Ghost story

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The ghost story -- supernatural encounters with spirits, usually of the dead -- has been a popular fantasy motif in oral and written culture. The late 19th century saw a surge a women writers publishing supernatural fiction. In the late 20th century, the ghost story is often given a horror spin. Ghost stories also crop up in magical realism, with ambiguity for the fantastic elements, or a seamless interface between the magical and the real.

  • Dorothy Allison "Demon Lover" (in Trash, 1988) (lesbian ghost story)
  • Francesca Lia Block. Dangerous Angels: The Weetzie Bat Books (1998). This collects five short novels in one book. All books are rather mysterious, but Missing Angel Juan (1993) and to a lesser extent Baby Be-Bop (1995) have significant ghost presence.
  • Jane Chambers. Burning (1978) (two women are possessed by the spirits of two lesbians killed in the 18th century)
  • Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, 1852-1930. The Wind in the Rose-Bush, and Other Stories of the Supernatural (1903) (ghost stories)
  • Shirley Jackson. The Haunting of Hill House (1959)
  • Melissa Kwasny. Modern Daughters and the Outlaw West (Spinsters Book, San Francisco, 1990). A small Wyoming town is infested with quirky lesbians, ghosts, and politics.
  • Paula Martinac. Out of Time (1990)
  • Toni Morrison. Beloved (1987)
  • Sarah Waters. Affinity (1999, UK) (victorian women's prison, spirituality, and sublimated sapphism)
  • Brenda Weathers. The House at Pelham Falls (lesbian ghost story)
  • Brenda Weathers. Miss Pettibone and Miss McGraw (1995) (lesbian ghost story)

Anthologies