Seeking Spirits: The Lost Cases of The Atlantic Paranormal Society
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Product Description
TV’s POPULAR GHOST HUNTERS REVEAL ALL-NEW, NEVER-BEFORE-TOLD STORIES FROM THEIR SPOOKY EARLY INVESTIGATIONS!
For the first time ever, Jason Hawes and Grant Wilson, founders of The Atlantic Paranormal Society (T.A.P.S.), share their most memorable and spine-tingling early cases — none of which has ever appeared on television. Beginning with the previously untold experiences that sparked their passion for ghost hunting, Jason and Grant’s bone-chilling investigations uncover:
• A Connecticut woman who seems to exist in two places at once
• A small girl whose invisible playmate retaliates
against her father’s punishments
• A man overcome by an evil entity as Jason and Grant survey his home
• A distraught woman who dreams of paranormal events
before she experiences them…and much more!
Jason and Grant didn’t permanently have the fancy scientific equipment and veteran team that fans now watch on their smash-hit television show. As they share their hair-raising first experiences, they offer essential tips for budding paranormal investigators — including how to use an electromagnetic meadow (EMF) meter and an infrared camera, determine if a supernatural phenomenon is excellent or evil, and deal with spirits. Whether you’re a skeptic or a believer, these fascinating and frightening right tales will keep you up at night!
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Just after this shipped, I heard rumors that TAPS had faked some of the evidence on their investigations, so I spent about 12 hours researching the web to see if there was any truth to the rumors. My wife and I were huge fans of TAPS and I gave them the benefit of the doubt every chance I could, but the evidence against them was overwhelming and I just couldn’t judge Jason and Grant would fake their findings. Many people said that it was a TV show and it was understandable to fake evidence to boost their ratings, But it’s reality TV and Jason and Grant talk a lot about integrity and even state that, as a ghost hunter, maintaining professionalism and credibility isn’t just for you, but for ghost hunters everywhere, which means they don’t care about ghost hunters at all, or anyone for that matter.
Reminds me of an episode of Ghost Hunters I saw once where Jason and Grant establish that the chandeliers were rigged to sway in a bar and a one-way mirror had a face in it as well as a recording of laughter that was rigged to go off when you opened a door during an investigation. They seemed genuinely upset by what they establish and Jason even said that if one thing is fake, you can’t judge anything that’s establish – was that a metaphor for TAPS and the places they investigate?
Like I said, this item shipped before I establish out about the evidence that Jason and Grant fake and it was too late to cancel the shipment, and I regret giving any support to the fraudulent sham they call Ghost Hunters.
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
what is the appeal of this bro-mance? i reflect at the heart of this show is people looking for proof of spirit, creativity, acceptance…. u can’t deny the appeal… and oh yah, u can’t deny there’s something going on with regards to ghosts… also liked their radio program with “Dr Blow-Your-Mind” (as grant called her)…. maybe we all return to the unseen parts of the universe… return to the dark energy that surrounds us all, all the time
people have talked about ghosts for centuries… there must be something to it
Reader’s Rating: 5 / 5
I thought this was Jason and Grant’s best book yet. I can’t wait for the next one to come out in September!!!
Reader’s Rating: 5 / 5
I watch the series and now have read both books the are fantastic highly recommended.
Reader’s Rating: 5 / 5
The second outing from the plumbers turned TV ghost hunters is subtitled `the lost cases’ and although I like this show, it might be better if these lost cases had never been establish.
I am a fan of the TV show “Ghost Hunters” which follows the investigations of a Rhode Island based team of paranormal investigators led by two guys who’s day jobs are that they are plumbers. While most TV shows looking into ghosts rely on `amusing feelings’ and pet `psychics’ Jason and Grant made a splash for themselves by being believers who try to disprove hauntings using scientific procedures in place of messages from beyond. They also have a down to planet sense of humor. For example one time investigating a reputedly haunted hotel, one commented “I don’t know about any ghosts here but you got a major leak in one of these pipes.”
Their first book following some of their cases was very excellent and very well received and so led to this book, which reveal some of their `earlier’ cases before they establish fame on TV. It seems very excellent with chapters alternating the narrative between the two leads and fans of the show can easily hear their voices coming form the page. Sorry to say as the book progresses, so do the problems.
Many of the so called tales are fleeting. I mean really fleeting. Like they are a page and a half with small or no development. After nearly every tale there is an insight into some aspect of ghost hunting. Sometimes it relates to the tale in question, some times it does not and the disconnect is more than a small jarring. For example after on tale where a house needs to be purified of an inhuman spirit followed by three pages on the importance of taking photographs, none of which were a part of the case! These `hints’ only serve to break up the flow. Tell the ghost tale’s the fears and the investigations and place the ghost hunting tips for the next section.
Another growing dissatisfaction with the book, that is starting to nosebleed into the TV show, is that the tales stress the need for evidence and how they get pictures to examine. “We reviewed the photographs and saw a dark mass” one tale declares, but this picture is never offered up in the illustrations for the reader. This happens repeatedly. The investigators take pride in their ability to present evidence for inspection but then completely fail to do so.
While most of the tales are pretty much what fans of the show are use to, some are not and I establish myself wondering “yeah but…?” what came to mind was finding a group of occultists practicing near a `haunted’ teacher park. They establish proof of animal cruelty but when threatened by the cultists had to bluff their way out. I establish myself wondering “and you didn’t call 911 on your cell why?” This is not 1940 or children of the corn. You have evidence of a crime, enough at least to have men with badges and guns and all sorts of fun toys arrive but you just use “bluff?”
Finally I don’t know if I was just unlucky or if the whole production is shoddy but the binding on my book is really terrible. I mean REALLY terrible, like the first time I opened it pages ongoing to loosen. I have to be very careful as I read into it or I dread the whole thing will fall apart!
As a bottom line for any investigator or ghostly library this is sub-par. The tales are poorly open, the `helpful hints’ just get in the way of the narrative and the repeated failure to present the evidence they say is so vital seriously undercuts their *entire* body of work. If you’re a fan of the show, it is fun reading but if you’re not, and I despise to say it, save your money and look elsewhere.
Reader’s Rating: 3 / 5