When mortgage rates and home prices drive potential buyers to the breaking point, haunted houses start looking surprisingly appealing.
When mortgage rates and home prices drive potential buyers to the breaking point, haunted houses start looking surprisingly appealing.
They appear in lace and corsets, drifting from the fog… but why do so many ghosts wear Victorian mourning clothes?
A Swedish prospector went searching for gold in the British Columbia wilderness in 1924, but what he found was far more terrifying than anything he could have imagined.
Two paranormal researchers bought a 16th-century prison where accused witches awaited execution – then the renovations began stirring things up.
A centuries-old inn’s resident poltergeists are moving guests’ belongings and sparking arguments between couples who blame each other for the paranormal mischief.
The beloved entertainer’s ghost has allegedly been heard repeating his famous catchphrase beneath the stage where his ashes rest, joining centuries of theatrical hauntings at the historic venue.
Hundreds died seeking miracle cures in this luxury hotel’s rooms, and now something child-sized crawls into bed with guests at night while a murdered gangster haunts the basement pool.
Scientists discover that human consciousness can jump through time, while researchers develop tools to literally see the quantum music of your thoughts
From Victorian parlors to modern laboratories, the talking board has left a trail of unexplained phenomena, tragic deaths, and scientific mysteries that challenge everything we think we know about consciousness itself.
A comedian just bought America’s most notorious collection of cursed objects — and paranormal experts say people are going to die.
Discover why North Carolina has earned its reputation as one of America’s most haunted states, with ghostly encounters spanning from historic battlefields to modern vacation rentals.
Philadelphia’s historic Germantown district harbors a stone colonial house where British blood still marks the floorboards and the scent of phantom bread wafts through empty rooms on Friday nights.
The accounts describe creatures that killed with poison rather than fire, left trails of noxious slime, and grew to lengths that defied natural explanation — all recorded by seemingly credible witnesses in an age when such testimonies carried weight.
In the English countryside, a narrow stream masquerades as a harmless babbling brook while concealing underwater caverns that drag victims into stone chambers with no escape — and the water is always hungry for more.
He dressed like a 17th-century priest, translated witch-hunting manuals, and believed vampires and werewolves were terrifyingly real — Montague Summers was a priest and scholar who took the supernatural deadly serious.