Tag Archive for 'psychic phenomena'

Photo Album Six

Another great set of vintage photos. I’m really digging on these circus snake charmers, and will be looking for more in the future. For that matter, there are a lot of pictures of circus performers out there.

Ada Mae the Snake Charmer

Oh Ada Mae, some lucky audience member was no doubt able to see you in person before purchasing this lovely postcard. – Auction Here – Expires 7/14

Preserved For All Time

At first glance, doesn’t this look like the girl from The Ring, except twins? It looks like they’re standing next to a giant urn. A really stunning tintype. – Auction Here – Expires 7/16

The Night Sky

The Night Sky as personified by our lovely 19th Century lady pictured here. It looks to me like her name is Effie. – Auction Here – Expires 7/17

Unicorn, June 1959

I’ve been trying to figure out the identity of this particular animal. I think its a unicorn. One lesser-known fact about unicorns is that they are always dissatisfied. Auction Here – Expires 7/18

Houdini Spirtualist Debunking Photo

A nice photo example created to debunk spiritualists, featuring Harry Houdini, who did that kind of thing. Photo also stars Miss Rose Mackenberg and James Collins. 1944 – Auction Here – Expires 7/19

Makes me think of Alice

Doesn’t this tintype make you think of Alice in Wonderland? – Auction Here – Expires when it expires.

Constance Talmadge!

Constance Talmadge in a lovely Egyptian Revival getup. – Auction Here – Expires when it expires.

See more Vintage Photos here on Dark in the Dark.

Check this space for more weird photos on eBay.

*Best Search Ever*


darkinthedark does not claim copyright on these images. If you are the copyright holder and object to their presence here, please contact me and I will remove them.

Brief Paper Terror: The Ostrich by Lucas Zanotto

The Ostrich from Lucas Zanotto on Vimeo.

An unsuspecting ostrich goes prematurely gray after an encounter with The Other Side. Paper marionette short by Berlin based artist Lucas Zanotto. Via

A Grab Bag of Mini Reviews

I’ve managed to rack up quite the backlog of books lately. So I’m taking a page out of the book of Arbogast, and have dialed up some mini reviews. Those pressed for time may wish to check the executive summaries (in italics) at the end of each mini where I rate each book for creepiness, suspense, violence, and erotic factor. Each executive summary ends with a one word summary of the book.

Supernatural The Unholy CauseCivil War re-enactment has never been more terrifying as the Winchester brothers tangle with demonic powers unleashed by a 19th century unholy relic in SUPERNATURAL – THE UNHOLY CAUSE. Should the brothers trust the kindly single dad and his earnest boy, or the aggravating town Sheriff, Jacqueline Daniels, who seems to be keeping something big to herself? What is causing so much friction between the Winchester brothers? Who is Castiel looking for? Where the heck are the black helicopters? The book is a fun read and is suspenseful. Joe Schreiber is probably not going to win the Bram Stoker award for it, but nobody I know picks up a novel based on a TV series because they want to sink their teeth into some Literature. I found this one a little more entertaining than the last one I read: Supernatural – Heart of the Dragon by Keith R.A. Decandido. Creepy, suspenseful, and violent, but not sexy. Entertainment. (Titan Books, 2010)

A Boy Born of MoldLorin Morgan Richards charts the paths of weird clouds that pass far overhead and then maps the changes that their rain makes on the lives of people living below. His writing has become better and more interesting in his newest collection of very odd stories, A BOY BORN FROM MOLD. The stories are amusing and make me think of the likes of Shel Silverstein and Tim Burton. As I reported with his last book, I was left wanting more outrageous tragedy and monsters and wished it wasn’t printed in ALL CAPS. If you like zines, Tim Burton, and nonsense stories, you may wish to check it out. Maybe creepy, maybe suspenseful, not violent and not erotic. Odd. (Published by the artist, 2010)

The Name of the WindDepending on your tolerance level for bigger-than-life heroes and melodrama, your good humor and fascination may or may not turn into irritation by the end of THE NAME OF THE WIND. Patrick Rothfuss chronicles the boyhood of a traveling musician (bard? gypsy?) who loses his parents to a violent supernatural gang, barely survives as a child beggar on the streets, and then studies to become the greatest wizard of all time. The fantasy is thick, the world-building is complete and amazing, the story and characters are compelling. Be warned: The childhood is more tragic than you can imagine; the woman is more beautiful, confounding, and mysterious than any you will ever meet; and the love affair is more painful and exultant than any normal heart could bear. I can see that many will love this book and look forward to the next (it is the first in a series). At some point I grew a brand new callus on my heart and could no longer be moved. Lightly creepy, suspenseful, sometimes violent, and romantic. Magical. (DAW Books, 2009)

When Ghosts Speak by Mary Ann WinkowskiYou may think that your house is haunted by the ghost of a notorious satanist, a pair of tragic lovers, or maybe someone interesting like Clara Bow. If that’s the case, then WHEN GHOSTS SPEAK is here to set the record straight. Your ghost probably has more in common with your great aunt Mildred, who still feels awful because she flushed your grandmother’s wedding ring in a fit of spite, but who never fessed up to the crime. Mary Ann Winkowski assures us that ghosts are not dangerous and recommends that they should always be directed into The Light. Lie to them if you must and let the afterlife sort ‘em out, she advises. Just get them there. Other important facts to remember: 1) Your dog or cat can become a ghost. 2) NEVER EVER play with a Ouija board. 3) Your chronic respiratory ailment might be due to a haunt. 4) If you’re a ghost and you’re haunting Jennifer Love Hewitt, it’s probably because you want to watch her in the shower. How many ways can I say it? The book is not fascinating. Creepy in a voyeuristic way, not suspenseful, not really violent, and occasionally titillating. Ghost-gossipy. (Grand Central Publishing, 2009)

Many thanks to the Hachette Group for the review copy of When Ghosts Speak, Titan Books for the review copy of Supernatural – the Unholy Cause, and Lorin Morgan Richards for the review copy of Boy Born from Mold.

Book Review: Black Hills by Dan Simmons

Black Hills by Dan SimmonsIt’s good to be ambitious. You might be a giant gorilla who crashes though the jungles of a remote island, where you are worshiped like a god by the natives and wrestle with dinosaurs. But then you might see Fay Wray and think to yourself, “I want some of that.” If you’re ambitious, you might succeed. Or you might find yourself on the wrong side of the Empire State Building with Fay Wray in one hand, and swatting at airplanes with the other. If you don’t try sometimes, you’ll never know what you can really achieve. The problem is that when you get too ambitious things can get out of hand. I think Black Hills suffers from too much ambition.

I’m a little reluctant to review this book here because it’s almost more historical fiction than horror or speculative fiction. There are ghosts and supernatural happenings in this book, but nothing remotely creepy or eerie. Black Hills follows the life of a Native American man around the turn of the century. As a young Lakota boy, he “counts coup” on General George Armstrong Custer at the moment the man dies, and Custer’s ghost invades his body. The boy, named Paha Sapa (the name itself meaning Black Hills in his native tongue), can also sometimes see the futures and pasts of people he touches. We follow Paha Sapa as he grows up and into old age. Being historical fiction, the book involves what was really happening in the United States at that time. Namely, Native Americans were being pushed onto reservations and/or killed. A visit is made to the famous White City of the Chicago World’s Fair in 1893, and later Paha Sapa works as a dynamite layer for Gutzon Borglum as he creates Mount Rushmore.

Although there are happy times in Paha Sapa’s life, Simmons chooses to focus on those times which are most tragic and the book is sometimes horrifyingly sad. We watch as Paha Sapa tries to kill himself, directly or indirectly, several times, both as a boy and an old man. Because of his ability to see the future from touching people, he accidentally witnesses the funeral of his future wife on the day he meets her. Don’t get me wrong – just because a book is sad doesn’t make it a bad book. I can name any number of sad books that I think were masterpieces. For the record, I think that many who read Black Hills might have a contrary opinion and really enjoy the book. I wasn’t won over.

For one thing, the haunting of Paha Sapa by the ghost of George Custer is unusual, and so a reader might think that it would play a large part in the goings-on of the plot. It does not, however, and for me the ghost ended up being meaningless to the story. We wait until halfway through the book before Custer and Paha Sapa finally speak to each other, and to me it seemed like they failed to develop any sort of relationship, even at the end. Instead, strangely, we are treated to Custer’s memories of having sex with his wife, Elizabeth, a lot. At one point we find them covered in buffalo blood, enjoying acrobatic sex on the back of a trotting horse. These scenes appear between chapters about Paha Sapa’s violently interrupted childhood.

Much later, Paha Sapa visits Custer’s widow when she is ninety, just before she dies. This chapter is written from the viewpoint of Custer himself and he spends most of it belittling her for how old she has become. He goes into great detail describing her wrinkles, deafness, and old lady smell. Of course it could be that I missed the point.

What all these stories have to do with each other is what escapes me.

I think this could have been a book about a psychic Native American who was unwillingly haunted by a famous killer of his people, and how their relationship changed over the one man’s life. Alternatively, Simmons could have written a book about a man’s search for peace after he lost his only son to a foreign war, in which the son fought for those who had brutalized his people and culture. OR a book about a Native American who helped build (and plotted to destroy) Mount Rushmore in the heart of the land his people held most sacred, and the racism he faced every day. OR a book about Custer’s very interesting wife and their relationship, including how they got it on, and then what his ghost might have thought if he had visited his faithful widow many decades later.

I’ve read enough of Dan Simmons and think highly enough of him that I believe he could have written any of the above books and given them the emotional depth and time they needed to be excellent. I think his main fault here is in trying to do too many things at once and as a result not doing a great job with any.

Creepy Factor: 1 out of 5
Suspense Factor: 1 out of 5
Weird Erotic Tension Factor: 1 out of 5
Funny and/or Strange Factor: 2 out of 5

(As with some other recent books, because this book isn’t exactly in the horror genre, the numbers above are rather unkind.) To his credit, Dan Simmons takes a lot of risks with Black Hills, but I was never won over and did not end up enjoying the book. I do recommend him as an author, however.

Black Hills by Dan SimmonsReagan Arthur Books2010
Buy Black Hills at Amazon

Many thanks to the publisher for sending me a review copy of this book. See you next time!

Book Review: Snake Agent by Liz Williams

Snake Agent by Liz WilliamsTo retrieve his wife, a man journeys to hell. How many more times can this tale be told? It’s almost like a band choosing to cover Stairway to Heaven. It has been told perfectly a few times. Countless other writers have tried their hand at it, and most have failed. When I see a man-goes-to-hell-to-retrieve-his-wife story coming, I think to myself. “This better be good.”

Fortunately, it is. I love this book! It begins the way a normal detective novel does, with a vaguely downtrodden detective, Detective Chen. Detective Chen tries not to be cynical. As his police department’s “snake agent”, Chen is in charge of dealing with supernatural crimes. He is brought into a case involving a wealthy woman who has found that her daughter’s soul ended up in hell instead of heaven. Hoping for a simple bureaucratic mix-up, Chen investigates and discovers that someone is trading in souls. Soon he uncovers a conspiracy that may lead straight to the emperor of hell himself.

There are many charming things about this book. Not the least of which is the matter-of-fact way the book lays out its own internal mythology. For example, when asked about what happens when you die, Detective Chen tells it like it is: Souls take a journey through regions with names like the Sea of Night and the Night Harbor on their way to the afterlife, where they are processed by the bureaucratic departments of heaven or hell and then eventually reincarnated. Along the way they are shown their past life, what they will most likely be reincarnated as, and given a special drink which makes them forget everything before they are shuttled back to the living. It is in this sort of play that the book excels.

My only real complaint is that there are too many dues ex machinas. I personally enjoy a dues ex machina here or there, but when there are too many, I think it can be a suspense killer. On the other hand, I enjoyed that conventional detective fiction characters abound in Snake Agent. There is the oafish sergeant, the rogue cop, the captain who is beholden to local politics, and the vaguely threatened detective’s wife. Once the book builds up steam and really kicks into gear, though, a lot of these conventions are broken or twisted. For example, the detective’s wife goes from being vaguely threatened to being on an adventure of her own, and the rogue cop turns out to be a more complex character than one would expect. The book eventually stops being a detective novel and turns into a fantastic journey through hell.

Creepy Factor: 4 out of 5
Suspense Factor: 4 out of 5
Weird Erotic Tension Factor: 2 out of 5
Funny and/or Strange Factor: 5 out of 5

Final result: Great adventure, Chinese mythology, evil alchemists, soul trading, great cover art… This book has it all! Mmmmmm. Fans of dark fantasy such as Clive Barker’s Imajica will be excited to get their hands on some intelligent writing. Fans of detective fiction will be gratified to find a new series of novels with a fresh twist on the genre. The story is ancient, the plotting is Shakespearean, the humor is thick, and it’s a real page-turner. I love this book! I am simultaneously excited and scared to read the next one.

Snake Agent by Liz Williams – Night Shade Books2005
Get Snake Agent on Amazon

Thanks for reading another one of my book reviews. See you next time!

The flying monkeys let our technician out for a minute and he snuck away into the light of day. Thanks for your patience during this difficult transition.
I ated Tinkerbell.

Fhtagn Spoken Here.

... the attic, a vast raftered length lighted only by small blinking windows in the gable ends, and filled with a massed wreckage of chests, chairs, and spinning-wheels which infinite years of deposit had shrouded and festooned into monstrous and hellish shapes.
The Shunned House
H.P. Lovecraft




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