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Reviews tagging 'Miscarriage'
The Haunting of Alma Fielding: A True Ghost Story by Kate Summerscale
3 reviews
directorpurry's review against another edition
emotional
informative
mysterious
medium-paced
4.5
Graphic: Antisemitism
Moderate: Medical content, Miscarriage, Child death, Sexual violence, and War
Minor: Abortion
rb26's review
challenging
informative
mysterious
slow-paced
4.0
Some really fascinating insights into the reliance on ghosts in the early/mid 20th century and the links between the supernatural and repressed trauma. I do wish that I hadn’t listened to it on audiobook, because it meant I couldn’t keep up with the details.
Graphic: Sexual assault, Grief, Domestic abuse, Miscarriage, Child death, Death, and Animal death
Moderate: Rape
debussy's review against another edition
dark
emotional
mysterious
reflective
sad
medium-paced
5.0
The Haunting of Alma Fielding is a well done piece of non-fiction. Not overly dry, written with a quick pace in mind, and never condescending to its main cast of characters. The book itself is interested in the spiritualism of England in the late 1930s, which is a country on the cusp of war, and on Nandor Fodor, a man who believed that poltergeists were not hauntings so much as they were the physical manifestation of trauma.
Alma Fielding comes into Nandor Fodor's life just as he's faced with a libel suit for besmirching spiritualism, offering him the investigation of a lifetime. At first, Alma seems like the real deal--a woman haunted. A true medium. But is she? As the book dives deeper into Alma and her life, it takes another hard look at the spiritualist movement of the early 20th century. Why are so many mediums girls and women, and why are they so often broken in some way? It dives into her life much like Nandor did in the 1930s, and at the end it gut punches you.
I wish more people had been there for Alma when she needed them, and I'm glad this book became her champion in a way, however late.
Alma Fielding comes into Nandor Fodor's life just as he's faced with a libel suit for besmirching spiritualism, offering him the investigation of a lifetime. At first, Alma seems like the real deal--a woman haunted. A true medium. But is she? As the book dives deeper into Alma and her life, it takes another hard look at the spiritualist movement of the early 20th century. Why are so many mediums girls and women, and why are they so often broken in some way? It dives into her life much like Nandor did in the 1930s, and at the end it gut punches you.
I wish more people had been there for Alma when she needed them, and I'm glad this book became her champion in a way, however late.
Moderate: Child death, Chronic illness, Grief, and Mental illness
Minor: Miscarriage, Sexual assault, and Animal cruelty
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