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  • Format: ePub

  • Geräte: eReader
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  • Größe: 1.76MB
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Autorenporträt
Walter Hubbell, a 19th-century Canadian author, is best recognized for his work 'The Haunted House: A True Ghost Story,' which recounts the alarming experiences of the Teed family in their purportedly haunted Nova Scotia home. Hubbell's narrative, although not widely known in the annals of literary history, taps into the enduring fascination with the supernatural and the attempt to reconcile the ostensibly unexplainable within the context of rational inquiry. His writing style, part investigative journalism, and part sensationalism, reflects the popular tastes of his time-where readers sought thrill in the macabre and the mysterious. Few official biographical details of Hubbell exist, as his standing in the literary world rests predominantly upon this singular work which has garnered attention not just for its content, but also for its contribution to the genre of ghost literature in the late 1800s. 'The Haunted House' serves as a historical artifact, examining the cultural tendencies of a society intrigued by the phantom and the spectral. Hubbell's work, whether considered factual account or clever fiction, remains a topic of discussion for those interested in paranormal narratives and the shaping of ghost stories in North American literature. Not much else is known about Walter Hubbell's life, works, or his literary trajectory following the publication of his memorable tome on the supernatural.