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The Haunted Librarian

~ Researching, investigating, and writing about the paranormal.

The Haunted Librarian

Category Archives: Travel

3 Cozy Paranormal Themed Mysteries to Travel With

17 Wednesday Nov 2021

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in AudioBooks, Book Review, Books, Cozy Mysteries, Travel

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Accidental Alchemist Mysteries, Salem B&B Mystery, Vampire Knitting Club

According to AAA, 53.4 million people will travel next week for the Thanksgiving holiday. That is up 13% from 2020—a sure sign that people are ready to travel. Moreover, a recent The Vacationer survey found that 67% of the respondents were planning on driving. That’s a lot of time couped up in a car. Here are 3 paranormal themed cozy murder mysteries to get you through.

I listen to Audible.com (and sadly not paid for this plug). I found that I’m able to relax, to create art, or to cruise on my Electra when I’ve got a great book playing. I can also tell you that the narration sells it. I’ve returned a few audio books where the narrator was not the right fit. For these series, the narrators enhance the stories. Through their voices (taking on different characters accents and all), I can visualize the stories and thoroughly enjoy the stories.

Up until this year, I maneuvered past the cozy mystery genre. Even when I was reading print editions, I rarely read one. For me, the time was not right. This changed after I finished a run of hard-boiled murder mysteries, fiction and non-fiction. I was looking for stories where the gore and sex was off the page. I sought protagonists who were amateur sleuths in tiny hamlets similar to the British crime shows my husband and I binge on Acorn, BritBox, and PBS. In the last 2 months, I’ve discovered three series I want to share:

  1. The Accidental Alchemist Mysteries written by Gigi Pandian and narrated by Julia Motyka. A 300-year old alchemist, Zoe Faust, relocates to Portland, Oregon and mistakenly ships the animated gargoyle, Dorian Robert-Houdin, who seeks Zoe’s assistance in finding a remedy to keep him alive. This series delves deep into the world of alchemy. It also includes vegetarian recipes, which sound scrumptious, but I have not made. I have listened to the first 3 books in the 5 book + 1 novella series. For more information: https://www.gigipandian.com/books/the-accidental-alchemist-mysteries.
  2. The Salem B&B Mystery written by Traci Wilton and narrated by Callie Beaulieu. Recent widow Charlene Morris escapes the city and purchases an historic Victorian home in Salem haunted by the former occupant. Charlene intends to open a bed and breakfast when she feels compelled to help solve the previous owner’s murder. The stray cat has a minor supporting role. Each book features a new murder. I’ve listened to the first book in the 5-book series. For more information: https://cozy-mysteries-unlimited.com/salem-bb-mystery-series.
  3. The Vampire Knitting Club written by Nancy Wilson and narrated by Sarah Zimmerman. This series is set in Oxford, England with the American raised protagonist Lucy Swift arriving to visit her grandmother, Agnes Bartlett, owner of Cardinal Woolsey knitting shop. Lucy learns her grandmother died a few weeks earlier and has been turned into a vampire. Each book features a new murder. This series also has Nix, Lucy’s new cat familiar. (I’m a sucker for a cat. Also my mother’s family has a long line of females named Agnes.) I’m presently listening to book 3 of the 13-book and 2 novella series. For more information: https://www.nancywarrenauthor.com/vampire-knitting-club-series/.

Young Female Ghost Appears in Eastbury Manor House Photograph

10 Friday Sep 2021

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in England, Haunted England, Haunted Houses, Hauntings, Historic Places, Real Estate, Road Trip, Travel

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Anne Argall, Augustine Steward, Barking Abbey, Clement Sisley, Eastbury Manor House, Estburie Hall, National Trust England

Photograph showing the supposed ghost.

There’s a photograph making the rounds on the Internet of a supposed apparition of a young girl peering through a window at Eastbury Manor House. The image is too blurry to definitively state that Joanne Puffett and Diane De-Groot captured a ghost in the photograph. However, the location is worth discussing.

Barking Abbey, located in Barking, London, England, was a large monastery established in 666 AD. It remained viable until King Henry VIII dissolved all British monasteries in 1539. Only the Curfew Tower remains today. In 1551, the land was sold off. Clement Sisley purchased a plot in 1557 and built the first red brick Elizabethan gentry house in the area. Construction was from 1560-1573. The home was originally called Estburie Hall.

Clement Sisley (1504-1578) and his much younger wife Anne Argall (1547-1610) lived in the home with their 4 young children. Even though Clement was of the gentry class (wealthy landowner who lived totally on rental income), he was in serious debt when he died in 1578. Anne sought financial security through her second husband, Augustine Steward (d. 1597). Ownership of Eastbury remained in the family until 1629.

Ownership of Eastbury fell through many hands over the centuries. The National Trust (England) purchased the home in 1918 and restored it. The home is an H-shape with an inner courtyard. Although most of the land once owned by the Sisley family has long been sold, the house does boast two gardens: a Tudor herb garden and a walled garden. The walled garden houses bee-boles. “Bole” is a Scottish word for recess in a wall. Rows of recessed bee boles help bees proliferate.

  • Furnell, Joseph W.; Eastbury House; Valence House Museum; http://www.artuk.org/artworks/eastbury-house-133475
1. Painting of Eastbury Manor House. 2. Bee-boles, location unknown and not the one at Eastbury.

But the question of the day is whether Eastbury Manor House is haunted. It probably is. The most familiar legend tells of the house being haunted by a young girl that only women can see. That certainly fits the narrative of the photograph. However, there is a lesser-known variation where it is a young girl and a woman who haunt the dwelling.

I’m curious about whom might the girl—and woman—be. Records from the 1500s are scarce, possibly lost to fire. Luckily, the house does hold paranormal events. At this time, though, the home is closed due to COVID. (Note: Joanne and Diane merely walked outside the house, where they took the picture.) Check the website, https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/eastbury-manor-house, to see when the home reopens. And I will add the house to my bucket list.

Escaping to Ireland: History Meets Paranormal

04 Friday Dec 2020

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Castles, Prisons, Travel

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Desmond Castle, Leap Castle, Mike Ricksecker, Oubliette

I’m daydreaming of my post-COVID travel plans. One excursion that looks totally enticing is Mike Ricksecker’s Ancient Mysteries of Ireland trip next July.

Scheduled to begin July 1, 2021, this 9-day/8-night adventure offers a variety of mystical and haunted locations in Ireland. In true Irish fashion, there are a lot of castles on the itinerary.

The first stop is Blarney Castle, where one can kiss the Blarney Stone, a ritual where a person lays on her back, leans down with the assistance of castle docents to kiss the stone upside down. Back 20 years ago, my mother did it. I declined. The act supposedly confers upon the person the “gift of gab.” The person was to obtain the ability to speak eloquently. However, the “gab” implies the ability to speak unnecessarily—not really a trait I’m seeking.

Desmond Castle, Leap Castle, and The Leap image.

One stop that does hold my interest is Desmond Castle (Kinsale) where in 1747 a fire broke out killing 54 prisoners, most who were of French descent. The tower house structure is known locally as the “French Prison.” The building was donated to the town of Kinsale in 1791 and has served as a prison and poor house. There are several ghost stories attached to the building.

The oubliette discovered in the “Bloody Chapel” in Leap Castle.

Probably the most intriguing castle on the tour is Leap Castle (believed to be built circa 1250 CE, though some sources date it at 1500s). The striking feature of this castle is the discovery of the oubliette, an underground dungeon with wooden spikes. During a period of renovations in the “Bloody Chapel,” workers located human skeletal remains in the chamber. A watch dating from the mid-1800s shows that the act of impaling people was used quite recently. Tourists report two tales of hauntings: The Red Lady and ghost children Charlotte and Emily.

Jameson Distillery Midleton, Spike Island Prison, and Kindred Spirits.

The itinerary includes several favorite tour destinations like the Jameson Distillery Midleton; Spike Island Prison, once the largest prison in Ireland dubbed “Ireland’s Alcatraz”; and “Kindred Spirits” a stainless-steel monument honoring the Choctaw Nation (U.S. Native American Indian tribe). Book your tour by following the links below. This tour combines history with interesting locations that would capture any paranormal investigator’s imagination.

For more information:

https://www.hauntedjourneys.com/mike-ricksecker-s-ancient-mysteries-of-ireland

https://www.wetravel.com/trips/mike-ricksecker-s-ancient-mysteries-of-ireland-mysterious-adventures-tours-llc-cork-28046528

https://www.hauntedjourneys.com/mike-ricksecker-s-ancient-mysteries-of-ireland

Historic Holbrooke Hotel (CA) Closed Indefinitely for Renovations

22 Saturday Jun 2019

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Dead Files, Hauntings, Travel, Travel Channel, Uncategorized

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Henry Shipley, Lola Montez

HistoricHolbrookeHotel

Read my latest blog at Haunt Jaunts:

Historic Holbrooke Hotel (CA) Closed Indefinitely for Renovations: https://www.hauntjaunts.net/historic-holbrooke-hotel-ca-closed-indefinitely-for-renovations/

The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) Time Warp Picnic Event Is Fully Booked for 2019

11 Tuesday Jun 2019

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Travel, Uncategorized

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Oakley Court in Windsor, Rocky Horror Picture Show, Time Warp Picnic

RockyHorror

The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) Time Warp Picnic Event Is Fully Booked for 2019

The iconic and popular audience-participatory film The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) was filmed at Oakley Court in Windsor. Several horror movies filmed on location, and the castle has a long history. At the time the movie was filmed, the castle was empty and only used for film productions. In 1981, the castle was renovated and opened as a boutique hotel—complete with a “Rocky Horror Package.”

The 118-bedroom hotel includes an upscale restaurant, pool, gym, and gardens. The “Rocky Horror Package” includes an overnight stay in an elegantly appointed room, full English breakfast, outdoor buffet for the “Time Warp Picnic,” and late-night screenings of the film. Unfortunately, all reservations are taken. However, the hotel is maintaining a waiting list.

FrontDoor
MoviePic
Poster

Keep an eye on 2020 dates, as they are not posted yet. Request “mansion suites” when booking since those rooms are original to the house.

Hotel information: https://www.oakleycourt.co.uk/

“Let’s do the Time Warp again”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aizCMO-mI1Q

Image

What Is “Dark Tourism”?

06 Wednesday Feb 2019

Tags

Anthony Seaton, Anton Chekhov first gulag tourist, Heritage Tourism, John Lennon Malcolm Foley, Thanatourism

Slide1

Posted by The Haunted Librarian | Filed under Dark Tourism, Travel, Uncategorized

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Visit “Ashecliffe Hospital”

07 Saturday Jul 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Abandoned America, Haunt Jaunts, Travel, Uncategorized

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Tags

#FirstFriday, #FunFactFriday, #HauntJaunts

ShutterIsland

The Medfield State Hospital, used to film Shutter Island and called the Ashecliffe Hospital for the Criminally Insane, has re-opened for walking tours. Read my article here: https://www.hauntjaunts.net/visit-ashecliffe-hospital/.

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Archer Paranormal Investigations

Archer Paranormal Investigations

The Haunted Librarian

Gainesville, Florida

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