Friday, February 13, 2026

Book of the Week: An Allagash Haunting : The Story of Emile Camile

Today's book of the week was one that I bought when we attended a local library talk. The author, Tim Caverly, is a former Maine State Park Ranger. He has written 14 books about topics related to Maine parks and woodlands. The book I bought is one of his only fiction books, because it was about a ghost. It's written for teenagers, but just the same, I enjoyed it.

It was a short story that followed a family's journey on the Allagash River. When they camped, the daughter had a paranormal experience.  

An Allagash Haunting : The Story of Emile Camile: (Book 1 of Olivia's Journey) (The Allagash Tails Collection)  By Tim Caverly (Author), Franklin Manzo Jr. (Illustrator)

ABOUT THE BOOK: A damping cloak of darkness approaches . . .Olivia’s mother had always said that Maine’s Allagash River trip was not like any other canoe trip. But she would never explain what she meant. A violent thunderstorm is building as ten-year-old Olivia is canoeing and camping deep in the Maine woods with her family. Travel with her as she uncovers the mystery and learns about one of our nation’s wild rivers, where she discovers an unknown secret about her mother when she comes face to face with the last thing anyone could ever imagine.

Thursday, February 12, 2026

Rare medieval seal discovered in UK is inscribed with 'Richard's secret'

An 800 year old piece of jewelry was discovered that has a much older center dating back 2,000 years! My first thought was that it belonged to a king, but historians speculate that  Instead, the owner was likely a wealthy or educated person, potentially a knight or, a member of the clergy.The discovery was made at Gosfield, just north of Braintree, Essex, United Kingdom in September, 2025 and has been declared treasure by a coroner.

(Image: A metal detectorist found a rare medieval seal in Essex, England. (Image credit: Colchester and Ipswich Museum Service (CC-BY 2.0))

  Rare medieval seal discovered in UK is inscribed with 'Richard's secret' and bears a Roman-period gemstone 

LIVE SCIENCE By Kristina Killgrove published February 1, 2026

A medieval seal with a blood-red gemstone that was discovered in the U.K. is hiding an ancient secret, researchers have found.

A metal detectorist discovered the medieval seal in Gosfield, in the eastern county of Essex, in the fall of 2024. But a recent analysis of the seal by experts with the U.K.'s Portable Antiquities Scheme has revealed that the 800-year-old object prominently featured a 2,000-year-old Roman gemstone at its center.

"It's not common to have an object composed from two different time periods," Lori Rogerson, the finds liaison officer for Essex, told the BBC. "I thought it was a really special find."

The silver seal is just 1 inch (27.5 millimeters) long, and the entire keepsake weighs 0.23 ounces (6.44 grams), according to the entry for the artifact in the Portable Antiquities Scheme database. A loop attached to one end of the oval seal suggests it was suspended, perhaps on a necklace, rather than being a signet ring.

Around the bezel (grooved ring or frame holding the cover of a watch face, mobile phone, etc. in position), there's a mirror-image inscription that reads "SECRETUM.RICARDI," meaning "Richard's secret" or the "secret [seal] of Richard," along with a cross pattée, a plus-shaped Christian symbol commonly used in medieval times by the Knights Templar.

The center of the Gosfield seal features a piece of carnelian, a brownish-red semiprecious stone, engraved with the image of a two-horse chariot. A charioteer stands on the back of the cart, holding the reins and a whip, suggesting he is competing in an ancient circus race. The carved gemstone dates to the late first century B.C. or early first century A.D., making it at least 1,200 years older than the metal seal matrix.

The mirror-image engraving and intaglio chariot design would appear the right way when Richard pressed it into wax as his seal.

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

WTOP Newsradio, Wash DC: Linville Manor- Is this the most haunted house in Maryland?

When I published my 13th book in September 2025 with my co-author and friend Winn Brewer, I contacted WTOP-FM Newsradio in Washington, DC to see if they were interested in doing a story about the book, "Ghosts of Linville Manor - Investigating Maryland's most haunted house." Reporter John Domen, whom I've known for years through my work (at NASA) was all in for a Halloween story. So, we talked on the phone and he visited Linville Manor and got a tour with Winn, owner/operator. The result was a great story on WTOP Newsradio, presented here. 



Is this the most haunted house in Maryland? 

John Domen | jdomen@wtop.com,  October 31, 2025, 5:13 AM LINK: https://wtop.com/maryland/2025/10/this-home-in-upper-marlboro-might-be-the-most-haunted-one-in-md-if-you-believe-in-ghosts-2/

It’s a property that dates back hundreds of years, and in that time, it’s seen its fair share of untimely deaths. But does that mean Linville Manor in Upper Marlboro, Maryland, is the most haunted house there is?

The original home was built in the early 1700s, though a massive fire in 1849 destroyed the original structure. Up until the 1950s, it was owned by the Bowie family (you may have heard about the city north of Upper Marlboro named after them), who rebuilt the home in the same spot, building on the same foundation and same brick-walled basement where the original home stood.

In 2018, the home was bought out of foreclosure auction by a man named Winn Brewer.

Although the structure needed a substantial amount of work, he saw the building’s potential and went all in on trying to fix it up.

“All I knew was, it was a great real estate deal,” Brewer said. “Let’s see if we can make it an event space, maybe a wedding venue. And very quickly, the ghost kind of decided, ‘not quite so much.'”

Brewer admits to always being interested in history and at least amused by ghost stories growing up. Then, guests renting the house out through short-term rental apps and people who bill themselves as ghost hunters and paranormal experts started visiting and having their own experiences.

“So in every single room of this house, there is activity,” Brewer said, as he began a guided tour of the home. “Everything you see in a ghost show happens here. Mists, orbs, unexplained lights, responses, knocks, voices in distant rooms, footsteps, moving furniture.” In all, Brewer and his friends said they think there’s at least 10 ghosts, including a cat, that haunt the property. He said what really stirred things up was rehab work he did in the basement to replace the boiler system.

“Many paranormal folks, researchers, will tell you that if you disturb the foundation of the home, there’s a good chance you might have paranormal activity to follow,” he said.

While the basement saw substantial renovations when new owners bought the home in the ’50s, Brewer said the bricks that make up the walls date back to 1717, and some of them are still charred by the fatal fire that was sparked in 1849.


“I had this renovation done, we removed the radiator, and at that point, a whole different vibe came over the house,” Brewer said.

“We started hearing footsteps up and down from the basement over and over again. There is an uncomfortable feeling across the house, almost like a very heavy vibe. And even guests that were staying would report this feeling … one group even left a recorder down here, and they heard just very aggressive breathing.”

Maryland’s most haunted That’s when Brewer called a man named Rob Gutro, a medium who investigates paranormal activity. The two have also teamed up to write a book about the home.

“What we found was quite a number of — quite a number of ghosts that inhabit the property,” Gutro said. “I ran into a woman that was apparently one of the burn victims from the 1849 fire in the backyard. That’s before we even got in the door.”

Inside, he said, there were five more ghosts in the front hallway as soon as he walked in.

All in all, some of the ghosts are believed to be victims of the fire. Another is a 3-year-old girl named Lily, and who — if you believe in ghosts — was perhaps photographed at least once by one of Brewer’s friends.

In the ballroom, which was added to the home in the ’50s, Brewer said someone, or something, keeps moving a chair into a specific spot facing out to the backyard. “Airbnb guests would say, ‘Hey, I thought that, you didn’t come into this space when we rent it,'” Brewer said. “I’d say ‘I wasn’t down there.’ I would think that maybe a kid or someone had moved it. But it happened time and time again.” He later found out a former resident of the home liked to sit in front of the window to watch trains go by when he got sick. In one of the upstairs bedrooms, a room that historically was where women gave birth, Brewer said no matter how neatly made the bed is, one side always looks like someone had laid in it. It started during the pandemic, and Brewer said he later found out another former owner of the home died in that room, too. “People will now report … if they slept on this side of the bed, they would hear someone get into the bed beside them at night,” he said, pointing to the other side of the bed. “If they sleep over there, it feels like somebody sits on them in the middle of the night.”

When morning comes, Brewer said people report feeling someone caressing their arms or their cheeks, likening it to a mother’s touch.

“The midwives of this house were extremely good at what they did, and other notable families in the area would actually bring the pregnant mothers here to have their births because the midwives were so well-known,” Brewer said. “So we don’t know if we have the ghost of a midwife. We don’t know if we have the ghost of this expectant mother trying to induce the labor, but people will see a woman in white pacing.”

There’s also been the sound of people slamming doors, walking down steps or standing in front of people laying in bed — especially if it’s a woman sleeping there. But both Brewer and Gutro have come to believe when that happens, it’s not because a ghost is trying to scare anyone.


“We’ve described to guests, like, ‘Hey, if you’re experiencing anything intense like this, it might just be because a ghost is kind of fond of you, like you’re bringing back some kind of happy memory,'” Brewer said.

“We’ve, in fact, since had guests that, once they acknowledge something’s going on, they’ll have a conversation with the ghost, and the room just sort of settles, and he almost becomes like a helper to them in some way.”

“In some rooms where there were traumatic things that happened, or there were emotional things that happened, people who tend to be sensitive and emotionally sensitive tend to have more of a sense of what happened in a particular room,” Gutro said.

Lifting the spirits While touring the house on Wednesday, Brewer walked the upstairs rooms with an EMF detector, a device used to measure unseen electromagnetic fields in the rooms. If none of the lights were blinking, or only one or two green lights were blinking, it was no big deal.

There were a few instances where the lights would blink into the yellow, orange and red lines, though, even as the reader laid on a bed six feet away from anyone. In the world of the paranormal, it’s supposed to indicate the presence of a ghost, even if you can’t see it.

The activity inside the home really kicks up in the middle of the night — 1:11 a.m. to be exact.

“The ghosts have told ghost hunters, paranormal investigators, that they actually congregate in the lounge around 1:11 to not only remember their past lives, but to talk about the people who are in the house that day,” Brewer said.

Ultimately, the experience wasn’t as spooky as when a reporter from The Washington Post visited a few years back, though it was also a briefer experience.

“There have been countless people who have stayed there, and many of them have had their own interactions,” Gutro said. “So you don’t have to be sensitive, you don’t have to be a medium or a paranormal investigator. You just have to stay there, and you may meet one of the earthbound ghosts that linger there.”

Brewer stays in an apartment he had built on the side of the home. He said he’s communicated to the ghosts that it’s a “no ghost zone” on the property, and that they aren’t welcomed there.

The spirits seem to abide by his rule, according to Brewer. But if they’re there, they’re at least cooperative, he said.

© 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved.  John Domen John has been with WTOP since 2016 but has spent most of his life living and working in the DMV, covering nearly every kind of story imaginable around the region. He’s twice been named Best Reporter by the Chesapeake Associated Press Broadcasters Association. jdomen@wtop.com 202-895-5060 @JDDsays @johnoffmic.bsky.social @JDonWTOP

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Wow! Wing-backed "dinosaur" Dimetrodons were not really dinosaurs, but more related to Mammals!

When is a dinosaur not a dinosaur? When it's a Synapsida. Today's blog will tell you what that means, and why I just learned that a "dinosaur" I've known about since I was a kid is more related to mammals than reptiles! I'm currently reading a book called "The Rise of Mammals" by Steve Brusatte and that's where I learned the Dimetrodon was a link to the first true mammals. You'll learn about that and how the Permian Period led to a mass extinction. 
(Image: Restoration of Dimetrodon grandis by Bogdanov. CC BY-SA 3.0)

Wing-backed "dinosaur" Dimetrodons were not really dinosaurs, but more related to Mammals! 

Often confused for a dinosaur, Dimetrodon is actually a prehistoric synapsid, making it more closely related to mammals (including humans) than to a Tyrannosaurus Rex. 

WHAT IS A SYNAPSIDA? It's a group of living things characterized by a single opening behind the eye socket in the skull. This lineage eventually led to the evolution of mammals. Because of this, Dimetrodon provides critical insights into the early development of mammalian traits, such as specialized jaw muscles and complex dental structures.

Riley Black of Smithsonian Magazine explained it this way: "There is a single large hole there called the temporal fenestra, and it was the place where some of the lower jaw muscles attached to the skull. The number of these holes in this part of the skull can immediately tell a paleontologist what kind of animal they are looking at. Dinosaurs have two holes in the same area and are called diapsids. The possession of just one of these holes defines a group of vertebrates called synapsids, the group to which modern mammals (including you and I) belong. As odd as it may seem, this means that Dimetrodon is a distant relative of ours."

This predator ruled the Earth roughly 295 to 272 million years ago during the Early Permian period—finishing its reign nearly 40 million years before the first dinosaurs ever appeared.

(Photo: Dimetrodon Skull. Credit: Wikimedia.Jeff Kubina Columbia, Maryland) 

ABOUT THE DIMETRODON

The Back Sail: Its most striking feature is a large dorsal sail formed by elongated neural spines extending from its vertebrae. While paleontologists once believed it was strictly for thermoregulation (warming up in the sun), current theories also suggest it served as a display to attract mates or intimidate rivals.

Unique Teeth: Its name means "two measures of teeth." Unlike the uniform teeth of reptiles, Dimetrodon possessed heterodont dentition— that is, different types of teeth used for different tasks, such as sharp canines for piercing and serrated teeth for shearing flesh.

Size:  Depending on the species, Dimetrodon could grow between 5.6 to 15 feet (1.7 and 4.6 meters) in length and weighed as much as 550 pounds (250 kg). It walked with a sprawling, four-legged gait similar to a modern crocodile.

What Dimetrodon's Ate:  A variety of prey including freshwater fish, amphibians like Eryops, and early land-dwelling herbivores.

******************************* 

ABOUT THE PERMIAN PERIOD- and WHY the "Great Extinction" 

The Permian Period, occurring 299–251 million years ago as the final, critical phase of the Paleozoic Era, saw the assembly of the supercontinent Pangea, massive climatic extremes, and the formation of the Permian Basin. It concluded with Earth's most severe mass extinction, wiping out over 95% of marine life and initiating a new era of life.
Key Aspects of the Permian Period:

  • Significance: It was a defining turning point in Earth's history, transitioning from a cooler early climate to extreme heat, arid deserts, and the assembly of the supercontinent Pangea (all continents combined into 1 massive landmass), which profoundly affected global weather patterns and habitats.
  • The End Extinction: The Permian ended with the "Great Dying" (approx. 251.9 million years ago), the largest extinction event in history. 
  • Causes likely involved massive volcanic eruptions in the Siberian Traps, releasing carbon dioxide and causing catastrophic global warming, ocean acidification, and oxygen depletion
    .  This d
    rastically altered from high-oxygen to low-oxygen levels, contributing to the mass extinction.
  • Geography: Almost all landmasses gathered into the C-shaped supercontinent Pangea, surrounded by the global ocean, Panthalassa.

Monday, February 9, 2026

The Famous Berwick (Maine) Sponge Cake – and Why it Disappeared

Today's blog is about a once famous locally created pastry in the 1800s that seems to have disappeared and was once enjoyed by Charles Dickens, himself! The Berwick (Maine) Sponge Cake was "light and lemony" and topped with raspberries. This story includes the ingredients! 

The Story of the Famous Berwick Sponge Cake – and Why it Disappeared 

The light and lemony confection was a favorite among train travelers  

When people traveled by rail in Maine from the 1850s until 1879, there was a delicacy that you simply had to have if you could get it: the famous Berwick sponge cake. When the Boston & Maine stopped in North Berwick, Maine, travelers got off and headed for a tiny restaurant nearby. There they would buy the light and lemony confection.

Charles Dickens, during his 1868 tour of America, made his acquaintance with the Berwick famous sponge cake on his way from Portland to Boston. Eleven-year-old Kate Smith (later Kate Douglas Wiggin) happened to travel on the same train as the writer she revered. When the train stopped in North Berwick, she looked out the window and saw Charles Dickens standing on the platform. Years later, she remembered, His hands were plunged deep in his pockets (a favorite gesture), but presently one was removed to wave away laughingly a piece of the famous Berwick sponge cake, offered him by Mr. Osgood, of Boston, his travelling companion and friend.

(Photo: Train station in North Berwick, Maine) 

Origin of the Famous Berwick Sponge Cake 

A 1901 story in Domestic Science Monthly recounts how in 1845 a Boston & Providence clerk named William C. Briggs said, “Build me a restaurant in North Berwick, and stop every train five minutes there.” So the railroad built a restaurant, and Mrs. Briggs made sponge cake according to a secret recipe. The cake became famous, and the Briggses shipped it all over the United States in boxes. 

Mrs. B. retired from the railway dining room business in 1879, having made a comfortable sum, mostly from cake sales. Mary Ann Briggs closed the restaurant, gave the recipe to her son-in-law and moved to Boston, where she died in 1898.

The Recipe

A reader from Rockland, Maine, wrote to the Domestic Science Monthly with the old Berwick sponge cake recipe:

Beat 6 eggs 2 min. Add 3 c. sugar and beat 2 min. 1 1/2 c. flour with 2 tsp. of cream of tartar; beat 1 min. Add 1 c. cold water with 1 tsp. of soda; add grated rind and juice of 1 lemon; beat 1 min. Add 1 1/2 c. flour and pinch of salt; beat one min. Bake 40 min. (oven temperature not recorded)  

A Worldwide Reputation 

Of the many cakes made in Massachusetts, none have a wider reputation and in their day larger sales than the Berwick sponge cake.  

My interview on the Medium Frequency..."Haunting Of" series of books

On February 2, 2026, I was a guest on the youtube show/podcast called The Medium Frequency with Raven Wolfe & Gwen Johns (filling in for Christopher J Brown) - We discussed the "Haunting Of" series of books by Rob Gutro and Monique Toosoon.

 YOU TUBE LINK: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M5m6bOyqfmc


HAUNTING OF HUNT MEMORIAL LIBRARY

The "Haunting of Hunt Memorial Library" by Rob Gutro and Monique Toosoon is a book about an intense Paranormal investigation in a haunted former library! The book hit #2 on Amazon.

Their findings revealed three ghosts that were not associated with the building but chose the building as their residence. Together with other paranormal professionals and members of the public they uncovered a haunted secret love, illicit trysts, a ghostly teenage accident victim and haunted paintings. When reading this, you’ll feel like you’re on the paranormal investigation!  

HAUNTING OF EMERY ESTATE 

"Haunting of Emery Estate" by Rob Gutro andMonique Toosoon is a #1 Selling book. It's a book about an intense Paranormal investigation in Weymouth, Massachusetts!

  A 5-hour paranormal investigation at the Emery Estate in Weymouth, Massachusetts was coordinated and hosted by Monique Toosoon and led to chilling communications with 3 ghosts. They included one innocent boy, another attached to a special furnishing, and a third who revealed his terrible nature. Follow along with one team as they encounter and learn about these three ghosts, why they stayed behind, and how the team confirmed their identities. The end of the investigation will surprise you and show the darker side of human nature in an earthbound ghost. When reading this, you’ll feel like you’re on the paranormal investigation.

Sunday, February 8, 2026

Read the "Superbowl" of True Paranormal books by Rob Gutro

Read the "Superbowl" of True Paranormal books by Rob Gutro

6 Number ONES, and the latest at #2... make "Haunting of Hunt Memorial Library" a Superbowl winner!
**PUPPYBOWL watchers would enjoy the "Pets and the Afterlife" Series" (SEE BELOW for time and how to watch the puppy bowl)
*In Paperback, Ebook, and Audio Book*

Puppy Bowl XXII
 airs on Sunday, February 8, 2026, at 2 p.m. ET (11 a.m. PT), featuring 150 adoptable puppies from 72 shelters across Team Fluff and Team Ruff. The three-hour event, held on Super Bowl Sunday, highlights special needs and older dogs, with a pre-game show at 1 p.m. ET on Animal Planet, Discovery, TBS, truTV, Max, and discovery+.





Idiots of the Week: Maryland animal crematorium is accused of giving fake ashes and more

This week's idiot is HORRIFIC. As dog dads, who have the ashes of 5 of our dogs, I'm disgusted and angered by this "pet cremation" business. These people are idiots who should be in jail for a long, long time.

Baltimore County pet crematorium owners arrested for allegedly scamming pet owners

By Adam Thompson, Kaicey Baylo , August 28, 2025 / 7:21 PM EDT / CBS Baltimore

The owner of a Baltimore County pet crematorium has been charged after allegedly scamming pet owners by giving them sand or concrete instead of their pets' ashes.

Rodney Ward and his wife, Yalanda, the owners of Loving Care Pet Funeral and Cremation Services in Catonsville, are each facing 56 charges of malicious destruction of property.

Business owners appear in court

On Thursday, Rodney Ward appeared in court, where his attorney fought to get him home detention. Yalanda Ward posted a $10,000 bail.

Prosecutors said the Wards owned an unlicensed business that collected $13,000 from victims. Yalanda was arrested first, while Rodney fled, and was arrested nearly a week later, according to prosecutors.

"With the 51 victims that we have, every single one of them has remains or a box that they thought were their pets' remains," said Adam Lippe with the Baltimore County State's Attorney's Office. "It turned out to be non-animal. It turned out to be what I indicated in court, which was sand, gravel, baking soda, fertilizer. So, for those reasons, this defendant is a danger to the community. He victimized people in their moment of need."

Lawyers believe Rodney is still involved in the business.

Pet owners say they were scammed WJZ reported in April that investigators said the remains of 38 different animals were packed inside a hearse in West Baltimore.

Juanita Logan told WJZ that in October 2024, she called Loving Care Pet Funerals to cremate her 14-year-old cat, who had died. Logan said that within 24 hours, she received a box back with his picture and a cremation ID.

However, inside the box was a bag of sand instead of his ashes.

"This is like all I have, and I don't know where he is, and I'm just devastated," Logan said. "There are no words. The more I talk about it, it puts me back and back and back." When WJZ attempted to call Loving Care Pet Funerals, no one answered, and a link to the company's website went to an error page.

"I feel like I failed him because they just tossed him," Logan said in April. "I just pray that through all the remains that they found in the hearse, they find him and whatever is left of him, so I can get the real ashes."

Joy Schoonover found out that the ashes of her dead 17-year-old cat, Garfield, were instead something else after sending him to get cremated at Loving Care Pet Funeral. "They were not ashes," Schoonover said, "It looked like sand, concrete with wires inside of it."

Pet owners react to arrest 

In April, pet owner Nikki Pickens said she received a bag of sand from Loving Care Pet Funeral Services instead of the ashes of her 13-year-old cat Norbie. "It doesn't leave your brain ever," she said on Wednesday. "It's continuous." Pickens said the arrest of Rodney and Yalanda Ward brought her and other alleged victims to tears. "We were crying also because it brings you back to the grief," Pickens said.

Now, the alleged victims are looking for the Wards to take accountability. "Be honest and tell us what he has done with our pets and why he left them in that hearse and why he left them on the side of the road," Pickens said.

Investigation continues 

 A Baltimore pet crematorium offered free pet cremation services to people who claimed to have been scammed by Loving Care Pet Funeral and Cremation Services.

Zoey Robinson-Budreski, from Charm City Pet Crematory, told WJZ she worked with the Baltimore Animal Rescue and Care Shelter (BARCS) and animal control to cremate the recovered pets for families.

"I couldn't just stand by and not step in and help," said Robinson-Budreski. "It's really sad because he took the trust of a lot of people by misleading them." Robinson-Budreski said the work to identify the pets still continues. "There are still seven that animal control has in their possession," she said. According to Robinson-Budreski, the final seven are hard to identify. "A lot of them are not even into the point that we can see what kind of animal they were," she said.

She said she's trying to correct the harm done, but she is seeing some clients come to her door with hesitancy. "As people walk out the door, they say, 'You promise me you're going to cremate my pet, right? This is going to be my pet, right?'" Robinson-Budreski said. "I've heard that much more since this Rodney thing."

Saturday, February 7, 2026

Heroes of the Week: Misquamicut Fire Department Rescue Dog in Icy Waters

This week's heroes are the firefighters of Misquamicut, located within the town of Westerly, Rhode Islandwho waded into icy waters to rescue a dog who fell through thin ice! 

(Photo: Crews rescue a dog from Little Masachaug Pond in Westerly, Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026. Credit: Misquamicut Fire Department)

Dog rescued from icy water in Misquamicut, Rhode Island


Friday, February 6, 2026

New Podcast! Afraid of Investigating the Ghosts of the Linville Manor

 If you'd like to know about the ghosts and hauntings of Linville Manor in Maryland, my coauthor, Winn Brewer and I joined Bob Heske, host of the Afraid of Nothing Podcast to talk about it for an hour. Today's blog shares the links to the interview- both on Video or Podcast.

New Podcast! Afraid of Investigating the Ghosts of the Linville Manor

 

Bob Heske, Host of the famous "Afraid of Nothing" Podcast asked Co-authors Rob Gutro and Winn Brewer to discuss their collaboration on the book "The Ghosts of the Linville Manor" -- Maryland's most haunted house! 

LISTEN TO THE PODCAST: 

https://www.afraidofnothingpodcast.com/afraid-of-investigating-the-ghosts-of-the-linville-manor/

OR WATCH THIS ON YOU TUBE: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4GHPVpEWCk 

And LISTEN TO A PRIOR "Afraid of Nothing" Episode about the house! 

Buy the Book on Amazon! AND Visit the house!

ABOUT THE HOUSE:  Linville Manor in Maryland dates back to the 1600s. Over the years, the home has gained notoriety for its paranormal activity, which has piqued the interest of distinguished investigators in the field.  



Book of the Week: The Ghost and the Haunted Portrait by Cleo Coyle

 One of my favorite series of mysteries is called the "Haunted Bookshop Mystery" series by Cleo Coyle. I've just finished the seventh book in the series called" The Ghost and the Haunted Portrait." It was wonderful,  5 of 5 stars! Today's blog is about the book.

I love the characters!!! Pen McClure owns a mystery book store in Quindicott, Rhode Island with her aunt Sadie. In the 1940s a private investigator named Jack, was killed in the store, thus he haunts it. Pen can hear him and he has helped her solve mysteries in the town. There are a lot of great supporting characters, too. One is a mailman and another is a college professor who bicker back and forth. In this story, an art collector is selling his paintings, and one is supposed to have a curse on it, that leads to various deaths, family matters, a tie in to a case that the dead detective had in the 1940s, and more. It's a great read!! I look forward to the next book! 

ABOUT THE BOOK: 

The Ghost and the Haunted Portrait is the seventh book in Cleo Coyle's Haunted Bookshop Mystery series, featuring bookstore owner Penelope Thornton-McClure and her ghost sidekick, Jack Shepard, as they investigate a mysterious, cursed-seeming portrait that causes accidents. The cozy mystery blends contemporary and noir elements, with Penelope enlisting the help of the 1940s-era ghost detective to solve the case, which involves a vintage book cover painting and a woman rumored to have gone mad.


Thursday, February 5, 2026

South Berwick, Maine literary icon recognized on postage stamp

Sarah Orne Jewett is a famous figure in southern Maine. Now she's going to appear on a postage stamp! 

South Berwick literary icon recognized on postage stamp 
Noreen Biehl, November 17, 2025, So. Berwick News

An image of renowned South Berwick author Sarah Orne Jewett against a backdrop of her beloved Maine coast will appear on a U.S. commemorative postage stamp, one of 19 new images that will be issued for 2026.

The images portray cultural icons, historic events, and the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence being celebrated next year.

“The 35th stamp in the Literary Arts series honors Sarah Orne Jewett (1849-1909), a lifelong resident of Maine and a foundational figure in American literary regionalism,” according to the U.S. Postal Service’s announcement in October.

Jewett published several novels, as well as numerous short stories, poems, essays and a correspondence collection that included hundreds of letters to her partner, Annie Adams Fields.

“I’m very impressed that she has a stamp along with other notables in a year when we celebrate our 250th anniversary,” said Alyssa Lapierre, adult services librarian at the South Berwick Public Library, noting Jewett is taking an esteemed place among such historical figures as Phillis Wheatley, Harriet Powers and Abigail Adams.

The stamp’s image was designed by Postal Service art director Ethel Kessler using a portrait painted by Mark Summers, according to the Postal Service. The coastal background evokes a scene from Jewett’s best-known novel, “The Country of the Pointed Firs.”

“I wanted to really tie her to the age she lived in and to the landscape of Maine,” Summers said in the announcement.

Susan Morse, a member of the local Jewett Writers Group, recalled her connection to Jewett’s novel when she first moved to Maine.

“I can’t think of Sarah Orne Jewett without thinking of her most famous book,” Morse said, referring to “Pointed Firs.” “When I first read it, I was transported to the late 1800s in Maine. I loved her almost poetic writing and descriptions of people and places.”

Jewett, born in 1849 in her grandfather’s Georgian-style home at the corner of Portland and Main streets in South Berwick, got her inspiration from the people she knew in her hometown.

She lived in her grandfather’s home until she was five years old, then moved with her family next door to 37 Portland St., home of the South Berwick Public Library from 1971 to 2012 and now known as the Jewett-Eastman House.

At 38, Jewett moved back to 5 Portland St. with her sister Mary and lived and wrote there until her death in 1909, having spent part of the years between 1882 and 1909 in Boston with Annie Fields. Both Jewett homes are now owned and operated by Historic New England.

David Ramsay of South Berwick, a tour guide with Historic New England, described how a rapidly changing nation and town influenced Jewett’s writing.

“She witnessed the transition from a rural, agrarian and shipbuilding economy to an industrial order, as her town of South Berwick saw the building of factories, like the shoe factory and the cotton mills down on the Salmon Falls River,” Ramsay said.

He noted Jewett’s novels and stories also showed her love of her historic home and her strong focus on everyday Maine people, especially women, as she illustrated the quiet dignity and strength of the women of her time.

In an excerpt from “A Country Doctor,” written in 1884, Jewett described South Berwick, which she called Old Fields.

“There was one long street which had plenty of room on either side for most of the houses, and where it divided, each side of the First Parish Church, it became the East road and the West road, and the rest of the dwellings strayed off somewhat undecidedly toward the world beyond,” she wrote.

Jewett’s portraits of New Englanders have “left an indelible mark on American literature,” the U.S. Postal Service noted in issuing the stamp.

The words “three ounce” on Jewett’s stamp indicates it will always be valid for first class envelopes up to three ounces in weight. A Forever® stamp is good for envelopes up to one ounce. The first date of issue and issue location have not been announced.

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I'm a simple guy who enjoys the simple things in life, especially our dogs. I volunteer for dog rescues, enjoy exercising, blogging, politics, helping friends and neighbors, participating in ghost investigations, coffee, weather, superheroes, comic books, mystery novels, traveling, 70s and 80s music, classic country music,writing books on ghosts and spirits, cooking simply and keeping in shape. You'll find tidbits of all of these things on this blog and more. EMAIL me at Rgutro@gmail.com - Rob

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