The Girls' Ghost Hunting Guide website


After much rolling of the eyes from the tween and teens, THE GIRLS' GHOST HUNTING GUIDE website is complete to their satisfaction.

Excerpt:
Don't turn around. 
That funny feeling you get right before you turn out the light may not be your creepy little brother after all, it could be something more… interesting.

How can you tell? What makes some of us able to see or hear ghosts and others – not so much? Everyone has the ability to interact with ghosts but some are more sensitive than others until one knows what to look for. Being conscious of what is going on around can help you to see what others cannot - and experience what others wished they could.

THE GIRLS' GHOST HUNTING GUIDE was designed for girls ready for the challenge of finding out what's really hiding under the bed. With tools found in your own home and a healthy dose of adventurous spirit, you'll be ready to possibly discover what happens next after we die.

Ask questions, get curious and keep an open mind.

Ready? You can turn around now.

Swing by and say hello! Ghost stories and contests will be found on the GGHG facebook page so check back for updates.

Dragging out my soap box for PBS

Last week I felt the power of social media more than just being hit on over Twitter direct messages. I responded to PBS's open call for Washingtonians in my age group *cough* about why we trust PBS. How could I pass this up? After all, three of my four television channels are PBS and you know by now I'm a bit of a costume drama nut. Combine this with Antiques Roadshow UK and you've summed up my perfect evening.

I spoke to the director and after making the cut, I was called back to be filmed for a small segment of the next PBS commercial, to start airing mid-May on PBS stations and featured on the website. So -- what did I talk about for twenty minutes? I started with my own experience with PBS and how it has influenced my life with rich programming, different cultural perspectives and how I can finally get my husband to discuss Jane Austen without the use of force. I moved on to how PBS creates a community of like-minded individuals that put education and people first before prescription drug commercials and McDonald's soundbites. They trust us to stand up for programs that enrich our lives, not kill time. That's accountability, my friends.

Then I wrapped it up with five minutes on how I, as a parent, would like to see more programming spent on the next generation of PBS supporters: teenagers. PBSkids does an excellent job of those under eight -- now how about a little sumthin' sumthin' for my tweens and teens? Book clubs? Writing forums via their website? Science and math-based programs that inspire them to take the next step toward a career? These are the times that shape the goals of our young people -- give them the tools to make informed choices and trust that they'll use them benefit us all.

That's why I trust PBS.

Thank you for a lovely afternoon, Maryland Public Television and PBS!

The Jane Austen Handbook :: Review


Fellow Persuasion lover, Margaret C. Sullivan's new release THE JANE AUSTEN HANDBOOK (Quirk) is a charming dip into Regency manners and the proper way to secure a husband of good fortune. The Handbook delivers bites of information including the areas of How to Get Rid of Unwanted Guests and How to Carry Off a Secret Engagement. Sullivan's research into the Regency period and Jane Austen's novels is first rate. Her tone is quick and light-hearted, making the short volume a pleasure to read.

I found especially interesting the section on The Best Company; or Social Gatherings. There I learned how to behave at a dinner party - I'll be sure not only to gargle my fingerbowl water and not to drink it - as well as the best ways to avoid dancing with an undesirable partner, though some things never change from 8th grade dances - hiding and lying. 

Sullivan's tongue-in-cheek advice extends to matters of the heart:

"Fall into a decline. Make yourself ill with unrequited love. He will hear of it and ride his horse into a lather to fling himself at your feet and beg your forgiveness. Just don't be so stupid as to actually die, especially if he has married someone else in the meantime."

The Handbook is a boon for writers as a quick reference on Regency life or to add a little lagniappe to their work. The appendix details a short biography of Jane Austen and her family, plus synopsis of her novels and other works rounding out the Handbook well.

Image credit: Quirk Books

Spirit photography

Photo: William Mumler
One of the chapters I'm working on for The Girls' Ghost Hunting Guide is the history of spiritualism and the fascinating realm of spirit photography of the mid-19th and early 20th century.


Infamous for his spirit portrait featuring the deceased Abraham Lincoln cozying up to his very-much-alive-but-slighty-wacky wife, William Mumler turned an amateur photograph of himself and a reportedly deceased young cousin into a media sensation in 1862.Turning a double exposure into a thriving business by capitalizing on the grief and deep pockets of others during and after the Civil War, Mumler continued to churn out hazy photographs of the living and their +1.

Mumler was eventually brought up on fraud charges in 1869 after it was discovered that some of his "ghosts" still had a pulse, though the charges were dismissed due to lack of evidence. The popularity of spirit photography continued past his death in 1884, however he never managed to pop up into any other photographs.







Image credit: Collection of National Media Museum
[note the hand creeping up the seance table]







Though we've moved out of that era and into newer, high-tech equipment to capture what we want to believe are ghosts (orbs, anyone?), we're still chasing after a curious spark. Look what I found running through my woods--





Garnet, Montana -- ghost town

I'm in the mood for a ghost story. Okay, I'm always in the mood for a ghost story. This is one I wrote years ago and while not scary, the town always sticks with me. While I do research for THE GIRLS' GHOST HUNTING GUIDE, I'm having a grand time wandering through my own notes of the past twenty years.

What scares you?

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


One of my early experiences with the paranormal came from visiting a ghost town in the northwestern USA while on vacation. Now, you’d expect a ghost town to come with the prerequisite residual hauntings or at least a spooky outhouse. This town of Garnet, Montana, had its share of rundown buildings as it nestled in a wee valley in the mountains. A gold mining town, it once held the riches of the mountain in its palm and miners flocked to pluck it from between the fingers of the hillside. It grew fat and rich for a time but when the gold ran out, so did the miners, leaving behind a hotel, a general store, small houses and large pockets dug into the nearby hills (plus the aforementioned spooky outhouses).

My family wandered through what was left of the town, along with other curious tourists, trying to get a sense of what it was like in its heyday. Imagining dirty, desperate men coming from inside a mountain wasn’t difficult, what remained of their cabins told the story better than any signage the BLM had provided. Ruined furniture, rusted pans left scattered about filthy cabins and the feeling of failure permeated the broken walls of the houses, why wouldn’t there be a haunting? It seemed as if that was all there ever was here.

I entered the hotel slowly. Once there was grandeur of sorts, now it looked like a woman ruined by too many men and not enough self-respect. Plaster flaked from the walls and heavy tables stood in the middle of the first floor dining room, looking strangely proud of weathering time and being able to show off their wounds left by drunken gunshots and the flying glass of old arguments. I followed my family upstairs to see the rooms. Plexiglas partitioned them off so you could peer inside but not enter. In some of the rooms, the windows were left bare, sunshine squeaked in through the dirty glass and fell onto beds salvaged from the hotel and covered with old quilts. In others, the windows were covered, dusty light shone through the boards that swallowed the glass. These rooms held what seemed to be 100-year-old garbage. It covered the floors and rose up the walls, it smelled like decay and made you want to turn away. I, naturally, couldn’t.

As I got closer, my heart started to beat louder in my ears and my nose started to twitch. I felt lightheaded and wanted to run. I poked my head into the room and at once felt something rushing towards me. I am not particularly psychic, just enough to know when to get the heck out of a place! If I could describe it, I’d say it was pain, screaming and confusion coming at me all at once. I backed away quickly and my investigational gene kicked in. I checked out the other rooms to see if I experienced any similar occurrences and casually asked my husband if he had seen anything out of the ordinary. This man is as intuitive as a brick. “Nothing that a Dustbuster couldn’t help…” he replied.

I knew what I had felt was unusual; I tested it again before we left the building. Again, my heart raced and my nose tingled but this time there was no attack of emotion towards me. I could feel that it sat huddled in the corner, amidst the rubbish and filth, and watched as I moved out of sight and down the stairs, escaping into the light.

I hope you saw her petticoat, six inches deep in mud...

Ah, the mud.

While watching Pride & Prejudice (2005) for the umpteenth time, what struck me was the script's adherence to life in a rural English village during the Regency period. The laundry hanging in the yard, the quiet contemplation of a gentleman's daughter with little to no duties in the house thus having to fill her time with other pursuits, and the infamous English weather. It felt... real.

Adam Spunberg, a cohort of mine and one of the founders of The Austen Project, interviewed scriptwriter Deborah Moggach of that particular film. I love how she shaped the Bennets into a family -- less formal and more emotional than other depictions, and invited the viewer to care about the love story brewing between Elizabeth and Darcy while scandal and social restrictions spun around them.

Please pop over to read the interview and see how Moggach wove this story of love, betrayal and forgiveness connected with a 21st century audience.

::::::::::::::::::::::

Adam continues with part II his interview today with Ms. Moggach, touching on added scenes and where the heck was Wickham? (I happen to like the American ending as well, Adam!)