Ghosts I Have Seen, and other Psychic Experiences

Ghosts I Have Seen, and other Psychic Experiences
In the aftermath of the Great War, a grieving world turned to spirit communication with desperate hope. Violet Tweedale, a Scottish writer and Theosophical Society member, offers thirty-four intimate testimonials of her own psychic encounters: phantom figures in country houses, premonitions that arrived like whispered warnings, the unmistakable sensation of presence from beyond the veil. What distinguishes this collection from mere ghost stories is Tweedale's earnest conviction. She writes not as a storyteller seeking chills but as a woman who witnessed too much to dismiss, too much to doubt. The book captures a pivotal cultural moment when spiritualism moved from fringe fascination to social phenomenon, and Tweedale's voice bridges the gap between rational observation and inexplicable experience. For readers drawn to Edwardian spiritualism, early psychical research, or the particular melancholy of postwar Britain, these testimonials offer a window into one woman's determined search for proof that death is not the end.
X-Ray
Read by
Group Narration
11 readers
Michele Fry, Gloria Loughry, Kimberly Wilson, Aaron Zimmerman +7 more


![Night Watches [complete]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd3b2n8gj62qnwr.cloudfront.net%2FCOVERS%2Fgutenberg_covers75k%2Febook-12161.png&w=3840&q=75)



