30 Ghost Stories

17 short stories from the book twenty-Five Ghost Stories and 13 shorts from the book Indian Ghost Stories


01 - The Flayed Hand - Guy de Maupassant



02 - The Parlor-Car Ghost - W. Bob Holland



03 - The Ghost of Buckstown Inn - Arnold M. Anderson



04 - The Burglar's Ghost - W. Bob Holland



05 - The Phantom Toe - W. Bob Holland



06 - Mrs. Davenport's Ghost - Frederick F. Schrader



07 - The Phantom Woman - W. Bob Holland



08 - Sandy's Ghost - W. Bob Holland



09 - The Ghosts of Red Creek - W. Bob Holland



10 - How He Caught the Ghost - W. Bob Holland



11 - The Grand-Dame's Ghost Story - W. Bob Holland



12 - The Fight With a Ghost - W. Bob Holland



13 - The Ghost of the Count - W. Bob Holland



14 - Old Mansion - W. Bob Holland



15 - An Unbidden Guest - W. Bob Holland



16 - A Dead Woman's Photograph - W. Bob Holland



17 - The Ghost of a Live Man - W. Bob Holland



18 - The Ghost of Washington - W. Bob Holland



19 - His Dead Wife's Photograph - S Mukerji



20 - The Major's Lease - S Mukerji



21 - The Open Door - S Mukerji



22 - What Uncle Saw - S Mukerji



23 - The Boy Who was Caught - S Mukerji



24 - The Starving Millionaire - S Mukerji



25 - The Bridal Party - S Mukerji



26 - A Strange Incident - S Mukerji



27 - What the Professor Saw - S Mukerji



28 - The Boy Possessed - S Mukerji



29 - The Examination Paper - S Mukerji



30 - The Messenger of Death - S Mukerji


This collection of ghost stories owes its publication to an interest that I have long felt in the supernatural and in works of the imagination. As a child I was deeply concerned in tales of spooks, haunted houses, wraiths and specters and stories of weird experiences, clanking chains, ghostly sights and gruesome sounds always held me spellbound and breathless.

Experiences in editorial offices taught me that I was not alone in liking stories of mystery. The desire to know something of that existence that is veiled by Death is equally potent in old age and in youth, and men, women and children like to be thrilled and to have a “creepy” feeling along the spinal column as the result of reading of a visitor from beyond the grave.

Guy de Maupassant, the clever Frenchman, is also represented by two effective bits of work, and other less widely known writers have also contributed stories that are worth reading, and when once read will be remembered. There is not a story among the twenty-five that is not worthy of close reading.

There has recently been a revival in interest in ghost stories. Many of the high-class magazines have within a few months printed stories with supernatural incidents, and writers whose names are known to all who read have turned their attention to this form of literature.

Whether or not the reader believe in ghosts, he cannot fail to be interested in this little book. Without venturing to express a positive opinion either way, I will only say with Hamlet: “There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”

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