The Ghost That Haunted Itself is a collection of encounters documented by the operators and owners of the 'City of the Dead' tours in Edinburgh, Scotland. Specifically the phenomena experienced by people on these tours while visiting the black mausoleum in Greyfriars Kirkyard. The mausoleum is said to be inhabited either by a poltergeist or the late tombs owner, George Mackenzie (known as Bluidy Mackenzie for his persecution of the Covenanters).
The Mackenzie poltergeist, as it has become known, has been active since 1998 when a homeless man apparently broke into the mausoleum in search of refuge from a storm. Ever since strange things have been happening to people who visit the tomb. The most common forms of activity involve people passing out and being attacked in some fashion, often resulting in mysterious injuries which appear and disappear without warning or pain.
The book also features the origin story of the 'City of the Dead' tours, and owner/operator Ben Scott's experiences and struggle to understand what is going on during these tours.
I'll give credit to this book for addressing other possible causes for the hauntings in Greyfriars, though an attempt at a deeper examination wasn't really made. It was mostly just a few ideas thrown around by the author. But the book was entertaining and easy to read, the author's storytelling was quite nicely accomplished. But herein lies a slight problem.
The beginning of the book states that some names were changed on request to protect those involved and that the author used his discretion and changed a few where he felt it was necessary. After finishing the book I went and researched the Mackenzie poltergeist a little on my own and found some archived newspaper articles which struck me as a little odd.
It seems that author Jan-Andrew Henderson neglected to disclose that he is the owner of the 'City of the Dead' tours. Making him "Ben Scott". After locating a biography on the author, it was fairly apparent that there is no disputing this fact.
I have a slight problem with his failure to acknowledge this, as knowing it could influence the way you read the book. Ultimately one could view the book as promotion for Henderson's tours, making his claims questionable.
Ultimately, people do faint in the black mausoleum, people do receive cuts and feel sick. It could very well be mass hysteria, some very efficient storytelling on behalf of the 'City of the Dead' tour guides inciting it (Henderson seems fairly capable of this), it could be pheromones, negative energy absorbed by the stone in the Covenanters Prison, maybe even the ghost of Greyfriars Bobby tormenting guests for uncovering his cockup (wrong grave apparently, poor boy). But it's an interesting book about a curious spot in a rather beautiful city. And if nothing else, Henderson tells a good story.