Because of the depression and the war, the Queen Mary’s sister ship, the Queen Elizabeth, wasn’t finished until 1946. The Queen Mary was the flagship of the Cunard Line, from her maiden voyage on May 27, 1936, until October 1946, when that honor was shifted to the newly built Queen...
Step aboard the Queen Mary, learn about the ship’s fascinating history and grab a cocktail or mocktail at the Spirits Bar while you explore the real stories of paranormal experiences and ghost sightings about this notoriously haunted ship and learn how they’ve inspired the stories and characters...
The “Ghosts, Myths & Legends of the Queen Mary” tour was developed, according to Keith Kambak, vice president of the Queen Mary, after the staff realized that scores of visitors spent much of their time asking questions about reported ghost sightings and legends connected with the ship. Alt...
The story of Pan Yuliang’s life has been adapted into films in China and France: the 1994 film by Huang Shuqin titled Hua hun (the soul of a painter) or A Soul Haunted by Painting and the French movie La Peintre. In 2008, Jennifer Cody Epstein wrote a biographical novel on Yuliang ...
This page was last edited on 17 March 2021, at 16:12. They had no desire to tarry in that land, for its woods were bitter and lifeless things, and the chill air sapped the heart of even the cruellest of Dryads. Elves and spirits awoke as from a nightmare, the cloak of vengeance an...
Lenore Glen Offord's The Glass Mask (1944) (end of Chapter 7, Chapters 8, 9), which has stories-within-the-story in synopsized form. Mary Roberts Rinehart has outlines in several works: The Case of Jennie Brice (1912) (near the end of Chapter 3) has an outline of the facts up...
Except she’s haunted by a memory. A memory of a confusing, romantic, strangely perfect summer spent with a girl named Jasmine. A memory that becomes a confusing, disorienting present when Jasmine herself walks through the front doors of the school to see Lara and Chase chatting it up in ...
Back in the 1980s I wanted my Woolrich book to answer almost any imaginable question about the haunted recluse I’ve called the Hitchcock of the written word. Now as I slipslide into senility I want my new book to be just as comprehensive about the two first cousins from Brooklyn ...