"It Is Genius Only Which Can Make Ghosts": Narrative Design and the Art of Storytelling in Simms's "Grayling; or, 'Murder Will Out.'"Published in:2009By:Newton, David W.Publication type:Essay
Negotiations of masculinity in American ghost-hunting reality television.Published in:Horror Studies, 2013, v. 4, n. 2, p. 201, doi. 10.1386/host.4.2.201_1By:Renner, Karen J.Publication type:Article
Simms’s Ghosts and the Ghost of Simms: “Grayling,” Genre, and Revolutionary Memory in the Antebellum South.Published in:Mississippi Quarterly, 2017, v. 70/71, n. 4, p. 395, doi. 10.1353/mss.2017.0030By:HAGSTETTE, TODDPublication type:Article
The Spectres of Capitalism and Democracy in Edith Wharton's Early Ghost Stories.Published in:2009By:Patten, Ann L.Publication type:Essay
Shadow People.Published in:Voices: The Journal of New York Folklore, 2017, v. 43, n. 3/4, p. 16By:TUCKER, LIBBYPublication type:Article
Haunted Halls: Ghostlore of American College Campuses.Published in:2011By:LLOYD, BARBARA WALKERPublication type:Book Review
"Weapons of Dress": How Elizabeth Bowen Purloined Henry James's First Ghost Story.Published in:2008By:THOMPSON, TERRY W.Publication type:Literary Criticism
American Women's Ghost Stories in the Gilded Age.Published in:2015By:Patten, AnnPublication type:Book Review
Ghost of the Ozarks: Murder and Memory in the Upland South.Published in:2013By:ROLL, JARODPublication type:Book Review