Was Harry Price a brilliant investigator of the paranormal or serial fraudster?
Once again, my fave historical true crime podcaster has entertained & educated me - this time on the British masonic-like Ghost Club, members known as “Brother Ghosts” - a secret society, along with the likes of the Society for Psychical Research, who have studied & educated on mediums, spirtualism, psychics, & paranormal activities since the mid-1800’s. The members used their combined book smarts to attempt to prove or de-bunk claims of the otherworldly.
Her approach to research & reporting on science-y themed historical & true crime subjects are what make her work so interesting to me. Her podcasts, Tenfold More Wicked & Buried Bones, are must listens & I esp loved her book ‘American Sherlock: Murder, Forensics, and the Birth of American CSI’ about Edward Oscar Heinrich (in fact, Sherlock Holmes’ creator, Arthur Conan Doyle, was also a member of The Ghost Club, as was Charles Dickens!). You learn a lot from her extensive research, but it also leaves me with a taste for more. I’ll be doing a further deep dive into the Borley Rectory, the spiritualist Fox Sisters of NY, The Davenport Brothers, famous spiritual photographer William Hope (thanks to early double exposure techniques), and William Butler Yates’ relationship with the paranormal.
This isn’t a book about whether or not you believe in spirits, psychics and paranormal or not - it’s about the people behind the phenomena (Harry Price, The Fox Sisters, The Davenport Brothers, Helen Duncan), the places they studied (like the formerly infamously haunted Borley Rectory in Essex), it’s study & history - and at least one woman imprisoned for witchcraft because of course, the patriarchy.
The audiobook clocks in at 4 hrs, narrated by KWD, so about the same as a long-form podcast. I’m giving it 5⭐️ because she can do no wrong for me - there’s some things it used as examples that I wanted more info on, so I’ll be doing more research on my own…😄 Does that make me an unofficial Sister Ghost? BTW, ladies were only later allowed in as members or invited guest speakers because “females” told the stories of their paranormal experiences much better & had different perspectives. The club was also known for their attention to detail in their lavish dinners, and not serving the standard “bland” English fare.