In recent years interest in paranormal fiction has burgeoned, though of course the genre is by no means new.
Many
young readers who have discovered vampires through Twilight and its successors probably never heard of Bram Stoker’s Dracula when they first gained an
interest in the saga of Bella Swan.
Ghost
stories are one sub-genre of the paranormal and these have a long and
respectable tradition, penned by a good number of great authors, among them
Charles Dickens, M.R. James, Henry James, Washington Irving, Edgar Allan Poe, Edith
Wharton, Fritz Leiber, Shirley Jackson, Ramsey Campbell, Stephen King, Dean
Koontz and Susan Hill.
Medieval ghost - wikipedia commons
There
are two types of ghost stories. In the first, it is obvious from the outset that
the story relates to ghosts – usually to be found in an anthology. There, the author
is striving for effect, the crawl of chilled fingers up the spine, the
anticipation of incipient doom, the tragedy of history repeating itself,
etc. The second type is not defined as ghost story, and may be a romance, a mystery, or a suspense tale and its ending is often the twist that reveals the ghost aspect; naturally, these
stories cannot be contained in a ghost anthology, or the plot ultimate device is
destroyed.
In
my time I’ve written both kinds, and enjoyed writing them.
Interestingly,
a 2014 YouGov poll reveals the findings concerning British people and their
belief in things that go bump in the night.
Apparently,
only 23% of British people say they are religious. I think that despite the low
percentage who consider them religious, a higher percentage actually believes
in God (in one form or another).
According
to the poll, 1 in 3 holds the belief that ghosts exist; that is 34%. And of
that number, 9% state they have communicated with a ghost.
39%
believe a house can be haunted.
28%
have felt the presence of a supernatural being.
The
poll states that women are 10% more likely than men to believe in ghosts.
And,
finally, 17% are likely to believe in life after death.
Touch
wood, like all poll results, these figures may need to be taken with a pinch of
salt (thrown over the shoulder if spilled), since we all know that statistics
can prove anything.
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