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Inventing the American Ghost Story

When I was in college, the house across the street from mine was said to be haunted. I never entered that house, but every time I walked in its shadow, I felt a little queasy. There was something unsettling about the place. Older students claimed to have held séances in the living room. Younger ones believed that these had opened a door to another world, one whose terrors were unleashed at night. Maybe there was something to that. Everyone who slept under the house’s roof shared dreams: of shrieking children, of vermin scuttling across the ceiling, of an old woman drifting down the halls. One day, the frightened students called a priest to perform an exorcism. The disturbances ceased—but only for a time. 

A lot of places in the neighborhood were like this. Ours was an old Michigan town, with many buildings dating back to the 1880s. By the time I got there, nearly a century and a half of legend had wormed its way into their decaying beams. One night I sat up with the owner of the diner downtown as she closed up shop and whispered to me stories about the “lost” children she had glimpsed in the basement. Another night I listened in dumb silence as an older friend—no believer in the supernatural—told me how, once, a nocturnal screeching in his apartment, which was adjacent to the old Freemason hall, had compelled him to clutch a rosary till sunrise. Others spoke of strange apparitions in the fairgrounds, on the access roads, out over the lake. 

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