Over 250 of the most bloodcurdling and bone-chillingly fascinating and true monster stories. Not recommended for reading just before bedtime!Monsters have been spotted everywhere, not just slithering under a child’s bed or lurking in the closet. Paranormal researcher extraordinaire Brad Steiger, an author of thousands of books and articles on the mysterious and unknown, collects some of the scariest, most unbelievable but true monster stories in his latest collection, Real Monsters, Gruesome Critters and Beasts from the Darkside.
From slightly demented humans to spine-tingling paranormal encounters, each outlandish occurrence is detailed with thorough research and recounted with a storyteller’s crafted voice. This bold telling of verified monster sightings taken from historical records and first-person accounts
The British scientists’ discovery of a tuft of hair in the Himalayan mountains containing DNA that cannot be matched with any known animal—the most convincing proof yet that Yetis are real; The “Mothman” sighted in West Virginia that some believe to be a harbinger of death; The monstrous creature, complete with horns and tail, that still lurks in the shadows of the Big Easy; The expectant mother examined by the strange praying-mantis entities aboard a UFO; and The couple walking near a lake in British Columbia, Canada, astonished to see a reptilian humanoid emerging from the lake's depths; UFO abductors seeking to create human-alien hybrids; Lake monsters, lizardmen, and creepy mermaids troll the waters for prey; Dinosaurs terrorize the jungles; Yeti and Bigfoot leave clues that they live in the mountains; Big cats, black dogs, and giant snakes prowl neighborhoods; And many, many more hair-raising stories!Highlighting news articles, historical accounts, and first-person interviews, this chronicle of human interactions with monsters will convince even the most hardened skeptic of the existence of the bogeyman, Bigfoot, shadow people, devils, mutant animals, swamp creatures, and all kinds of heinous beasts. Real Monsters, Gruesome Critters and Beasts from the Darkside will leave you constantly looking over your shoulder and wondering about the things that go bump and howl and screech in the night.
I took my time reading this book. I would read a chapter and then go to something else for a while before I'd come back and read another chapter. I think this is the way you should read this book. I really enjoyed it this way. I didn't realize this was a non-fiction book when I picked it up to read. Then because it was non-fiction it became more interesting and also hearing all the first hand accounts from normal people.
I'll be honest now: I got two-thirds of the way through the book and just skimmed the rest. Because it was just terrible.
Even, mind you, even for a book on crazy things that people believe even though they0 are silly, it was still terrible.
Here's why:
a) You don't need a line break AND an indentation at the beginning of every paragraph;
b) Paragraphs should, generally speaking, strive to be more than a single sentence a piece;
c) Pics or it didn't happen.
Now Sean, I hear you say, it is a book about widely-believed but totally unverifiable supernatural phenomena, how can you expect the author to include pictures?
Well now sir, sirree, sirrah, there are hundreds of 'photographs' of UFO's, Bigfoot, and all sorts of other things that Mr. Steiger could've included here. But no, what did he choose instead? Poorly done cartoons, and photos from iStock. YUP.
Okokok, I may be being too harsh with the photographs things, I mean, who wants to fill their book with blurry, half blackened pictures of what could be UFO's but are probably street lamps? I get it, you make a fair point. BUT, I say, BUT for the WHOLE CHAPTER ABOUT SNAKES. Snakes. Real snakes! Snakes that both exist in real life, AND are widely photographed and documented. I mean, for pity's sake he spends the first three pages of this chapter talking about the Burmese Python and the Anaconda.
I'll EVEN make this concession, so nobody can say I'm not being fair. But if you aren't going to have any photos of ANY of these supernatural creatures/experiences/phenomena, then at least do us the courtesy of not WASTING OUR TIME WITH DISCUSSIONS OF FAMOUS PHOTOGRAPHS YOU WON'T EVEN LET US SEE, THANK YOU.
This is a pretty comprehensive (read really, really long) guide to scary stuff. It covered quite a wide variety of topics like bogey men and headless horesmen and aliens and werewolves. Some of it was really interesting, some of it not.
I did enjoy this book even though at times it read more like an encyclopedia. Some more real pictures would have been nice, even if they were a bit blurry and ill defined. The numerous drawings seemed ridiculous at times and more like something that belonged in a 1950's pulp magazine or something.
It was a okay read. Some chapters were repeated later on and could of been combined with previous chapters. The artwork was very good, but the details were matching the artists style, not the descriptions given by witnesses.