Introduction by John O. West |
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3 | (5) |
Authors' Introduction |
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8 | (7) |
PART ONE Tales the Pioneers Brought |
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Introduction by John L. Davis |
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15 | (5) |
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20 | (5) |
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Attempting to outwit Death, Macario is given a magic healing potion. In a chilling climax, Macario must choose between honor for his family and life for himself. |
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25 | (3) |
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The most famous of all Hispanic haunts, this weeping woman seeks her drowned children along the riverbanks of Texas. |
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28 | (4) |
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A beady-eyed varmint crawls through the floor of a lonely old man's cabin. The old man chops off his tail, but the varmint wants it back. |
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32 | (5) |
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Young Wiley always minds his mama, and he'd better. She's the best conjuring woman in the county and his only hope against the Hairy Man. |
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37 | (3) |
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Irish Mary meets a hideous and mostly dead man in the grave-yard. She piggybacks him around the village, then tricks him for his gold. |
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40 | (3) |
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An old gentleman leads three young men to Death. They think they will slay the Grim Reaper. They do not. |
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Fiddling on Devil's Backbone |
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43 | (4) |
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A young fiddler wagers with a stranger that he can cajole rattlesnakes out of the rocks. To his peril, he does so. |
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47 | (8) |
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An innocent husband discovers his new bride's secret-she climbs out of her skin at night and flies to meet her Boo Daddy. |
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55 | (4) |
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A skeleton returns from the grave to find his widow courting a fiddle player. The musician discovers the skeleton must dance as long as the music plays. |
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59 | (5) |
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In this chilling tale from the Borderlands, a young girl is disrespectful of her mother and pays the ultimate price. |
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64 | (2) |
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Ignoring her mother's warnings, a young girl is lured by cantina music into the arms of a dancer with cloven hooves. |
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66 | (4) |
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Jack spends the night in a haunted house. No one tells him about the skeleton in the chimney. |
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70 | (2) |
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In this popular slave narrative, Little Eight John is mean as the dickens. Meaner still is Raw Head and Bloody Bones. |
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72 | (3) |
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Early settlers from Tennessee told of sweet Katie Bell and the invisible witch that tormented her. |
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75 | (3) |
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This shape-shifting bruja captures children from an isolated jungle village. The villagers retaliate, cruelty escalates, and evil is triumphant in this fatalistic fable. |
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78 | (3) |
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While the hurricane blows, a Cajun grandmother warns her grandson of a floating coffin and the perils of being stingy. |
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81 | (8) |
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Set in the Texas Hill Country, this story is a variation of the legend of Bluebeard, the wealthy aristocrat who mutilated naive young maidens. |
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PART TWO Tales of the Pioneers |
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Introduction by John L. Davis |
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89 | (4) |
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93 | (3) |
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One of the Austin area's first citizens, Josiah loses his scalp to a band of Comanches. His dead sister intervenes to save his life. |
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96 | (3) |
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An old shepherd discovers gold in a cave in Uvalde County, but determined rattlers protect the treasure. |
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The Doctor's Eerie House Call |
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99 | (4) |
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Under cover of darkness, a physician follows a stranger to a San Antonio mansion. The house was the scene of a gruesome old crime. |
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103 | (3) |
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Returning from her late-night job, an elderly resident of Jefferson encounters a dozen men in white robes. A spirit dog leads her safely home. |
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106 | (5) |
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The heroes of the Alamo, only days after their bodies have been torched, revive to prevent the destruction of the fortress. |
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111 | (3) |
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A range dispute results in the death of hundreds of cattle and several cowboys. This ghostly herd still roams the plains of Crosby County. |
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114 | (3) |
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Every evening Dolores lit a fire for her beloved. Folks still see those fires in the hills surrounding Fort Davis. |
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117 | (4) |
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An aristocratic young man murders his servant to protect his buried gold, then kills the only witness. |
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121 | (3) |
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Though all agree Colonel Bowie died defending the Alamo, he made one final visit before departing. |
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124 | (3) |
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In this unique variant of the "Weeping Woman," Indians, racism, and rampant floods provide a volatile mix for a Texas tragedy. |
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127 | (4) |
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In this Texas version of A Tale of Two Cities, an angel of mercy saves a Mexican soldier. He returns the favor and dies in her lover's place at the siege of the Alamo. |
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131 | (3) |
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A young Comanche student, witness to a murder trial, is followed by the ghost of the killer. |
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The Ghost of San Luis Pass |
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134 | (2) |
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A young fisherman launches his boat in a storm. His demented widow still walks the beaches and calls for him. |
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136 | (4) |
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In Brazoria County, a ghost light still haunts the woods near Bailey's Prairie. Is Brit looking for his whiskey or seeking his beloved? |
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140 | (4) |
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Pirate Lafitte, aging in Galveston, recognizes his life's true treasure. An unsuspecting servant digs it up. |
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Fiddle Music on the San Bernard |
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144 | (5) |
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Two teenage girls on a river outing meet the ghost of a grieving musician. |
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149 | (5) |
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Other than Anna's obsessive fear of snakes, Ross and Anna were the perfect newlywed couple. In a striking conclusion, they hear noises in the kitchen of their dark nuptial cabin. |
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154 | (5) |
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Before recent renewals of death row executions, Chipita was the last woman legally executed in Texas. She returns to haunt the people of San Patricio, the site of her hanging. |
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159 | (8) |
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From Dickens County, Texas, comes this tale of two pioneers driven mad by the isolation. Taciturn Ben hacks off the head of his partner Burl, but Burl just won't stay buried. |
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PART THREE Urban Myths and Contemporary Tales |
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Introduction by John L. Davis |
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167 | (4) |
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171 | (4) |
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A giant owl attacks doubters, then terrifies a girl and her grand-mother near Pleasanton, Texas. |
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The Lady of White Rock Lake |
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175 | (6) |
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A victim of drowning during Prohibition, this eerie spirit knocks on doors and hitchhikes along the shores of the Dallas-area lake. |
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La Llorona at Mission Concepción |
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181 | (4) |
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At a family wedding, two bickering children meet a stern old woman who warns them of the wicked La Llorona. As they nap by the river, one of the children disappears. |
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185 | (4) |
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Suspicious of his wife, a wealthy Spaniard has her hanged. She still walks the highways near Refugio, Texas, proclaiming her innocence to all who will listen. |
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189 | (4) |
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Distraught and dateless on prom night, a young man finds a beautiful girl on a deserted road. She's his age and dressed for the prom. Surprise! Surprise! |
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193 | (5) |
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The ghost of a beautiful blonde woman still walks the hallways of San Antonio's Gunter Hotel. |
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198 | (4) |
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This famous San Antonio landmark was once a downtown hospital. Many claim the diminutive occupants of the basement still carry on their healing. |
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The Lady in the Red Dress |
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202 | (2) |
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She walks El Mercado after midnight. Leave her alone if you want to see the dawn. |
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204 | (5) |
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A librarian in San Diego, Texas, tells this true-life story of an old man killed by a teenage driver. He returns to share his empanadas with a child who loved him. |
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The Crying Children of Carrollton |
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209 | (5) |
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Anyone who looked upon them said they were the saddest children they'd ever seen. Almost a century later, their sobbing still haunts the town of Carrollton, Texas. |
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Fang Baby of Old Pearsal Road |
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214 | (4) |
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A friend relates this chilling modern vampire tale of an infant on a south Texas roadside. When motorists stop, the child's toothless gums grow fangs. |
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218 | (2) |
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So, you thought it was a man? Bet you didn't know it was a cheerleader, either. She couldn't hold her pom-pom, and she's out for revenge. |
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220 | (4) |
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An Alabama man traveling across Texas discovers it's a long way to El Paso. A hitchhiker shortens the trip. |
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224 | (3) |
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This is a classic San Antonio story of twenty-three children killed when their school bus stalled on a railroad track. The driver fled to safety, but the children did not forget. |
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227 | (12) |
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Sweet Rosalee was the object of cruel ridicule throughout her youth. She now seeks her revenge on teenage romancers near Helotes, west of San Antonio. |
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In Conclusion |
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235 | (4) |
Appendices |
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Appendix A: Learning Ghost Stories: The Why and How |
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239 | (25) |
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Appendix B: Notes and Thoughts on Story Sources |
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264 | |