m looking forward to checking out.

-Written by Aimee Harris, Head of Reference