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The Ghosts on 87th Lane: A True Story

The Ghosts on 87th Lane: A True Story

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Author: M.l. Woelm
Publisher: Llewellyn Publications
Category: Book

List Price: $12.95
Buy New: $1.97
You Save: $10.98 (85%)



New (42) Used (17) from $1.94

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 19 reviews
Sales Rank: 149582

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 288
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.8

ISBN: 0738710318
Dewey Decimal Number: 133.10977665
EAN: 9780738710310
ASIN: 0738710318

Publication Date: September 1, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand new book with no markings. Expanding Books has been in the bookselling business for 18 years and we guarantee your satisfaction.

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Once upon a time, my house was haunted. It still is. I began recording my experiences, hoping to one day share them. I kept waiting for the incidents to stop, so I'd have a logical conclusion to my book. So far, that hasn't happened. It may never happen. I'd like to get my story told before I become a ghost myself.

The True Story of a Haunting
Beginning in 1968 and spanning four decades, this true story chronicles the hair-raising experiences that nearly drove an ordinary housewife and mother to the breaking point.

Not every haunted house is an old Victorian mansion, as the author and her family discovered when they bought a modest house in the suburbs. Even a post-war starter home can be a dwelling place for earthbound spirits?especially if it holds a tragic secret from the past. Eerie feelings of being watched, disembodied sobs, mysterious scratches appearing on her throat, and a child's voice crying, "Mommy!" convinced M. L. Woelm that she was sharing her home with ghosts. This is her story.



Customer Reviews:   Read 14 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars All In the Head   October 2, 2008
I love a good ghost story, but it was the subtext to this particular one that kept me fascinated. No, the 'hauntings' aren't very dazzling, but if you read it as a study in oppressed emotion being projected on to the house the 'emoter' lives in, it's unputdownable. Without once writing it in those terms, you realise the author is a woman furious with the way she's been treated by friends and family and is unconciously perceiving very normal events as 'para-'. It haunts her ironing board for heaven's sake.! This would make a great little movie. Anyone interested in female psychology of the mid 20th century should have a read, even if you don't belive in ghosts per se.


3 out of 5 stars Had a hard time with authors story/viewpoints   August 7, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I am in complete agreement with a few others here on the fact that the book is very long winded about things that did not need to be included. I actually skipped many pages toward the end and missed nothing of importance. My own personal opinion is that the author started out in the book with an actual true story of the child that died and that he was possibly still lingering in his old home. She took this story as far truthfully as she could then just started to take things that probably had a perfectly rational explanation to them and just blew them way out of proportion. I also had a hard time with the authors personality while reading this book. I mean this is supposedly a mother, a good mother, and yet she has a very crass and uncaring way of speaking about what is supposedly the spirit of a little boy. My heart was breaking for this little boy and his family. This part of the story just drops off about midway through the book and she never talks anymore about it. Then there are just day after day of items being moved, feelings of being watched etc. This in between her constant talk about her husband and how he is not supportive of her and doesn't believe her. Other than that there are some good points to this book and I did enjoy the story told whether true or not. Decide for yourself.


5 out of 5 stars Wonderful!   August 4, 2008
How seldom does one find a book like this! This is my favorite of all the personal hauntings that have hit the bookshelves in the past two years.

What makes this book intriguing is:
1) The haunting went on for decades.
2) The author chronicles her personal struggle in learning to live with the haunting when no one else would believe her.
3) The ordinary life she describes interspersed with her nights of terror are very thought provoking--what would you do if faced with the same events?

The author struggles with fear of the unknown, personal rejection and nights filled with terror. These events move her from being a shy wife and mother of the 1960's into a woman of the 1990's that accepts the ghosts in her home and is finally vindicated when other family members finally confess thier own encounters.

This intimate sharing really touched my heart since that is much of my own experience with a haunting.

Definitely a great read! Almost 300 pages.



5 out of 5 stars Very enjoyable true-life haunting account   July 12, 2008
If you have a passion for true-life ghost stories (as I do), I highly recommend this book. The author has a tale of a 30+ years haunting to tell that is truly creepy. And she tells it in most readable style. She has an engaging, self-aware, humorous writing style that really draws the reader into her both head and into her emotions, which makes the events she recounts seem very immediate even though some of them happened a long time ago.

In recent years, I've read many books like this one (many self-published; this one is not, and it shows), and the vast majority of them are frustrating reads, not only because they are often poorly written and loaded with grammatical and typographical errors, but because they provide minimal details/history about the victims of the hauntings under discussion. But I'm always curious (okay, nosy) about the back stories of the people involved in these hauntings, so I really appreciated the depth with which the author treated her family interactions regarding the hauntings, especially her husband's stubborn silence.

I also appreciated that this was a real BOOK -- not just a sliver of a book with wide margins and huge type, as so many of these types of books are -- and that it didn't stint on describing even repetitive events, because the author's response to these wasn't always the same as the years progressed.

After finishing the book, I did still have some questions (for instance, did her husband stop working nights in 1980 or 1982? She cited both years for that -- and what happened to her cat, Murray?), So I do think this book would have benefited from more careful editing. But that is just a minor complaint. Overall, this book is well worth reading.



3 out of 5 stars Skeptical about the author's honesty, and way too long   June 27, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I love true ghost stories and am not a skeptic about the paranormal, however I have a hard time believing this particular author. Many of the experiences that she writes about, such as the tapping sounds or misplaced items, have very logical explanations. More to the point though, I find her character somewhat questionable and wonder if she is exaggerating the less logical experiences (i.e. items being thrown) - or even making them up entirely!

My reason for thinking this is that it is noted at many times in the book that other people have little faith in her as a person - friends stopped being friends with her for little reason, both her father-in-law and mother-in-law stated did not like her and gave her a good chewing out, etc. In my experience, people close to you, such as friends and family, do not just drop you unless you give them just cause for doing so. But we need not speculate about why people dislike her, because the author provides us with her own reasons not to believe her story.

In the best example I found, she begins the story of her encounters with Echo Bodine by stating that she has written a letter to Echo about her hauntings. This letter goes ignored for some time until Echo finally contacts the author, because Echo is eager to use the letter in a forthcoming book. The author says she'll think about it, and later on writes that she is concerned there will be legal implications if both Echo and the author try to publish books using the same material (by publishing it first, Echo would gain copyright rights to the information). Then, on pages, Mrs. Woelm writes of one of her first phone conversations with Echo Bodine. She states that she "casually mentions" to Echo that she wants to get rid of her ghost, but adds that she "wasn't hinting that [Echo] should take on the task." Echo responds that she no longer rids home of ghosts, so the author asks for a recommendation for someone who could. Echo pauses a minute and then says she'll do it. The author feigns surprise - claiming she was "speechless, and "didn't expect that response at all."

Yet, on the next day (page 147), the author reports back to her friend/co-worker Nancy about her conversation with Echo. In this report, she crows that she used Nancy's "negotiating techniques," and "Echo decided she'd do her ghost-busting thing in exchange for the use of my letter." What?!? On page 146, the author makes it clear that Echo volunteers to "ghost bust" and that the author had nothing to do with Echo making this decision. But on page 147, we find the author admitting that she twisted Echo's arm to get her to perform the ghost bust!

It is clear from this exchange that this author lies, and also indicates that the author may be manipulative. There are other places in the book that the author trips up and catches herself in a lie, but I will leave you to find them yourself (here's a hint: re-read her descriptions of the neck scratches she receives; they go from "deep" to "fine" and "kitten-like"). Through these blatant lies and over-exaggerations, we can clearly see that this author should be handled with a bit of skepticism. After all, if she's willing to lie about her treatment of Echo - how do we not know the whole book is a lie?


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