Known for over a century only to devotees of microfilm and rare-book rooms, Edward Warren now emerges as an invaluable eyewitness account of the beaver trade of the Rocky Mountains and of the fabled mountain men, sketched from life by one who shared their times starving and shining. Sir William Drummond Stewart, soldier, adventurer, and baronet, spent most of a decade in a place as unlike his luxurious ancestral estates as possible--the plains and mountains of American in the 1830s, when the inhabitants were Indians, mountain men, and buffalo.
Edward Warren
The story of the most terrifying case of demonic possession in the United States.
The Demonologist reveals the grave religious process behind supernatural events and how it can happen to you. Used as a text in seminaries and classrooms, this is one book you can't put down.
All cases in this book are prior to 1973. Since the first publication of this book, the Warren's have gone on to become known as the original ghost hunters.
One Family's Nightmare Ed Warren, Lorraine Warren, Robert Curran, Jack Smurl, Janet Smurl. Special thanks and acknowledgment to Ed Gorman for his work on this book. Contents AUTHOR'S NOTE INTRODUCTION The History of a Curious House.
The Life of John Warren, M.D.: Surgeon-general During the War of the Revolution; First Professor of Anatomy and Surgery in...
... way young Jim Hawkins had in Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island—and sailing somewhere far away where people ... He thought about Larry Talbot as Lon Chaney played him in “The Wolfman,” and how Talbot pleaded with the gods not ...
The Life of John Warren, M.D.
This is the spellbinding, shocking true story that gripped the nation about an American dream that turned into a nightmare beyond imagining—“this book will scare the hell out of you” (Kansas City Star).
Coffey wrote: “Even a man was not safe. On one occasion Joseph Curtiss of Stratford led some men to Newton to gather grain. On their way home, passing through this northern area, they were attacked so violently by wolves that they threw ...