50 Real Ghost Stories Audiobook By Eve S Evans cover art

50 Real Ghost Stories

A Terror-Drenched Anthology of Creepy Paranormal Encounters (True Ghost Stories: Real Hauntings, Book 22)

Preview

Audible Standard 30-day free trial

Try Standard free
Select 1 audiobook a month from our entire collection of titles.
Yours as long as you’re a member.
Get unlimited access to bingeable podcasts.
Standard auto renews for $8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

50 Real Ghost Stories

By: Eve S Evans
Narrated by: Erica Clare Bogan
Try Standard free

$8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $15.95

Buy for $15.95

A haunting selection of Eve's favorite, chilling, and real-life ghost stories—in one amazing collection.

In this delicious anthology, you will listen to some of the creepiest real-life paranormal encounters that have happened all over the world! This includes:

  • Haunted houses
  • Haunted objects
  • Shadow people
  • Haunted first responders
  • Haunted hospitals
  • Haunted hotels

And so much more....

©2022 Eve S Evans (P)2022 Eve S Evans
Unexplained Mysteries Haunted Supernatural Paranormal Fiction Fantasy
All stars
Most relevant
I’d be interested to know what makes a story “real”. If these are true stories that are heavily doctored I’d be surprised, because every one is dramatic, yet predictable. None has its own voice, as you would expect of a true anthology or even a good researcher, intent on portraying individuals’ experience well. True stories can sometimes be anticlimactic, but I read them because they are true. Conspicuously missing are the stories that talk about footsteps that, “came closer, and closer, and closer…and then they stopped.” In these stories, the ghost relays its history and distress with pure introspection, the protagonist (usually a child or teen) solves the problem, then is rewarded handsomely, or some such formula. Even taken as fiction, they are formulaic and cheesy. It should be labeled as fiction, unless the author provides a pretty compelling explanation that helps us understand how they are factual. Did she interview 1,000 people and publish 50? Who are the participants? Is she retelling stories collected orally, or from existing sources? Did she take artistic liberties? I’ve never seen an anthology by another with no authors’ names, and so little explanation. I’d be more inclined to read another volume if this was honestly labeled as fiction.

These stories seem anything but real.

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.