You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
A patch work quilt of thirteen unique ethnic groups who poured their soups and stews into the Amercian melting pot- we read about cultures and food that have made Texas such a versatile state.
Includes touching stories of treasured pets who return to comfort their grieving owners and warn them of imminent danger, fire, or intruders. This book also includes many more supernatural experiences and encounters with beloved pets that simply cannot be explained away.
Collected writings dealing with supernatural encounters or experiences.
Collection covers Remembering Our Ancestors, Folklore Tales and Memorabilia and Family Sagas from favorite storytellers like James Ward Lee, Thad Sitton, J. Frank Dobie, Jean Granberry Schnitz, and many more.
Johaan Jacob Hammel was born in Germany in 1791. He married twice to Magdalena Laufer and then Barbara Mueller. He had ten children with Magdalena before her death. After her death he brought his children to America. About this time he married Barbara Mueller and they had two more sons. They settled in Illinois where many of his descendants still reside there. Information on many of these people is included in this volume.
Get an education in ghostly history—and meet the spirits that haunt schools in Boston and beyond. Includes photos! Among the throngs of students attending colleges and universities across the state of Massachusetts linger the apparitions of those who met their untimely ends on campus grounds. In 1953, Eugene O’Neill, an Irish American playwright, died in room 401 of the Sheraton Hotel—today a Boston University dormitory. Named Writer’s Corridor in O’Neill’s honor, the fourth floor draws students in search of creative inspiration and a sighting of the ghostly writer. A grief-stricken widow roams the halls of Winthrop Hall at Endicott College in her pink wedding gown. She threw herself from her widow’s walk after receiving news of her husband's death at sea, and is known to students today as the “pink lady.” Author Renee Mallett reveals the stories behind these “school spirits”—and offers eerie stories from over two dozen colleges and universities throughout the Bay State.