Ren Louie’s Kidlit Books

Indigenous author, Ren Louie (left) is set to release an adaptation of his book for younger audiences, about his childhood journey of connecting with his culture through a drum gifted by his mother.” FULL STORY

 

Paranormal gets its due

Grave concerns are grounds for entertainment in The Haunting of Vancouver Island (Touchwood) by Shanon Sinn.

March 28th, 2018

Charles Pooley's elaborate headstone at Ross Bay Cemetery, Victoria. Lorena Amaya photo.

There have been ghost collections before Shanon Sinn’s new book; and there will be more after. Reviewer Carol Anne Shaw applauds his efforts.


The Haunting of Vancouver Island: Supernatural Encounters with the Other Side

by Shanon Sinn

Victoria: TouchWood Editions, 2017.

$20  /  9781771512435

Reviewed by Carol Anne Shaw

*

No matter our age, or whether or not we believe in the supernatural, there is something compelling about a good ghost story.

Shanon Sinn’s The Haunting of Vancouver Island is a page-turner, a lively compilation of stories, testimonials, creative prose and two chilling tales experienced by the author first-hand.

Sinn describes himself as a realist, yet as someone whose own brushes with the paranormal have left him something of a “skeptical believer.” And while he writes from a journalistic perspective, there is a thread of mysticism running throughout the book.

Diligent regarding his interview process, Sinn is careful not to impose his own opinions and judgments on the stories he shares, preferring to present the information in a clear and grounded way so readers may draw their own conclusions.

He writes of sightings involving churches, alleys, hotels, graveyards, beaches, logging roads, mountaintops and even a golf course. The ghost of Doris Gravlin, murdered by her husband in 1936, haunts the Victoria Golf Club in spring, known as the “April Ghost.”

Shanon Sinn

 

 

 

The most significant forerunner of Sinn was the prolific poet, critic, anthologist and ghostbuster Robin Skelton of Victoria whose his public practice of witchcraft was important to his fellow Wiccans. In 1978 he was initiated into the ‘Old Religion’ by Jean Kozocari, with whom his daughter Alison had been studying, and later he co-authored, with Kozocari, A Gathering of Ghosts (1989), earning him the accolade of ‘ghostbuster’.

Skelton testified in the ‘100 Huntley Street’ witchcraft trial in Victoria and once conducted an unsuccessful ritual on Parliament Hill to convince Ottawa’s politicians to repeal the GST on books.

Skeptic or not, Sinn readily admits that there is “something” to all this attention paid to the concept of ghosts. He suggests there are simply too many sightings to discount. But whether or not ghostly apparitions are, indeed, spiritual entities, is impossible to say. Sinn does, however, present several possibilities for the reader to ponder, and the numerous ghostly sightings suggest that Vancouver Island has enough stories to keep one guessing for a very long time.

The chapters begin at the south end of the island and work their way northward. And while Sinn writes of some popular well-known ghosts, such as the April Ghost and the apparition of Kathleen O’Reilly at Point Ellice House, he takes us deep into the island’s rich spiritual history, sharing ancient ghost stories originally told by the Coast Salish, Nuu-chah-nulth, and the Kwakwaka’wakw — the first people to encounter Vancouver Island’s dense cedar forests and salal undergrowth.

Edward Curtis photo, 1914. Described as Kwakwakawakw Hami dangerous thing dancer at Koskimo.

Their stories are of the Wild Woman of the Woods (Dzunukwa, or Tsonoqua), the Sasquatch, as well as unusual sea creatures — not so much ghosts as supernatural creatures, which more often than not carried a special message for those who encountered them.

Sinn starts each chapter with a moody and poetic paragraph – one that whisks the reader straight into another eerie dimension altogether. It is here that the writing becomes enthralling; it is as though Sinn knows something that the rest of us do not. Take for example, the way he brings to life one of the purported ghosts that haunt Quadra Island’s infamous Heriot Bay Inn:

Rain splatters against the window as lightning flashes across the sky. The dark, empty barroom lights up for a long moment and then another. Thunder shakes the old inn’s beams. Bottles rattle behind the bar. The man slowly steps out of the darkness and onto the wooden floor in rubber gumboots dripping with water. A heavy axe is suspended from his right arm. From beneath his old-fashioned raincoat hood, dark, unblinking eyes stare menacingly. A handlebar moustache crows a snarling shadowy grin. He begins to pace back and forth, over and over across the floor….

The reader is pulled into the unsettling scene, and left there to wonder. It’s both chilling … and wonderful.

Inside Heriot Bay Inn, 2015. Shannon Sinn photo.

Shanon Sinn is a gifted writer whose research and journalistic writing style make for a compelling read. Open-minded, curious, and sceptical, he is also a keen observer and a respectful interviewer, and the 25 stories he has shared paint an evocative picture of Vancouver Island’s rich history, mythology, and cultural landscape.

The Haunting of Vancouver Island is entertaining, informative and culturally significant. It is a collection of stories that celebrate the mysterious and deep spiritual nature of Vancouver Island.

*

Carol Anne Shaw is the author of the “Hannah” books, all from Ronsdale Press: Hannah & the Spindle Whorl (2010), Hannah & the Salish Sea (2013), and Hannah & the Wild Woods (2015). When not writing, Carol Anne can often be found painting at her easel or hiking the local trails that surround her home in the Cowichan Valley on Vancouver Island.

*

The Ormsby Review. More Readers. More Reviews. More Often.

Reviews Editor: Richard Mackie

Reviews Publisher: Alan Twigg
The Ormsby Review is a journal service for serious coverage of B.C. books and authors, hosted by Simon Fraser University. The Advisory Board consists of Jean Barman, Robin Fisher, Cole Harris, Wade Davis, Hugh Johnston, Patricia Roy, David Stouck, and Graeme Wynn. Scholarly Patron: SFU Graduate Liberal Studies. Honorary Patron: Yosef Wosk.

“Only connect.” – E.M. Forster

Tsonoqua, Wild Woman mask by Francis Horne with Lucy for scale. Black Tusk Gallery, Whistler.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • About Us

    BC BookLook is an independent website dedicated to continuously promoting the literary culture of British Columbia.