True Ghost Stories You’ve Never Heard Before Within these pages you will not find ancient ghost stories or legendary accounts of spooky events of long ago. Instead, Rev. Gerald S. Hunter shares his investigations into modern ghost stories . . . active hauntings that continue to this day.
You’ll learn that "Dead Brothers Still Care" in Escanaba, and that "Amish Kids Like Cake, Too" in Montgomery. From Marshall’s "Spectral Sewing Circle," to Milford’s "Demon in the Dark," Haunted Michigan uncovers a chilling array of local spirits in its tour of the two peninsulas.
Wherever you may dwell, these tales of Michigan’s ethereal residents are sure to make you think about the possibility, as Hunter suggests, that we are not always alone within the confines of our happy homes.
So wait until the shadows of night have cast a pall over the serenity of your peaceful abode. Then snuggle into your favorite overstuffed chair, pour yourself a bracing bolt of 80-proof courage, and open your mind to the presence of the paranormal which surrounds us all.
Gerald S. Hunter is an ordained United Methodist minister currently serving a parish church in Hartland, Michigan. He was educated at Albion College, where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Religious Studies, and at The Methodist Theological School in Ohio, where he received his Masters of Divinity. Rev. Hunter is currently enrolled in the Masters of Counseling program at Central Michigan University in Mount Pleasant.
An avid writer, Rev. Hunter has had articles published in The Detroit Free Press, The Akron Beacon Journal, and The Michigan Christian Advocate. He has also taught creative and business writing at Saginaw Valley State University as an adjunct instructor of English.
Rev. Hunter and his wife, Tracey, maintain a home in Hillsdale County, Michigan.