The 2011 biographic tale, True Haunting; by Edward F Becker is a real page turner. His experience is hair raising, disturbing, and downright scary. And it all happened in the long ago time of 1970. He and his family were, in the deepest sense of the word; alone.

As Author Edwin F Becker points out, there were no Ghost Hunters a’ la TAPS in 1970. There was also no Amityville horror; at least not until 1977 when Jay Anson put pen to paper and wrote about the “alleged” ghostly problems of the Lutz family in the house where an entire family sans one was murdered.

It would not surprise me to learn that Jay Anson was not already aware of the ghostly events that plagued the Becker family via a NBC newscast that was aired both locally (where Becker and his wife lived) and nationally. Where else could he have gotten the idea? And  where Anson, admittedly, stretched the truth to breaking and beyond in search of a fast buck; Becker did not profit one cent from his haunted house experience until years later when he self-published his story.

I’d bet a pretty penny myself to say that he’s not profiting much from the sales of his story; his e-book is very affordable.

The Beginning

In 1970, Becker and his new wife and baby, wanted to buy a house. Finding a two-story house with two ready-made apartments already under one roof, he thought he’d found a bargain. Sure the house needed work and they needed to get rid of the “mentally unstable” woman who lived in the downstairs apartment. Edwin was not afraid of hard work and the unstable tenant was on her way out.

So what could go wrong?

Apparently, everything.

Becker recounts the true story of what happened when he and his young family moved into the house in the suburbs of 1970 Chicago. Edwin recalls the traumatic affect the property had on friends and family. He tells us the Church refuses to help. He seeks help from two (the only two in the Yellow Pages) paranormal investigative societies available.

Straight Forward here

He tells his true story in a straight forward, no-nonsense manner. This convinces and disturbs. It also, me anyway, made the hair on the back of my neck stand-up. It was then that I decided  to read the rest of the book in the daylight. What he does not do is embellish the events to “sell” his story. He steadfastly refused to sensationalize any of the occurrences that he and his family experienced. Hence the self publishing.

He and his family encountered what, at the outset, just seemed like odd events. A kitchen door that refused to stay shut. A mixer that refused to hang on the wall. A phone that kept taking itself off the hook and countless other things. All occurences that he found  “logical” explanations for.

Or so he thought.

The haunting begins to escalate. He and his wife; who to be fair, senses this a lot earlier than her skeptic husband, realise that the house is haunted by not just a ghost. It was full of them.

This True Story is plain

It was Mr Becker’s sincere and plain retelling that both convinced me of the truth of his story. This, combined with “strange” experiences that I myself have encountered, sold me on the validity of his tale.

This is a very understated book compared to Jay Anson’s nefarious tale of the Amityville “hauntings.” You’ll find no oozing black stuff pouring out of the sockets. No overabundance of flies. No voice telling anyone to, “Get Out!” There are no pigs floating outside a second story window.

What you will find is a simply written, not in a negative sense, tale of growing fear and financial difficulties. Your heart will go out to his (then) young family and the fact that they had so few avenues of help. Before the modern “ghost busting” equipment of today and the digital revolution that enables ghost hunters to track down “spirits and demons” you had psychics and clairvoyants and the odd paranormal scientist. Oh and the clergy, if you could get them to acknowledge the problem. This was a time of real “hit and miss” ghost hunting. True or not, it was something that not many of the main populace knew about.

Creeper

This was a great read and, as I said before, one that literally “creeped” me out. I will warn you, this is not a book for the overly imaginative. I slept with the light on after reading this book.

The Verdict

I’d give this a full 5 out of 5 stars for no-nonsense reporting of one family’s true experience with a haunted house. Do not miss reading this book, it is a great story, even if you don’t believe in ghosts.

Author Edwin F Becker.
Author Edwin F Becker.

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Fediverse reactions

15 responses to “True Haunting by Edwin F Becker: A Hair Raising Experience”

  1. […] film feels like a digital version of another true tale that creeped me out. True Haunting. Written by Edwin F Becker, it tells of his struggle to rid his apartment building, and home, from […]

  2. Thanks for including my review!

  3. Thank you for the wonderful review. You seemed to capture a number of factors that most never do. Please contact me. Blessings, Edwin F. Becker

    1. You’re welcome! I really enjoyed the book and it actually went so far as to scare the dickens out of me! If you send me your e-mail (to mikesfilmtalk@gmail.com) I’ll get in touch! Cheers! I’m very, very pleased that you liked my review! 😀

  4. […] True Haunting by Edwin F Becker: Hair Raising Experience (mikesfilmtalk.com) […]

  5. […] True Haunting by Edwin F Becker: Hair Raising Experience (mikesfilmtalk.com) […]

  6. Thanks to your well written review, I am interested in reading this book.

  7. Sounds good, I’ll have to check this out.

    1. It impressed me all to hell and back, as they say. 😀

  8. Hi. I’ve nominated you for The Versatile Blogger Award. I see you have it already, but there no such thing as too many awards, right? 🙂 http://asiancinemablog.wordpress.com/2013/04/22/the-versatile-blogger-award/

    1. Ah, thanks for thinking of me mate! I’m heading over right now. Cheers mate!! 😀

  9. I like the non fantastical no nonsense approach to paranormal. Thank you for sharing!

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