Saturday, August 16, 2014

!! Download The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan

Download The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan

Just attach to the web to obtain this book The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan This is why we suggest you to use and make use of the developed innovation. Reading book does not suggest to bring the printed The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan Created technology has allowed you to review only the soft data of guide The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan It is exact same. You could not should go and obtain traditionally in looking the book The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan You may not have enough time to invest, may you? This is why we offer you the most effective way to get guide The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan currently!

The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan

The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan



The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan

Download The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan

The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan. Join with us to be participant right here. This is the internet site that will provide you relieve of searching book The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan to review. This is not as the other website; the books will remain in the kinds of soft documents. What benefits of you to be member of this site? Get hundred collections of book link to download and also get consistently updated book each day. As one of the books we will offer to you currently is the The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan that has a really pleased idea.

This book The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan is expected to be one of the best vendor publication that will make you really feel completely satisfied to buy and review it for completed. As recognized could typical, every book will certainly have specific things that will make someone interested so much. Even it originates from the writer, kind, content, or even the publisher. Nevertheless, many people additionally take the book The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan based on the motif as well as title that make them astonished in. and also below, this The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan is quite advised for you since it has appealing title as well as theme to review.

Are you truly a follower of this The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan If that's so, why do not you take this book currently? Be the initial individual which like and also lead this book The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan, so you could obtain the reason and messages from this publication. Never mind to be puzzled where to obtain it. As the other, we discuss the connect to visit and also download and install the soft documents ebook The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan So, you could not carry the printed publication The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan all over.

The presence of the online book or soft file of the The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan will certainly reduce individuals to get the book. It will certainly also save even more time to just look the title or writer or publisher to obtain up until your publication The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan is exposed. After that, you can go to the link download to go to that is supplied by this site. So, this will be an excellent time to start enjoying this publication The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan to review. Always good time with publication The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, By Brent Monahan, constantly good time with money to invest!

The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan

Known throughout Tennessee as "Old Kate," the Bell Witch took up residence with John Bell's family in 1818. It was a cruel and noisy spirit, given to rapping and gnawing sounds before it found its voices.

With these voices and its supernatural acts, the Bell Witch tormented the Bell family. This extraordinary book recounts the only documented case in U.S. history when a spirit actually caused a man's death.

The local schoolteacher, Richard Powell, witnessed the strange events and recorded them for his daughter. His astonishing manuscript fell into the hands of novelist Brent Monahan, who has prepared the book for publication. Members of the Bell family have previously provided information on this fascinating case, but this book recounts the tale with novelistic vigor and verve. It is truly chilling.

  • Sales Rank: #109882 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-06-19
  • Released on: 2000-06-19
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.50" h x .47" w x 5.50" l, .62 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 208 pages

From Kirkus Reviews
Ever-intelligent horror novelist Monahan (The Blood of the Covenant, 1995, etc.) retells a true story--true as far as the participants knew--about a poltergeist. The book purports to be a recently discovered manuscript written by Richard Powell, an eyewitness of the Bell Witch haunting in Robertson County, Tennessee, 181721. Monahan says that his first skeptical reading of the manuscript led him to six books confirming the authenticity of the events. Indeed, Richard Powell, the long-dead narrator, is himself a skeptic who seems to know all the devices of poltergeists, and in particular how poltergeist activity within a home reflects a family's psychic torment. Poltergeists (racket-makers) do not attack from without but rather are a spiritual pustule erupting from within a deeply troubled household. The poltergeist in this case seemed set on doing away with John Bell, the head of the family, while at the same time gradually evolving a rather homey tie with the other family members that lasted for three years and was witnessed by many. The spirit first showed up as something invisible gnawing nightly on bedposts, raining rocks on the roof, ripping covers off beds, and repeatedly slapping 12-year-old Betsy Bell and pulling her across the floor by her hair. At times the spirit allowed itself to be touched; it gathered news from afar for the family; lectured on theology; sang sweetly in four different voices; and rescued children in trouble. For three years, the spirit joked, lectured, ran off frauds and charlatans, and even nursed Bell's sick wife, producing nuts and berries for the invalid out of thin air. Even so, it afflicted the father with palsy, tics, and neuralgia, and at last watched him die. What produced the poltergeist? It's unfair to reveal here Monahan's reasonable yet supernatural answer. More artful, if less exciting, than Monahan's brainy bloodsucker operas--but all immensely satisfying. -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Review

“America's greatest ghost story.” ―Dennis William Hauck, Haunted Places

“Too compelling to put down.” ―Fangoria

About the Author

Richard Powell was a Tennessee schoolteacher when he first encountered the Bell Witch. He died in 1848.

Brent Monahan is the author of half a dozen novels, the most recent of which is The Jekyl Island Club. He lives in Pennyslvania.

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Chilling; the most frightening book I've ever read
By A Customer
"The Bell Witch" is the most frightening book I've ever read. I frequently read books over, but I've read this one twice in six months, loved it enough from the library that I bought my own copy. This book covers two topics that hold great interest for me, and in which I consider myself well read. The first is hauntings. The second I won't reveal here because to do so would spoil the ending of this tale. However, the incidents cited in these pages made me question many of the things I was convinced I knew about both subjects. The book is made more chilling by the introduction. After having read it, and consulting the footnotes throughout the text, there is little doubt in my mind that this - unlike so many similar works - is a fiction. Read "The Bell Witch." Then read it again. And see if you can shake it from your mind.

30 of 34 people found the following review helpful.
First Of All, It's A Novel
By J. D Suggs
This book probably intends to confuse you a little- it did me- by purporting to be a newly discovered diary of a known eyewitness to events in the historically-documented "Bell Witch" case. In fact, it's a very good novel. Monahan takes the basic facts (or claims) that we have and fleshes them out artfully, with a narrator, dialogue, and a point of view that work beautifully well. The gripping story takes the horror and suspense genres in a unique direction, and lives up to the incredible source material. A small complaint: he tries to wrap things in a too-neat 1990s package for us at the end- the only false note he strikes here.
The book left me very interested in this case, and my interest increased recently when I discovered close family ties to many of the people depicted here, including Elias and Sugg Fort.

7 of 16 people found the following review helpful.
THIS IS ONE BELL THAT DOESN'T RING TRUE!
By David D. Warner
In THE BELL WITCH: AN AMERICAN HAUNTING, Brent Monahan tells the remarkable story of the only documented poltergeist or spirit haunting to ever result in the death of a human being. True to its purpose, THE BELL WITCH delivers a suspenseful tale of the supernatural that has the mystique of realness - historical documentation corroborates the events described. Monahan delivers plenty of surprises, interesting characters, a couple of gasps and even a few laughs along the way. What is missing, however, is believability - not so much in Monahan's premise or in his ability as a writer, but rather in his packaging. The real weakness here is Monahan's implausible framework, which is the direct result of some rather transparent marketing schemes.
In THE BELL WITCH, Monahan asks us to believe that what lies between the covers of his book is not a novel, but rather a recently discovered manuscript written by one Richard Powell for the edification of his daughter. His daughter, we are told, is the product of Powell's marriage to Betsy Bell, daughter of the haunted John Bell and target of some of the mysterious entity's most violent abuse. No less, we are lead to believe that Betsy Bell's daughter has never before heard this well-publicized story of her mother's torment and her grandfather's murder at the hands of a malicious spirit. For just a moment, set aside the fact that Monahan is the well-known author of several notable novels of the supernatural. Then ask yourself, "Do I smell a gimmick here?"
Perhaps in an effort to make this book appear more journal-like, Monahan dispenses with the usual convention of chapters. He writes straight through, from the setting of the scene to its final conclusion, in one long Uberchapter. For me, however, this device was largely unsuccessful. As a rule, when reading any book, I try to finish each reading session at a logical break point. The lack of a conventional structure just made it all that much harder to find my place each time I picked up the book again. I guess this would not have bothered me so much if it were such an apparent gimmick.
One thing that would have improved this book greatly in my mind is if the author had dispensed with at least some of the inherent racism laced throughout the length and breadth of the story. True, racism may have been en vogue in Kentucky in the early decades of the1800s, but Mr. Monahan - perhaps in a misguided attempt at period realism - took it too far. The constant references to "darkies" and, in particular, references to the "pungent odor of sweat" among the slaves, were not only overdrawn clichés, they also added nothing to the story. Even if one chooses to believe that this book is, indeed, the long, lost manuscript of Richard Powell, many, if not all of these offensive statements could have been stripped without affecting the end product in any way other than making it more palatable to a wider audience. If the desire had been to tell the complete and unedited story in Powell's own words, the alleged manuscript could have been published, as found, without the need for any involvement on the part of Monahan.
While I've been largely critical of THE BELL WITCH, I would never tell anyone NOT to read this book out of hand. It tells a decent story, sheds some new light on an old legend and even has a significant amount of entertainment value. But if you are looking for a good example of Brent Monahan's best work, I would strongly urge you to start with THE BOOK OF COMMON DREAD. It's a great supernatural novel that doesn't try to be anything else.

See all 63 customer reviews...

The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan PDF
The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan EPub
The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan Doc
The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan iBooks
The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan rtf
The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan Mobipocket
The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan Kindle

!! Download The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan Doc

!! Download The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan Doc

!! Download The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan Doc
!! Download The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan Doc

No comments:

Post a Comment