Haunted Buffalo: Ghosts of the Queen City by Dwayne Claud and Cassidy O’Connor
Release Date: August 2008
Publisher: History Press
Age Group: Adult (Non-fiction)
Pages: 128
Source: Borrowed from Mom who received it as a Christmas
gift.
Summary (goodreads.com): Grab pen and paper, a flashlight and a
camera and prepare to embark upon the haunted adventure of a lifetime using
this comprehensive guide to some of Buffalo's spookiest sites. Avid ghost
hunter and paranormal investigator Dwayne Claud and researcher Cassidy O'Connor
entertain readers with stories of the city's most acclaimed spooks and spirits,
such as Tanya, the five-year-old that can be spotted bouncing on guest beds at
the Grand Island Holiday Inn. The book includes twisted tales from the Buffalo
Psychiatric Center, as well as stories of roaming spirits at Frontier House- a
hotel frequented by figures such as Mark Twain and President McKinley. This
gripping collection of ghostly tales is sure to thrill anyone fascinated by the
unknown.
My Review:
First of all, right off the
bat, I need to get something off my chest: there are people called proof
readers and they should be utilized. In a book that is only 128 pages there
should not be a handful of typos. A couple misplaced punctuation marks are fine
but when a book is published with words missing letters, names spelled wrong
and one case of a name being accidentally substituted for another so it looks as
if the ghost is the one hearing the haunting there is a serious problem that
cannot be ignored. That being said, I enjoyed this book as much as I could.
I decided to read Haunted Buffalo because I live in
Buffalo and I’ve always believed in the paranormal, ghosts especially. It
starts out with a history of Buffalo which was incredibly interesting, and then
moved into the ghost stories. Each “story” was a brief summary of the history
of the place and then a quick explanation of the haunting and/or the
investigation that found the most evidence, not exactly the “twisted” or
“ghostly” tales that were promised in the summary, but overall the stories were interesting and worth reading. From a historical stand point I have to give Haunted Buffalo a lot of props for not adding the famous tales with no historical evidence backing them. Especially, the tale from Old Fort Niagara. They did not add its
famous claim to fame: the headless ghost whose head is in the well (which despite having no historical background is still a great story). It was interesting to read stories about places I pass every
day, like City Hall, the Central Terminal, and the Buffalo Psychiatric Center.
The story about the last one in particular had me itching to explore the old
Asylum seeing as its right next to my school. Too bad I would probably get
arrested if I tried to set foot in there.
The book is nicely organized into chapters that divide each haunting
into their location such as “Ghosts at Work,” “Historic Haunts,” and “‘Spirited’
Theatres” which makes it easy to navigate. Added at the end there is even a
handy glossary of terms and a list of paranormal researchers in the WNY area. I
fully plan on checking out some of the sights listed in Haunted Buffalo with my mom this summer!
~Laura!
Where should we start?
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