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Allen Media Strategies: Excellent Halloween Topic The Greatest Ghost Story of All Time Interview Author Cheryl Kincaid
Could The Greatest Ghost Story of All Time Be a Christmas Story AND a Halloween Classic? Author Cheryl Kincaid thinks so

HERNDON, VA, October 20, 2010 /24-7PressRelease/ -- For many people, Halloween just isn't complete without a good ghost story, and Christmas isn't complete without Charles Dickens's "A Christmas Carol", the book, the play or one of the movie versions. Author Cheryl Kincaid, who has completed a new book about Dickens and "A Christmas Carol" says that the story actually works equally well for Halloween and Christmas. "This is probably the best known and most popular ghost story in English literature", says Dickens scholar Kincaid. "However, it's not the only supernatural tale which Dickens wrote."
Kincaid says that Dickens had a nanny as a young child named Mary "Mercy" Weller, who took care of him from age 5 to 11 who loved to tell the young boy incredibly graphic tales of murder, ghosts, demons, and cannibals. Kincaid says that Dickens considered "Mercy" to be his greatest influence fueling his interest in spooky stories.
Kincaid says that during his teens, Dickens read The Terrific Register, a popular magazine of the era, which contained horrific stories, complete with ghoulish illustrations.
The first Charles Dickens writings to contain ghost stories was in The Pickwick Papers , with five tales of the supernatural within its pages: "The Lawyer and the Ghost," "The Queer Chair," "The Ghosts of the Mail," "A Madman's Manuscript," and "The Story of the Goblins Who Stole a Sexton."
In 1836, Dickens released "The Story of the Goblins Who Stole a Sexton" which Dickens scholar Kincaid says is a forerunner of "A Christmas Carol". "The two ghost stories contain several similar elements: a miserable loner, a Christmas setting, and a ghost who shows the loner the error of his ways, " says Kincaid.
One other Dickens ghost story was "The Haunted Man and the Ghost's Bargain" (1848), which was also his last Christmas book. Kincaid says Dickens continued to write special Christmas tales, but subsequent ones were short stories, three in the horror genre.
Other Dickens stories to dig out for Halloween include the off-beat ghost story "To Be Read at Dusk" "The Mortals in the House", "The Ghost in Master B.'s Room", "Mr. Testator's Visitation" "The Trial for Murder", "The Signal Man" (about an actual train crash in 1861) and "Captain Murderer and the Devil's Bargain" a retelling of one of the stories his nanny Mercy had told him in his youth.
Kincaid says that "It's interesting that many people primarily think of Dickens as a Christmas storyteller, but he's right up there with Edgar Allen Poe in my opinion for fantastic Halloween stories as well."
To interview Cheryl Kincaid about Dickens, ghost stories and other Halloween topics (including exorcisms, as Kincaid is an ordained Presbyterian minister), contact Allen Media Strategies Aaron Leistner at (703) 589-8960 or aaron@allenmediastrategies.com.

Press Release Contact Information:

Catherine Hooks
Allen Medai Strategies
Director of First Impressions
12019 Trossack Rd
Herndon, VA
U.S. 20170
Voice: 706-589-8960
Fax: 703-935-5350
Website: Visit Our Website

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