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Haunted Travels: Saint Petersburg, Florida

It should be no surprise that the state known for its bizarre stories and strange occurrences has its fair share of hauntings and horrors. There’s even a Horror Guide to Florida (reviewed here previously as Shadows Over Florida). There are plenty of places there that could be haunted (surely Disney World must have its share) or hide mysterious creatures (who knows what’s out there in the Everglades?) but Saint Petersburg, which is sort of between Tampa and Sarasota, also has its fair share of spirits.  Brandy Stark, a paranormal investigator, ghost tour guide, academic, artist, and the author of Supernatural Saint Petersburg and Paranormal Pinellas (click here to see it on Amazon) has some history and haunts for Saint Petersburg and Pinellas, for spooky places you can visit on your haunted travels.

 

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Cover art for Supernatural Saint Petersburg and Paranormal Pinellas

Saint Petersburg, Florida, is called the Sunshine City, but where there is sunshine there also must be shadows.  This moderate sized artsy city has a history dating back to the 1800s when it was a sleepy little fishing village.   A sister settlement to the military/industrial based city of Tampa, it was John Williams who saw the potential of the area.  He snagged a partner with Peter Demens, a Russian immigrant who owned the Orange Belt Railway system, and the two decided to make the area a tourist destination.  Demens named the land after his hometown in Russia, and Williams, who owned 1600 acres which he purchased for $1.25 a piece, built the city’s first hotel, the Detroit.  Williams named it for his own hometown in Michigan.

 

Williams also built the first wooden house in St. Petersburg.  Though he only lived in the building from 1891 until his death in 1892, his spirit is still attached to the place.  When I do my ghost tours, I like to say that I met Mr. Williams.  The date was April 4, 2004 and I was doing an interview with some students from the University of South Florida.  The building had a reputation for its haunting so we agreed to meet there, especially since the old homestead had been relocated to the St. Petersburg campus in 2000 and was utilized as office space.   As I waited for the students I decided to scan the area with my electromagnetic field  (EMF) meter. haunted chair

 

To my surprise, I got a sudden reading, followed by what I perceived as a male voice murmuring behind me.   I turned but found myself alone.  I followed up with a few snapshots from my digital camera and saw an odd circular ball of energy in one of the chairs behind me.  Above the chair was a portrait of Mr. Williams which I later learned was no coincidence.  The date that I was there was his birthday!  I’m not sure what he said to me, but I hope he enjoyed my company for a little while that day.

 

In downtown, just off of Beach Drive, is the legendary Comfort Station 1, built by the city in the 1920s.  The architect, Henry L. Taylor, also drew up the plans for the Vinoy hotel, another haunted hot spot, and for St. Mary’s Cathedral.  The restroom was hailed nationally for its unique style; the octagonal brick building sits on a small plot of land next to the bay.  It also has the dubious honor of being haunted.  Rumors are that a female presence wearing black Patton leather shoes manifests in the women’s side of Comfort Station 1. She sometimes engages in a conversation from another stall until the visitors discover that they are alone in the room.  One person reported hearing singing as she walked by at 7 in the morning and checked the area – no one was present.  The spectre, who is identified as Myrtle or Eloise, is sometimes a bit of a prankster.  One lady said that she saw someone reflected in the mirror behind her but when she turned, no one was there.  Another report says that the ghost appeared as a floating head in a toilet, quickly vanishing once seen.

 

The most famous haunted spot is undoubtedly the Vinoy Hotel.  Opened in 1925, the hotel has long had a reputation for ghosts.  One, the “Nefarious Gentleman,” resides on the 5th floor.  I have had an engagement with him just once when I stayed in the reportedly haunted room there.  The one night stay was a birthday gift and I was delighted to finally check this off of my list of places to investigate. A paranormal TV show had been in years prior and I knew that they had determined that one of the closet doors opened on its own.  Rumors also abounded that the bathroom faucets turned on by themselves.  The ghost particularly dislikes baseball players and the room was avoided by any in-town sports guests.  Delighted to have a king-sized bed all to myself, I prepared for a luxurious night of sleep.  Instead, I was kept awake most of the night by the sensation that someone was watching me, and that a figure was pacing from the bathroom to the left side of my bed to stop by the closet door.  The sensation of movement, back and forth, made for a sleepless night.  A sound recording caught swishes of movement (shuffling sounds), even when I had left the room for a time with the door locked behind me. photo of St. Petersburg Art Lofts studios

 

Finally, for those interested in the arts, I might suggest the building that houses my art studio:  ArtLofts.  Located as the second floor to Florida Craftart on Central Avenue and 5th Street North, the structure was built in 1916.  It housed  Rutland’s department store for nearly 70 years before that closed and the building was converted into an art center.  I have encountered unexplained noises, with and without guests, in the odd hours of the evening.  I’ve surveyed the building for the past 3 years and gotten odd images on infrared video and sounds on recording.  Artists have told me various stories of their encounters.  Some believe that a few of the former employees are still watching over the place, keeping it, and the artists, safe.

 

If you come down this way, be sure to check out the SPIRITS of St. Petersburg website, www.spiritsofstpete.com, and if there are any questions give me a shout at brandybstark13@gmail.com.

 

 

 

 

 

Book Review: Litani by Jess Lourey

cover art for Litani by Jess Lourey

Litani by Jess Lourey

Thomas & Mercer, 2021 (release date: Oct. 19)

ISBN: 9781542027014

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition, compact disc, MP3   Bookshop.org  |  Amazon.com )

 

 

Set in the mid-1980s, Litani is a mystery/thriller dealing with the unpleasant subject of child molesters, but the book is couched into language that will work for younger readers.  While written for adults, it has value as a “crossover” title to the young adult crowd. Fourteen-year-old Francesca “Frankie” Jubilee moves in with her mom after her dad’s untimely demise.  She is quickly beaten up by three 10 year old girls. The girls allude to The Game, something many kids know about and fear.  Frankie finds her town to be one with an unpleasant past that centers around children that have gone missing over time.  The story follows a fairly predictable path, with Frankie trying to find the truth, and getting it in bits and pieces.  There’s a minor story thread of Satanism, but it’s really just window-dressing and could have been left out.  There’s a big reveal at the end to explain it all, and everything ends up okay, more or less.

 

The writing is simple and to the point, and the plot devices are familiar: Frankie’s past may have secrets, she makes one friend with a troubled past of his own, she doesn’t get along with her mom due to her being absent from her life for years, etc.  The Game itself is no big mystery, and most of the characters act in a pretty predictable manner. The predictability and basic nature of the writing may not be enough for adult readers to get caught up in the story, but for high school kids, it’s perfect. Entertaining enough to keep teens enthralled, there’s mystery, some excitement, a dead body, characters that kids will understand, and nothing too violent or graphic.  Example: while some of the characters are child molesters, the author wisely doesn’t use any graphic firsthand descriptions of molestation.  Same goes for the Satanic angle: no elaborate ceremonies or sacrifices, just a few pentagrams and candles.  It takes skill to write about vile subjects for a younger age bracket, and Jess Lourey does it extremely well.  The violence is also mild: a couple fights, a rock to the head, nothing over the top.  All of the above and the straightforward nature of Litani make it a good choice for teen readers.

 

 

Recommended for high school readers.

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

Book Review: Tortured Willows: Bent. Bowed. Unbroken. by Lee Murray, Geneve Flynn, Christina Sng, and Angela Yuriko Smith

cover art for Tortured Willows by Lee Murray and others

Tortured Willows: Bent. Bowed. Unbroken. by Lee Murray, Geneve Flynn, Christina Sng, and Angela Yuriko Smith

Yuriko Publishing, 2021

ISBN: 9781737208

Available: Paperback  (Amazon.com)

 

A striking, heart-wrenching masterpiece, comprised of four vital voices in verse.

 

This four-poet compilation of works extends on themes addressed in the multiple award winning anthology, Black Cranes: Tales of Unquiet Women (Lee Murray and Geneve Flynn, editors). The individual poems are highly accessible and strike fiercely, each bringing to life “a story on skin” (Angela Yuriko Smith, “Her Hajichi”), and each written with unyielding voice and unique strength.

 

At once painful and powerful, the collection as a whole exemplifies the best of speculative poetry and is a collection that will be re-read again and again: first all at once because the poems bring you quickly into their vivid images and worlds, and then returned to over time for their courageous meanings and profound insights.

 

Highlights includes Murray’s “Defining Character,” which explores language itself and the associations inherent to female life; Flynn’s remarkable blackout poem “Abridge,” unearthing hidden realities and hopes for an end to gendered violence”; the harsh cruelties imposed by the wealthy on a young immigrant girl employed in the home in Sng’s “Phoenix.”

 

Alongside a combination of traditional forms and free verse work, the poets also offer short commentaries. This addition invites readers into deeper reflection on and conversation with the authors’ processes and purposes, an engaging and inspired aspect of the collection. Filled with diverse poems that explore complex themes like ancestral obligations, cultural appropriation and violence, intimate exotification and misogyny, the impact of the work also moves in intriguing, new directions toward empowering, reimagined histories and myths.

 

Beautifully arranged by individual author, each set of poems works on its own and contributes to the overall themes. The resulting range of voices and styles is merged into a magnificently cohesive set addressing intersecting issues of culture and gender. Potent truths, rich details, and dynamic verse, these poems bloom with taut images that slice away preconceptions and deepen attention to appropriations of heritage and impositions of restricting expectations.

 

Fans of Black Cranes looking for more work by the authors, as well as fans of modern speculative verse and horror poetry will revel in this impressive collection. From goddesses and teenagers to angry ghosts, these poems will haunt and inspire. Highly Recommend.

 

 

Reviewed by E.F. Schraeder