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Obake: Ghost Stories of Hawaii

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Ghost Stories in Hawai'i showcases supernatural tales collected from islanders of all backgrounds that first appeared in 1983 in the Hawai'i Herald. They are presented here for the first time in a single volume, accompanied by the original haunting illustrations by artist Ross Yamanaka. Those who do not care to believe in ghosts, or the hereafter, will glimpse into the dark realm of mystery.

272 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1994

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140 people want to read

About the author

Glen Grant

32 books10 followers

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5 stars
28 (23%)
4 stars
39 (32%)
3 stars
40 (33%)
2 stars
12 (10%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews
Profile Image for Lauri.
407 reviews109 followers
January 26, 2016
This book has both fascinated and terrified me for years! I bought it for myself and never read past the 4th chapter -- until now! Because it deals with paranormal stuff in Hawaii, right where I live, it gave me nightmares! I finally faced and conquered my fears and have had no lasting Ill-effects nor bad dreams. Dr. Grant is an amazing storyteller. I've had the pleasure of meeting him in person and have been on one of his hosted Ghost Tours. He wrote very believable and evocative stories while maintaining respect for Hawaii's diverse cultures. Read it, if you dare!
Profile Image for Judy.
794 reviews13 followers
November 18, 2019
I’m prejudice. The author is my late brother in law. He grew up being able to tell a good story. These stories were his love. They will make you think twice about what you’re doing when you visit Hawaii
Profile Image for Rob Waikiki.
1 review
August 16, 2018
Good book tells story's of accient days
hawaiians left behind them that was unsolved mysteries of there hidden past interesting story got me hooked.
Profile Image for Gabriel.
254 reviews1 follower
September 14, 2025
The first ghost stories are fine, although not very scary. The 2 stories about the detective at the end of the book are very long, not very interesting and boring.
Profile Image for Jennifer Canaveral.
Author 11 books3 followers
December 29, 2015
It is hard to talk about obake stories without mentioning Glen Grant. He was a prolific writer in Hawaii and I used to read this book as a little girl. It gave me chicken skin then and it still does now! For the lovers of ghost stories, especially Hawaiian ones, this book is a must-read. My brother kept the copy of this book so I bought another copy through Amazon. Makes for great campfire, spooky stories!
Profile Image for Stephen.
Author 4 books20 followers
May 30, 2022
Ghosts and other supernaturals generally arise from the conjunction of religion and culture. Almost every example can be traced back to something in this intersection. All of this works perfectly well -- sea-ice goddesses for the Inuit, Strigoi for the Slavs, Ahuizotl for the Aztecs, Lilith in Mesopotamia -- in mono-cultures. When the movement of people brought together languages and histories and oral traditions and faiths, something interesting happened to popular mythology, especially about ghosts, witches, monsters and the like. The Islands of Hawai'i are a near-perfect example of this fusion and synthesis. Atop the ancient traditions of the Native Hawaiians (parallel to other Polynesian mythologies), the legends of numerous successive immigrations were laid: Chinese, English, Filipino, Japanese, Portuguese, Norwegian, German, Okinawan, Puerto Rican, Korean, and Spanish. What are the ghosts and monsters supposed to do? How do they coexist when they don't even speak the same language? The result, according to Dr. Glen Grant, a college professor, is a somewhat syncretic mix which cannot exist anywhere else. He collected and told ghost stories for his entire career, not only to his college classes but as a "haunted Honolulu" tour guide, a newspaper columnist, and as a raconteur who won the Tusitala Award from the Storytelling Association of Hawai'i. I bought this book on a whim in a bookshop on O'ahu. I read it because I love all things Hawaiian and most things ghostly. Your choice remains your own.

Profile Image for Lindee Lee Keller.
35 reviews21 followers
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October 14, 2020
When I was about 10, we went to visit our family in Hawai'i. Somewhere along the way, the airport, maybe a gift shop, I bought and read this book. For those who do not already know, this book was written by a folklorist, the blurb on the back cover emphasized that these are true! stories!, and each is narrated from a first person perspective. I took this all very literally and spent the rest of the trip terrified. (To be fair, on this trip, I also refused to snorkel because I had gone into the water and been brushed by a slimy fish.) Dr. Glen Grant is a great writer.
Profile Image for Erica.
16 reviews2 followers
January 21, 2020
The stories were kind of a novelty at first and easy to follow. Something about the later stories made me lose interest. It might have been that there were more characters to keep track of or more details than I cared about, but I didn't make it all the way through because I just got bored. That said, it was good for short reading sessions, as each chapter gives you a different story.
Profile Image for SouthWestZippy.
2,111 reviews9 followers
October 22, 2025
A decent collection of ghost stories. Some of the stories ran a little overboard with information that had little to do with the Ghost story like background information. I could have done without chapter four. If you are a dog/animal lover skip that chapter. I am giving the book four stars because it still a good ghost story book that will keep people believing in ghosts.
Profile Image for Keefer.
6 reviews
October 15, 2024
Something I picked up at the Honolulu airport to pass the time. Stories were ok, a little outdated. Great for reading to the kids.
Profile Image for Jacs Rodriguez.
139 reviews1 follower
August 14, 2025
genuinely was confused by whether this is fiction or not.......but fuckin sick ghost stories, dude
387 reviews1 follower
October 15, 2016
Since I am from Hawaii I was glad to see these stories deeper in depth, I am a great fan of Mr. Grant and I miss his stories, the man that took over for him and I guess you would say trained under him does a great job. Good book to read during this Halloween season.
Profile Image for Celeste.
2 reviews17 followers
June 28, 2015
I don't usually review books, but I do have to say this book was enjoyable.

It is dated and there is a lot of orientalism in this book which is uncomfortable and there were a handful of religious Japanese terms that were incorrectly used and or spelled, but again this book is dated.

Aside from that, I enjoyed the stories. Grant had a talent for telling stories that were believable. I myself am a collector of Yōkai stories and wandering old abandoned places in search of stories in Japan so this book really refueled my love of that. It was interesting to see how much of a Japanese influence is in the stories.

So, overall, while dated, this book is definitely worth the read if you have a love for ghost stories.
Profile Image for Marie.
85 reviews7 followers
February 14, 2008
Obake: Ghost Stories of Hawaii by Glen Grant (2005)
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews

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