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2021 TIME Kid of the Year Orion Jean to Publish Children’s Book on Kindness and Character: Race to Kindness to Release

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Zonderkidz is pleased to announce that 12-year-old Orion Jean, the 2021 TIME Magazine Kid of the Year, will publish a children’s picture book titled Race to Kindness, releasing May 7, 2024.

Illustrated by Darshika Varma, the book is inspired by Orion’s accomplishments of getting over a half million books donated to children and collecting over 100,000 meals for the food insecure in his community and across the country, all beginning when he was 9.

The book shows a boy who takes on small acts of kindness – like a smile or a wave – to bigger actions – where everyone matters and everyone can make a difference. Based on Orion’s Be K.I.N.D. initiative, the characters in the book use the letters in the word kind to “Keep your eyes open,” “Include others,” think about how “Nothing is too small” and to”Do something about it” when someone is struggling or facing a challenge.

This one book deal with Jean was acquired by Katherine Easter, Acquisitions Editor for Zonderkidz/HarperCollins, for world rights.

“Orion’s story was so inspiring to us and we want to help him reach more young readers with this message of kindness to do what they can, from wherever they are. Working with Orion and his family has been a true joy! His passion fits our publishing mission so well,” says Megan Dobson, Vice President and Publisher of Zonderkidz.

More information on Jean and the new book can be found here:  www.racetokindnessbook.com  His profile as the 2021 TIME Kid of the Year when he was 11 can be found here:  https://time.com/6144632/kidoftheyear2021orionjean/ Orion makes his home in Mansfield, Texas where he looks forward to attending 8th grade this fall.

The book is now available for pre-orders wherever books are sold. Advance review copies of the book and media interviews are available upon request; please contact Publicity Director Jessica Westra at jessica.westra@harpercollins.com. A full media tour is planned for May 2024.

Zonderkidz™, the children’s division of Zondervan, inspires young lives through imaginative, innovative and educational resources that represent a Christian worldview and build up God’s children and teens. For additional information, please visit www.zonderkidz.com.

Principal® Foundation Launches National Short Story Contest as Part of New Initiative to Destigmatize Conversations About Money

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Nearly 50% of Millennials and Gen Z Feel It’s Inappropriate or Awkward to Talk About Money; Majority Underutilize Financial Tools that Help Build Financial Security

Principal® Foundation, a global nonprofit committed to helping people and communities build financially secure futures, is launching Money Chronicles: A Story Initiative that is using the power of storytelling to help destigmatize and encourage conversations about money and personal finances. The initiative is kicking off with a national short story contest that invites people to share imaginative and meaningful short stories that reflect lived experiences with money.

The contest is hosted in collaboration with The Center for Fiction, a national literary nonprofit, and Short Édition, a global publishing house. Stories can be submitted online until August 31, 202311:59 pm PDT at http://principal-foundation.short-edition.com. The initiative will also make the finalist stories accessible to the public by installing short story dispensers in libraries, bookstores and cafes in New York, N.Y.Los Angeles, Calif.Seattle, Wash.Charlotte, N.C., and Iowa City, Iowa. Visitors simply press a button on the dispenser to print a short story to enjoy.

“People develop narratives around money and personal finance based on familial experience and those narratives tend to impact their relationship to money and inform their financial decisions throughout their lives,” said Jo Christine Miles, director, Principal Foundation and Community Relations, Principal®. “This contest is a way to inspire people, through the universal, human art of storytelling, to reimagine their narrative, resolve any struggles and, ultimately feel more comfortable having more robust financial conversations that advance their financial goals.”

Conversations about money are typically driven by people’s perceptions of their own personal finances and experiences growing up. A new survey of 3,000 Millennial and Gen Z Americans conducted by YouGov and commissioned by Principal Foundation, reveals that like social media, conversations about money are usually only showing one aspect of personal finance, avoiding more comprehensive and candid conversations.

Millennials and Gen Z are most comfortable sharing information related to salary or income. Less is being shared about topics, such as savings, debt, and investments.

  • 72% will talk about salary/income.
  • 60% will talk about savings or debt.
  • 54% will talk about mortgage or rent.
  • 49% will talk about investments.

Millennials and Gen Z have underlying fears of being judged about their money habits.

  • More than 40% fear being judged for their habits or earning level.
  • Nearly one-third do not want it to create social tension with friends or family.
  • 30% do not want to seem materialistic or like they are bragging.

Financial habits witnessed growing up can lead to anxiety and control issues around money later in life.

  • More than half of Millennials and Gen Z continue with the same financial habits they witnessed growing up.
  • 40% agree that the financial situation they grew up in has led to issues controlling their spending.
  • 52% agree the financial situation they grew up in led to worries about having enough money even when they are financially stable.

Millennials and Gen Z underutilize financial products such as retirement accounts, investment accounts, and protection products due to disinterest or reasons other than lack of funds.

  • Only 33% report having retirement savings or life insurance.
  • 38% report not having retirement savings due to disinterest or reasons other than lack of funds.
  • 50% report not having investment accounts due to disinterest or reasons other than lack of funds.

Women are more likely to share financial information with their partners than men.

  • 73% of women will share information about salary or income compared to 65% of men.
  • 60% of women will share information about debt compared to 54% of men.
  • 57% of women will share information about mortgage or rent compared to 47% of men.

By reading stories presenting diverse financial situations, views and approaches to personal finance, this story initiative is designed to encourage people to reconsider their own situations and habits, engage in more candid conversations with those they trust, and develop more robust plans to attain the financial security they seek.

Entering the contest is free, and 30 finalists will be selected by an esteemed panel of literary authors and experts including Mahogany L. Browne, Ava ChinNovella FordSidik FofanaXochitl GonzalezAlvin Hall, Erika L. Sánchez, Ashley Woodfolk, and Judy Zuckerman.

Finalists will receive $250 and have their stories distributed through Principal Foundation’s network of story  dispensers, which can be found at New York Public Library in New York, N.Y.; Sip & Sonder in Los Angeles, Calif.; Charlotte Mecklenburg Library in Charlotte, N.C.; and renowned independent bookstores in Seattle and Iowa City, the only UNESCO Cities of Literature in the United States, Elliott Bay Book Company in Seattle, Wash. and Prairie Lights in Iowa City, Iowa.

Stories from the finalists will also be considered for publication in Short Edition’s global network of more than 300 story dispensers located in airports, public transportation hubs, retail centers, and other locations around the world.

Terms and conditions apply. Adults ages 18 and older are encouraged to submit original fiction or creative nonfiction stories through the contest website now through August 31, 202311:59 pm PDT. Finalists will be announced in October. For more information about Money Chronicles: A Story Initiative Supported by Principal Foundation and details on how to enter, please visit http://principal-foundation.short-edition.com.

Guest Post: Playlist for Entangled Secrets By Pat Esden

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This is a playlist of the songs I listened to while writing Entangled Secrets. Some of them like Sweet Child and Rockabye helped me get into Chandler’s head. Others like After MidnightBrave Enough, and Yuve Yuve Yu put me in the right place for writing specific scenes. Just Like Fire reminded me of Chander’s determination. Rubberband and Devils Touch speaks to the past that drives her. Set Fire to the Rain? Well, it was the lyrics that made me chose that song. And The Fire and Illusion are for Lionel because sometimes life an caring isn’t easy.

 

Sweet Child—Alex Cruz

She Burns—Foy Vance

Father Figure—George Michael

Rockabye—Clean Bandit

Love Triangle—RaeLynn

Lord of The Greenwood—Jenneth Tollin

Rubberband—Alex Cruz

Yuve Yuve Yu—The HU

After Midnight—J.J. Cale

The Fire—Rag’n’Bone Man

Illusion—Kevin Davy White

Hares on The Mountain—alt-J

Devils Touch—TIAAN

Set Fire to the Rain—Adele

Just like Fire—Pink

Listen to the ENTANGLED SECRETS playlist on Spotify


Pregnant and alone at twenty-one, Chandler Parrish sought refuge within the Northern Circle coven’s secluded complex. Never revealing the identity of her child’s father, Chandler has raised her now eight-year-old son, Peregrine, in peace, and used her talent as an artist and welder to become a renowned metal sculptor. But her world is shaken to the core when Peregrine shows signs of natural faerie sight—a rare and dangerous gift to see through faerie glamour and disguises that could only have come from his father’s genes. Worse yet, the boy has seen a monstrous faerie creature trailing Lionel Parker, a magic-obsessed journalist determined to expose the witching world.

But the very man who threatens the witches’ anonymity may also be key to healing Chandler’s long broken heart. As dangerous desires and shocking secrets entangle, new faerie threats and demonic foes close in on the coven and High Council. Loyalties will be tested. Fierce magics will be called upon. And Chandler will have to face her past to save all she holds dear: her coven, her child—and perhaps even her own soul.

UNRAVEL A BURNING UNSOLVED MYSTERY IN “BLACKING OUT”

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Bad people doing bad things in a tale of fire and murder in Southern California

Fire and murder blaze across the deserts of Southern California in Blacking Out, coming soon from Dark Horse Books. Originally funded on Kickstarter, this noir crime adventure will be published for the first time as a hardcover graphic novel. From the minds of comics industry veteran and writer Chip Mosher (Left On Mission) and legendary artist Peter Krause (The Power of Shazam!, Irredeemable), with colors by Giulia Brusco (Scalped, Django Unchained), letters by Ed Dukeshire (Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Mighty Morphin Power Rangers) and logo by Tom Muller (Mazebook) comes this new dark thriller.

A disgraced ex-cop, Conrad, seeks redemption by unraveling an unsolved murder during Southern California’s fire season. Conrad follows a lone clue—a discarded crucifix—to unravel the death of Karen Littleton, whose body was found amid a blaze that scorched 10,000 acres. The search leads him to clash with the victim’s father and prime suspect, Robert Littleton, as well as hostile former colleagues on the local police force. All the while, Conrad combats his consuming alcoholism and fading faculties.

Will his “questionable” methods net him a murderer, or will the grizzled detective be brought to his knees by heartbreak and addiction? Find out in this all-new edition of Blacking Out, a scorching crime noir comic set in a small town in the dry California desert.

The Blacking Out hardcover will be available in bookstores April 23, 2024 and in comic shops April 24, 2024. It is available for pre-order now on AmazonBarnes & Noble and at your local comic shop and bookstore and will retail for $19.99.

Dark Horse Comics

Sneak Peek: Murder at a Cape Bookstore by Maddie Day

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Murder at a Cape Bookstore by Maddie Day

In Agatha Award and Macavity Award-winning author Maddie Day’s fifth cozy Capers Book Club Mystery, it’s mud season in Cape Cod, and when an ill wind blows in a murder with a twist in the tale, bicycle shop owner Mackenzie “Mac” Almeida and her crime-solving book group are ready to leaf through the clues . . .

Everyone loves a festival, though Mac has a few concerns about the Spring equinox event organized by the new Chamber of Commerce director, Wagner Lavoie. After all, March weather is unpredictable. Still, there’s plenty to enjoy, between flower-shaped candies at Salty Taffy’s, spring rolls at the Rusty Anchor, and a parade of decorated bicycles. But the festivities soon take a stormy turn . . .

Mac glimpses conflict between Wagner and other locals during the festival, but it’s a shock when he’s found dead in the Book Nook, pinned beneath a toppled bookshelf. It’s an irresistible case for Mac’s book group. She and the rest of the Cozy Capers will have to use all their sleuthing skills to bring the killer’s story to an end . . .

Sun-Maid Teams up with ABCmouse and Little Free Library® to Feed Hungry Mouths and Minds this Back-to-School Season

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The Literacy-Focused Collaboration Puts Wholesome Snacking and Learning Hand-in-Hand for Kids with Interactive Reading Resources and Access to More than 50,000 Books

After a summer of fun and play, kids everywhere are preparing to head back to school. To mark the beginning of the new school year, Sun-Maid Growers of California, maker of innovative snacks that feed imagination one little red box at a time, has announced a new collaboration with ABCmouse, the leading and most comprehensive digital learning program for children ages 2 – 8, and Little Free Library to expand access to literacy resources and bring bite-sized learning to every pack of its classic Sun-Maid Raisin boxes.

The multi-faceted literacy campaign presented by Sun-Maid, ABCmouse and Little Free Library will provide widespread access to at-home reading activities and books that inspire young readers, all while promoting better-for-you eating habits. As of August 7, the iconic and beloved red Sun-Maid box will feature exclusive, limited-edition ABCmouse flash cards with a sight word lesson on every carton. In addition, each pack of six boxes will feature a custom link to an interactive and engaging microsite hosted by ABCmouse that includes a variety of imaginative and engaging activities, ranging from a full collection of sight word flash cards to worksheets and coloring pages.

The announcement comes alongside recent data that revealed that only 35 percent of students are reading proficiently by grade 4, and National Assessment of Educational Progress reading scores are the lowest they have been in decades. With these challenges in mind, Sun-Maid will expand its literacy efforts even further by teaming up with Little Free Library, a nonprofit with a mission to build community, inspire readers and expand book access. Through the partnership, Sun-Maid will sponsor the creation and installation of 100 Little Free Library book-sharing boxes throughout the U.S.

“Sun-Maid has long been known as parents’ partner in better-for-you snacking, making sure kids have access to the snacks they need to succeed in the classroom as well as in imagination and play,” said Steve LoftusSun-Maid President and Chief Operating Officer. “With less time in the classroom and reduced access to libraries for many, the last number of years have been challenging for many families. ABCmouse and Little Free Library are two of the finest education and literacy resources available, and we’re proud to team up to inspire a love of reading and help feed hungry minds this back-to-school season.”

Reading lovers around the country can get involved by voting to have a Little Free Library installed in their area via an online voting portal on the Sun-Maid website. With a global network and a mission of “Take a Book. Share a Book,” the Sun-Maid sponsored Little Free Library book-sharing boxes will feature ABCmouse books and expand book access to thousands.

“Practicing sight words helps build more confident and fluent readers, and in teaming up with Sun-Maid we’re taking the idea of wholesome snacking and learning and making it accessible to millions of families in bite-sized moments,” said Christine Woertink, Senior Vice President of Consumer Product, Age of Learning, creator of ABCmouse.

As a whole, Sun-Maid’s back to school efforts will have significant reach, including:

  • An anticipated 22 million cartons of raisins (bundled in packs of six), with access to the Sun-Maid x ABCmouse educational materials available, including ABCmouse 120 sight word flash cards and a link to a dedicated microsite.
  • Sponsorship of 100 Little Free Libraries, bringing access to books to some of the biggest literacy deserts in the country, including ABCmouse donated books within each of the libraries.
  • Access for young readers to an estimated 57,200 books shared through the Sun-Maid Little Free Libraries in the first year alone and an estimated 52,000 visitors to the Sun-Maid Little Free Libraries each year.

The Sun-Maid x ABCmouse packaging is available at retailers nationwide. For more information, please visit www.sunmaid.com

 

ACTION, COMEDY, AND ALIENS ABOUND IN ZACK KELLER AND GIOVANNA LA PIETRA’S “TOP SECRET SERVICE”

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Get ready for a thrilling, action-packed comedic adventure

Dark Horse Comics presents Top Secret Service, a new exciting graphic novel from writer Zack Keller (CreepingCupheadHotel REM), artist Giovanna LaPietra (Red Sonja), colorist Valerio Alloro (Star Wars: Hyperspace StoriesHotel REM), and letterer Frank Cvetkovic (Count CrowleyCyberpunk 2077: Blackout). Cover art provided by Tonci Zonjic (Skulldigger and Skeleton BoyLobster Johnson).

After achieving their lifelong goal of becoming U.S. Secret Service Agents, best friends Chris Lu and Blake Sansome are not assigned to protect the current president, but instead a retired ex-president enjoying the quiet life on his Montana ranch. The rookie agents hate their boring assignment far from the high-profile action they crave–until an elite hit squad assaults the house. They soon learn that the kindly old ex-president was actually involved in a world-altering government conspiracy covering up alien contact. Now, people have come for the secrets only he knows… and the dangerous technology the aliens left behind.

Top Secret Service is perfect for fans of 21 Jump Street and Men in Black.

Top Secret Service TPB breaks into bookstores January 30, 2024 and into comic shops January 31, 2024 and is now available to pre-order from AmazonBarnes & Noble, and your local comic shop and bookstore for $19.99.

Be sure to follow Dark Horse Comics on social media for more news, announcements, and updates!

Praise for Zack Keller:

“The comics are filled with the same charming vintage art that made Cuphead a stand-out success and throws in some of the game’s signature humour to tie everything together. The artwork is gorgeous, and it perfectly encapsulates what I imagine funny pages from the 1930s look like. All in all, the whole experience is a delight that anyone, regardless of age or prior knowledge of the game, can enjoy, even if it’s on the shorter side.” –Glitched, Cuphead Volume 1: Comic Capers & Curios

Creeping was a fun and breezy read that I highly recommend. Get cozy under the covers with your copy of Creeping on a cold, stormy night and settle in.”—Forces of Geek

Weekend Reads: Summer Mysteries & Thrillers

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When you think of a summer book, what comes to mind? Chances are it isn’t a mystery or thriller, but this week’s list of titles could surprise you. These novels effortlessly combine a wicked sense of humor with a thrilling plot making for refreshing poolside reads. 

One of my all-time favorite books is Jesse Q. Sutanto’s DIAL A FOR AUNTIES (Berkley), which was the inspiration behind this theme. The genius storyline is a rom com meets murder and hits home for anyone with nosy family members. I think this genre has become so much more than dark suspense, but full of well-rounded stories that are beautifully written and even… funny. 

Finish off the summer by reading one of these page turners! 

GOOD RICH PEOPLE by Eliza Jane Brazier (Berkley) 

A destitute woman deceives her way into the guesthouse of a Hollywood Hills mansion and inadvertently becomes a target in the twisted game of the wealthy family upstairs in the next intoxicating novel from Eliza Jane Brazier. 

 

 

DEATH BY BUBBLE TEA by Jennifer J. Chow (Berkley) 

Two cousins who start a food stall at their local night market get a serving of murder in this first novel of a delicious new cozy mystery series by Jennifer J. Chow, bestselling author of MIMI LEE GETS A CLUE. 

 

 

ONE OF THE GIRLS by Lucy Clarke (Putnam) 

A twisty psychological thriller from internationally bestselling author Lucy Clarke, ONE OF THE GIRLS is the delicious story of a bachelorette trip on a stunning Greek island… that ends in murder. 

 

 

 

A DEADLY INSIDE SCOOP by Abby Collette (Berkley) 

“Fun! Fresh! Fabulous! Abby Collette has crafted a delicious addition to the cozy mystery world with her superbly written A DEADLY INSIDE SCOOP. Delightful characters and a puzzler of a plot kept me turning pages until the very end. I can’t wait for my next visit to the Crewse Creamery for another decadent taste.”—New York Times bestselling author Jenn McKinlay 

 

GONE GIRL by Gillian Flynn (Ballantine Books) 

“An irresistible summer thriller with a twisting plot worthy of Alfred Hitchcock. Burrowing deep into the murkiest corners of the human psyche, this delectable summer read will give you the creeps and keep you on edge until the last page.”—People (four stars)  

 

 

ARSENIC AND ADOBO by Mia P. Manansala (Berkley) 

The first book in a new culinary cozy series full of sharp humor and delectable dishes—one that might just be killer. 

 

 

 

THE QUIET TENANT by Clémence Michallon (Ballantine Books) 

A pulse-pounding psychological thriller about a serial killer narrated by those closest to him: his 13-year-old daughter, his girlfriend—and the one victim he has spared. 

 

 

 

THE MAID by Nita Prose (Ballantine Books) 

“A cozy mystery to take along on vacation… a lighthearted mystery that shines as Molly evolves and learns to connect.”—The Washington Post 

 

God’s Little Black Dress for Women by Dr. Katherine Hayes

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God’s Little Black Dress for Women by Dr. Katherine Hayes

Women want to be spiritually stylish, but wearing the armor of God sounds clunky and unattractive. In “Gods’ Little Black Dress for Women: How to Put on the Full Armor of God Without Losing Your Femininity”, we discover how God tailor-makes a “little black dress of truth” that is battle ready for every occasion. Each of the 12 chapters is followed by a “Teaching Highlights” and “Participants’ Guide” complete with memory verse and prayer focus scriptures. Also included is an excellent “Leaders’ Discussion Guide”, “Small Group Leadership Guidelines”, “The ABC’s of a Small Group Covenant” and much more! Don’t miss the “Memorable Quotes” on page 179!

God’s Little Black Dress For Women: How to Put on the Full Armor of God Without Losing Your Femininity: Hutchinson-Hayes, Dr. Katherine: 9781365056161: Amazon.com: Books

“The attention to detail the author gives to this book in regard to the biblical verses and the way the author was able to find ways of incorporating femininity and female empowerment into the lessons that each chapter taught were great to see. The importance of making more room for positive interactions for women and supporting women in general when it comes to faith and religion as a whole is so important in this modern age, and seeing the author’s work incorporate this into the lessons showed through her powerful experiences and memories.”  Anthony Avina_ Top U.S. Reviewer

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: 

Author, speaker, educational consultant, and editor–Katherine Hutchinson-Hayes, Ed. D. has had her hand in leadership for many years. She loves speaking to groups and delivering messages with a quick wit and real-life stories. Katherine is a freelance writer/content editor, a content editor/writing coach for Iron Stream Media, and a sensitivity reader for Sensitivity Between the Lines. She is a review board member and contributor to Inkspirations (an online magazine for Christian writers), and her writing has been published in Guideposts. Her work in art/writing is distinguished by awards, including the New York Mayor’s Contribution to the Arts, Outstanding Resident Artist of Arizona, and the Foundations Awards at the Blue Ridge Mountains Christian Writer’s Conference (2016, 2019, 2021). She is a member of Word Weavers International and serves as an online chapter president and mentor. She belongs to FWA (Florida Writers Association), ACFW (American Christian Fiction Writers), CWoC (Crime Writers of Color), AWSA (Advanced Writers and Speakers Association), and AASA (American Association of School Administrators). She serves on the board of the nonprofit organization Submersion 14 and is an art instructor for the nonprofit organization Light for the Future. Katherine hosts the podcast Murder, Mystery & Mayhem Laced with Morality. She has authored a Christian Bible study for women and is currently working on the sequel to her first general market thriller novel.

EXCERPT: “The Girl in the Woods” by Leanna Renee Hieber

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Since I write, discuss, guide and research ghost stories for a living, it’s only fitting that I tell you a deeply personal, real-life, good-old-fashioned summer-camp ghost story. Ghost stories and summer camp go hand in hand and in my case, moments like this ended up shaping my career trajectory. I’ve said in many interviews and essays that some of my earliest memories are of delightedly terrifying my girl scout troupe with spooky stories I invented. Here’s one of them.

I grew up in rural Ohio. Our Girl Scout troop summer camp options were remote locations. I was about 8 or 9 years old when our troop joined other locals for a weekend overnight camp, held in a historic building that was completely surrounded by dense woods.

In retrospect, I’m not sure it was a good idea to take a load of over-imaginative children deep into the isolated woods in a historic building and give them an amorphous talent show assignment with absolutely no guardrails. But there we were, little groups separated out into pockets around this strange, old complex. I ran downstairs to claim the wood-paneled basement stage (once used as a chapel, as evidenced by an altar platform, podium and wooden cross) as our rehearsal space.

I immediately felt moved to take charge among my scout colleagues and I announced that we’d be telling a story about The Girl in the Woods.

Who was the girl in the woods, my camp-mates asked? Well…I began to speak with authority even though I was making it up as I went along.

I stared out into the deep, green woods beyond and told them all about a young woman who lived long ago, a darling girl who pined after her childhood sweetheart. Her beau had gone off to fight in some battle that she didn’t understand. But he promised he’d come back for her; to their little village in the middle of the deep green woods. She would walk in the woods every day, to their special clearing deep in the forest, and pray for his safe return. Days of walking to wait for him turned into weeks, into months, into years and finally the girl was no longer so young and whatever battle he had been engaged in surely had ended. A battle from which he never returned. Broken-hearted and unable to hold out hope any longer, one day she wandered out into the woods and just kept walking, walking, walking and simply never stopped. After her body failed her spirit kept walking… If you’re quiet… you can hear the faintest of footsteps snap the lightest of twigs. If you look closely, you can see her gaunt face peeking out from behind a tree, waiting to see if you’re her lost love finally come home…

My colleagues stared at me, then out the too-wide windows alternately. We swore we saw a figure out in those woods staring back at us. We all screamed, me included, having gotten caught up in my own story. We rushed up the stairs into an upper foyer lined in sickly green walls and awash with buzzing, garish fluorescent light.

That night, our lined-up sets of metal bunk-beds trembled from all of us working ourselves up into a frenzy. Every shadow held a figure, every footstep was hers, every window held her face.

I’d created a monster. But I was committed to her. My comrades agreed we had to tell her story. She would follow us forever if we didn’t.

For the talent show, we gathered at least thirty-some young girls into that wood-paneled basement space as dusk fell. As the lights were raised on the small stage, one of our group began telling the terrible story of The Girl in the Woods. And I, having donned a white shift and a draping fabric, having stolen someone’s purple lipstick to limn my eyes with greasy, terrible bruises, quietly began walking in from the back of the room. I edged along the audience until one girl turned to me and screamed, then the next, then the next as I kept walking slowly forward. Everyone was screaming as I took the stage and I put a finger to my lips and hushed them. The audience obeyed, looking alternately, terrified, between the now-dark woods beyond those too-wide windows, and me, standing on the stage before a worn wooden cross. As the Girl in the Woods herself, I told them I wanted them all to see me. To know that I was real. That I had lived, and loved, and died and was still in these woods. To respect the woods. To respect me. To remember that all girls had stories to tell, if we just listened. But that some of those stories might come out as screams.

There was wild (albeit nervous) applause when I took a bow. The troop leaders had no idea what to do with me. They rushed another group up to sing some cute songs afterwards, a necessary palate-cleanser for anyone hoping to sleep that night.

It was all quite ridiculous and I was terribly over-the-top. But something about that girl I’d made up haunted me. I realized that there was power in the Girl in the Woods once she became a ghost. Her ghost was no longer broken-hearted and hollow but vibrant, a force of nature staring out from blackened eyes, a figure who regained a voice and an unmistakable persistence.

I was no longer scared of her once I’d thought of what it was like to be her.

This concept of relating to a powerless figure who, in legend and whispered tales, becomes something lasting and undeniable, became part of the bedrock of A Haunted History of Invisible Women. My co-author Andrea Janes, founder of Boroughs of the Dead, writes insightfully about the staying power of the ghost herself. While my story was invented (and while we do discuss frauds and fakes), our book focuses on true stories and real histories of women who actually lived and whose spirits have become a part of local and national ghost-lore. We aim, as I did even as a child, to celebrate ghost lore as making the past contemporaneous in a present haunting.

Interestingly enough, while I made up the Girl in the Woods, I may not have made up the setting or circumstance. Only later in life did I find out the building used by the camp had once been 19th century hospital and purportedly some Union soldiers were taken or treated there during the Civil War. Many sweethearts who never went home. So, perhaps my dramatic little self was, in fact, tapping into something. An echo of that era had found its way to me. When I found out so many years later that I’d inadvertently mirrored an era and circumstance of war, I shuddered.

Another through-line from this story directly to the heart of A Haunted History of Invisible Women is that I wanted the campers to see and reckon with a woman ghost. I wanted her to be noticed, feared, empathized with but most of all: remembered. This woman I created was broken-hearted and lost to the world but I wanted to bring her forth in resilient terror.

I’d like to note for the record that I don’t believe ghost stories are or should be inherently scary. I’m far more drawn to the ghosts that want to tell us something about their deaths and in doing so illuminate our lives; be it to offer warning, perhaps a demand to be recognized, or a reminder that we’d best take care of ourselves.

But, I’ll admit, from my own varied paranormal encounters through the years, that a figure appearing from nowhere, a sound that can’t be traced or a touch when no hand is visible remains unsettling, no matter that ghosts are a part of my profession. I respect them but I’m not inured to them. As the psychic medium heroine of my Spectral City series says; ghosts are still ‘creatures of startle and shock’. They all have stories to tell, and as metaphors they are rife with possibility, but in the end, they were once people. And that is what makes them so captivating and so timeless; their ultimate closeness to us.

Walking right behind you.

Here’s a look at Leanne’s latest release: A Haunted History of Invisible Women: True Stories of America’s Ghosts

From the notorious Lizzie Borden to the innumerable, haunted rooms of Sarah Winchester’s mysterious mansion this offbeat, insightful, first-ever book of its kind from the brilliant guides behind “Boroughs of the Dead,” featured on NPR.org, The New York Times, and Jezebel, explores the history behind America’s female ghosts, the stereotypes, myths, and paranormal tales that swirl around them, what their stories reveal about us—and why they haunt us . . .

Sorrowful widows, vengeful jezebels, innocent maidens, wronged lovers, former slaves, even the occasional axe-murderess—America’s female ghosts differ widely in background, class, and circumstance. Yet one thing unites them: their ability to instill fascination and fear, long after their deaths. Here are the full stories behind some of the best-known among them, as well as the lesser-known—though no less powerful . . .

Tales whispered in darkness often divulge more about the teller than the subject. America’s most famous female ghosts, from ‘Mrs. Spencer’ who haunted Joan Rivers’ New York apartment to Bridget Bishop, the first person executed during the Salem witchcraft trials, mirror each era’s fears and prejudices. Yet through urban legends and campfire stories, even ghosts like the nameless hard-working women lost in the infamous Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire —achieve a measure of power and agency in death, in ways unavailable to them as living women.

Riveting for skeptics and believers alike, with humor, curiosity, and expertise, A Haunted History of Invisible Women offers a unique lens on the significant role these ghostly legends play both within the spook-seeking corners of our minds and in the consciousness of a nation.
Reprinted with permission from Kensington Books.