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A beady-eyed varmint crawls through the floor of a lonely old mans
cabin. A boy spends the night in a haunted house, complete with a
grinning skeleton in the chimney. A girl foolishly taunts a giant
owl-woman. A young mans prom date has a spooky secret. The Hairy
Man will catch you unless you can fool him three times. Graveyard
ghosts and creatures from swamps and riverbanks slink through ten
creepy tales presented by master storytellers Tim Tingle and Doc
Moore. Guaranteed to send shivers down the spines of younger
readers, each of these stories comes with its own eerie
illustrations. Some humorous, some haunting, these tales guarantee
thrills and chills for youngsters from any state.
This title is 'Storytelling World/Storytelling Magazine' Award
Winner. 'I love a book that gives me what it promises, and this one
does: fifty real ghost stories, drawn from a variety of sources and
told in as many voices, written so as to simulate the language and
delivery of a face-to-face performance, and artfully, delightfully
done' - ""Review of Texas Books"". 'Scarcely a page will you turn
in this collection of ghost stories in Texas without encountering a
disembodied hand or a fang babycreatures guaranteed to shock the
shell of an armadillo...Whether you read the tales out loud or spin
them around a campfire, youand your audiencewill be spooked. And
you'll never again saunter along a dark, deserted riverbank late at
night' - Patti Ross, ""San Antonio Express-News"". Some humorous,
some haunting, and some just late-night terrifying, these stories,
gathered by two favorite Texas tellers, span a rich cultural
heritage from the earliest Spanish explorers to the present, from
""La Llorona (the Weeping Woman)"" to the ""Vanishing Hitchhiker""
. Introduced by John O. West and John L. Davis, two of Texas most
respected folklorists, the stories include tales adapted by
European settlers to their new southwestern settings, more
historically rooted legends about such early pioneers as Britt
Bailey of the Gulf Coast prairie and Josiah Wilbarger of Austin,
and those notorious contemporary cautionary tales known as urban
legends. With two appendixes addressing selection, learning, and
telling of stories as well as sources and scholarship, ""Texas
Ghost Stories"" is a full-service compendium for tellers, teachers,
readers, and collectors. Celebrating both the blending and the
diversity of Texan cultures through the timeless stories we love to
be scared by, it is a treasury for all Texans and for those who
really want to know us.
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