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The World's Greatest Unsolved Mysteries

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People disappear without a trace. Captain Briggs, his crew, and his family vanished from the Canadian built Mary Celeste. Ben Bathurst walked around the horses harnessed to his coach - and was never seen again. People appear without explanation Kaspar Hauser arrived in Nuremberg as inexplicably as if he’d materialised from some unknown dimension. Researchers of the paranormal have investigated cases where thought-forms seem to have acquired quasi-physical properties. Madame Blavatsky claimed to have done it. There were times when Nikola Tesla, the brilliant electrical experimenter, seems to have lived in an alternative reality where mental images of his machines became solid to him. Tesla expert, Oliver Nichelson, put forward a theory connecting Tesla’s awesomely strange apparatus at Wardenclyffe, Long Island, with the Tunguska explosion of 1908. Were similar strange forces responsible for moving the Barbados coffins around in their sealed vault? Where do poltergeists, like the one that haunted Esther Cox in Amherst, Nova Scotia, get their inexplicable energy? When scores of reliable witnesses continue to report their sightings of UFOs, ghosts, crop circles, lake monsters, enormous cat-like beasts, Yeti, and Sasquatch, how can their observations be explained? We live in an immeasurably strange universe, miraculously suspended in space and a universe that has room for the mysteries of the ancient British King Arthur, Merlin, and the Holy Grail; the Oak Island Money Pit in Canada; the undeciphered Glozel Alphabet, and the Priest’s Treasure at Rennes-le-Chateau in France; Mermaids and Sea Monsters; the Kingdom of Prester John; the Riddle of the Pictish Stones at Meigle in Scotland; the Vampire of Croglin Grange; Zombies and Wer-beasts; the Devil’s Footprints in Devonshire; the Green Children of Woolpit; Lost Cities and Sunken Islands; Pyramids and Stone Circles; Telepathy, Telekinesis, Teleportation, and Prophecy. The list is endless. The investigations fascinating. The World’s Greatest Unsolved Mysteries invites the reader to accompany Lionel and Patricia Fanthorpe on their many intriguing investigations in Canada and worldwide and their years of research into the unexplained.

224 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1997

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About the author

Lionel Fanthorpe

178 books20 followers
Robert Lionel Fanthorpe cowrote with his wife Patricia Fanthorpe. Pseudonyms: Erle Barton, Lee Barton, Thornton Bell, Leo Brett, Bron Fane, R.L. Fanthorpe, R. Lionel Fanthorpe, L.P. Kenton, Victor La Salle, Robert Lionel, John E. Muller, Phil Nobel, Lionel Roberts, Deutero Spartacus, Neil Thanet, Trebor Thorpe, Pel Torro, Olaf Trent, Karl Zeigfreid

The Reverend Robert Lionel Fanthorpe is a priest and entertainer, and has at various times worked as a journalist, teacher, television presenter, author and lecturer.

Born in Dereham, Norfolk (UK), his parents were shopkeeper and teacher, Greta Christine, née Garbutt. In 1957 he married Patricia Alice Tooke, with whom he has two daughters (born 1964 and 1966). From 1958 to 1962 he was a teacher at Dereham Secondary Modern School, then from 1961 to 1963 he studied Education and Theology at Keswick College, Norwich, and was then again a teacher at Dereham until 1967, after which he served in the British Army and was a tutor at the Gamlingay Village College in Gamlingay, Cambridgeshire, and course leader with the Phoenix Timber Company in Rainham from 1969 to 1972 . From 1972 to 1979 he was Headmaster at Hellesdon High School in Norfolk. In 1974 he acquired a bachelor's degree at the Open University. The marriage currently live in Roath, Cardiff, South Wales.

In the early 1950s, Fanthorpe began writing short stories that appeared in various magazines published by John Spencer & Co., such as Futuristic Science Stories and Worlds of Fantasy. From 1954, Fanthorpe's novels appeared primarily in the Badger Books series of the same publisher. In the good decade between 1954 and 1967, Fanthorpe was astonishingly productive. Under various pseudonyms, some personal and some publisher pseudonyms such as Victor La Salle, John E. Muller and Karl Zeigfreid, Fanthorpe wrote much of the supernatural tales and science fiction published in the Badger Books, a total of well over 100 novels and countless short stories. At times a 45,000-word novel was published every 12 days at a flat rate of £22.50, with Fanthorpe dictating his lyrics on tape and then having friends and family transcribe them, after a quick proofreading of the text then going to the publishers. The production method caused frequent careless mistakes, inconsistencies and plot gaps, and the story often came to an abrupt end because he did not have an exact overview of the extent of the text produced while dictating it. Despite such shortcomings, it is conceded that his products often need not fear comparison with the works of other prolific writers. In particular, some stories from the series about Val Stearman, an adventurer in the style of Bulldog Drummond and the mysterious immortal La Noire are considered highlights of Fanthorpe's work. A contributing factor to the large number of pseudonyms used was that the Badger Books series often included so-called magazine volumes, i.e. collections of stories allegedly by different authors. In fact, the stories in such a volume came all or mostly from Fanthorpe under various pseudonyms.

From the early 1980s, together with his wife, he signed a series of non-fiction books on historical mysteries, for example on the legend of the Templars and on Rennes-le-Château, as well as on themes of anomalistics and cryptozoology. Adept at such subjects, he has appeared on television on a number of occasions, notably as presenter and writer on the British television series Fortean TV (1997) and Forbidden History (2013–2016).

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
295 reviews1 follower
November 9, 2012
This is a good book, some good mysteries. The writing could have been a little better - maybe they need a better editor? I would recommend this book.
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330 reviews23 followers
October 22, 2016
I will give it a 2 only because a few of the stories were new to me. Other than that, I didn't enjoy the stories included. A bit obscure.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews