Monday, March 4, 2013

The Unseen: Book Club discussion questions


Thanks so much for choosing The Unseen for your book club discussion!  Below you will find a set of discussion questions to get your meeting going, and some history behind the book.





One of my very great pleasures in book touring and book club appearances is that I get to hear other people’s real-life ghost stories and psychic experiences. I hope that your book group will be able to use the book as a jumping-off point to share your own stories (I find a little wine can be a great help getting those stories flowing! Chocolate also works...).

Here are some thoughts and questions to get the discussion going.







1. As I write about in The Unseen, parapsychologist Dr. J.B. Rhine’s wife and colleague, Dr. Louisa Rhine, conducted her own long-term study for the Rhine lab, in which she gathered thousands of accounts from all over the world of psychic occurrences and followed up with interviews, from which she isolated several extremely common recurring patterns of psychic experiences, such as:

+ Crisis apparitions: in which a loved one appears to another loved one at a moment of extreme trauma or death.


+ Precognitive dreams: dreaming a future event.

+ Visitations in dreams: a dead relative or significant other coming to a loved one in her or his sleep to impart some crucial bit of information.

+ Sympathetic pain: in which a loved one feels pain in a limb or elsewhere in the body when another loved one is injured in that place (often this is birth pains that a female relative will experience when a daughter or other female relative goes into labor).

Questions for the group: Have you or someone you know ever had a paranormal or psychic experience?  Did it fall into one of the above categories, or was it something else?


2. One of the themes of all of my books is that people are inexorably drawn to their greatest fear, and many of my books climax with the main character forced to confront his or her greatest nightmare in the flesh (or sometimes, spirit!).  Psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud called this tendency the “repetition compulsion.” He believed that all human beings are psychologically compelled to repeat early childhood traumas until we can finally transcend the situation.

In The Unseen, do you see Laurel being drawn to repeat past traumas?  Do you see yourself or people in your own life struggling with the “repetition compulsion”?


3. As an author, I often dream story ideas, so I try to write my dreams down every morning to make sure I remember them.  Many reported psychic experiences also occur during dreams.  (One example that fascinates me is that many people dream that they are ill,  and the exact specifics of their illnesses, long before any medical practitioner diagnoses the illness.)  The Torah says that “A dream uninterpreted is like a letter unopened.” 

Do you remember your dreams?  Have you ever dreamed something precognitively?


4. Do you believe in an afterlife?  Do you think ghosts are the real spirits of the departed, or do you think they’re psychological manifestations of our own desire to see a loved one again or learn something from them?  Or something else?

5.  There seems to someone in almost everyone’s family who is known to have “the sight” or “visions” or “dreams,” like Laurel’s grandmother and her Uncle Morgan.  

Is there someone in particular in your family who has that reputation? Is there a family ghost story that’s been passed down?

6.  I get many e mails from readers about the ending of The Unseen. Some people are disappointed that I don’t specifically explain what caused the haunting of the Folger house. Other people think the ambiguity of the ending, the convergence of many different forces and explanations, is the best part of the book.  

What did your group think about the ending?

I am available for Skype appearances and am also happy to answer questions from the group in the comments here on this page.

If you would like to read more about the real-life haunted mansion that inspired the book, here’s some history and photos:


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WHERE DO YOU GET YOUR IDEAS?

Pretty much the first question an author is ever asked about a book is: Where did you get the idea for the book?

Well, The Unseen is a book that has been percolating for a long, long, LONG time.

Since my childhood, really.



I’m sure a good number of you recognize these:

The Zener ESP cards.




I don’t know about you, but just the sight of those images gives me a thrill. Maybe I mean, chill… because it’s all about the unknown. Do we have that sixth sense, the freaking power of extra-sensory perception, or do we not?

Parapsychologist Dr. J.B. Rhine said we do. All of us. And in the late 1920’s, on through the 1960’s, he used the brand-new science of statistics to prove it, in controlled laboratory experiments that made him a household name.

I have no idea how I first came to hear about this, but then again, I grew up in California, specifically, Berkeley - and astrology and Tarot and meditation and anything groovy and psychic was just part of everyday life.

And it was very, very early that I first heard of Dr. Rhine and the ESP tests. In fact, my sister the artist made a set of her own Zener cards when we were in just fourth or fifth grade. I swear, it was in the air.

Here’s the principle: take a pack of twenty-five Zener cards, five sets of five simple symbols: a circle, a square, a cross, a star, and two wavy lines, like water. Two subjects sit on opposite sides of a black screen, unable to see each other, and one subject, the Sender, takes the pack of ESP cards and looks at each card, one at a time, while the Receiver sorts another set of cards into appropriate boxes, depending on what card s/he thinks the Sender is holding and communicating.

Pure chance is twenty percent, or five cards right out of a deck. Because if you have five cards, chance dictates that you would guess right 20 percent of the time.

So anyone who scores significantly more than 20 percent is demonstrating some ESP ability. (The Rhine lab generally used 5 sets of cards for each test run).

You can try it online at any number of places, including here.

And seriously, don’t we all – or haven’t we all at some point – think we have some of that? It’s kind of seductive, isn’t it?

Now, what Dr. Rhine was doing with these Zener cards was truly revolutionary. By the 1920’s the whole world, pretty much, was obsessed with the occult and spiritualism, especially the idea of life after death and the concept of being able to connect with dead loved ones on whatever plane they were now inhabiting.

There were many factors that contributed to this obsession, but two in particular:

1. Darwin’s publication of THE ORIGIN OF THE SPECIES, in 1859, which began a worldwide anxiety about whether there was any afterlife at all… and a fanatic desire to prove there was… especially among some scientists, interestingly enough.

And

2. The Great War, or as we know it now, WWI, in which so many people died so quickly that traumatized relatives were desperate to contact their lost – children, to be blunt - infants, as in “infantry,”underage cannon fodder – and have some hope that they were not lost for eternity.

The Great War really kicked spiritualism into high gear.

This was the age of “mediums”, most of whom were total frauds, con artists who used parlor magician tricks to dupe grieving relatives into believing their lost loved ones were coming back to give them messages – for a hefty price.

Well, (after a brief stint in botany and an abrupt switch to psychology) Dr. J.B. Rhine began his career debunking fraudulent mediums. His commitment to the truth won him a reputation for scientific integrity and a position at the newly established parapsychology lab at Duke University in North Carolina, the first ever in the U.S., where Rhine and his mentor, William McDougall, embarked on a decades-long quest to use the brand-new science of statistics and probability to test the occurrence of psychic phenomena such as ESP and psychokinesis (the movement of objects with the mind).

Using Zener cards and automated dice-throwing machines, Rhine tested thousands of students under laboratory conditions, and by applying the science of statistics to the results, came to believe that ESP actually does occur.

Rhine’s wife and colleague, Dr. Louisa Rhine, conducted her own parallel study, in which she gathered thousands of accounts from all over the world of psychic occurrences and followed up with interviews, from which she isolated several extremely common recurring patterns of psychic experiences, such as:

Crisis apparitions: in which a loved one appears to another loved one at a moment of extreme trauma or death.

Precognitive dreams
: dreaming a future event.

Visitations in dreams: a dead loved one coming to a loved one in her or his sleep to impart some crucial bit of information.

Sympathetic pain: in which a loved one feels pain in a limb or elsewhere in the body when another loved one is injured in that place (often this is birth pains that a female relative will experience when a daughter or other female relative goes into labor).

The Rhines’ daughter, psychologist Sally Rhine Feather, has written a fascinating book on the above called THE GIFT, which was extremely helpful in my research for The Unseen.

Now, most people who read about the paranormal and parapsychology, even casually, are aware of Dr. Rhine and his ESP research. But most people are not as aware that researchers in the Duke lab also did field investigations of poltergeists, starting in the late 50’s and early sixties.

Poltergeists!

I don’t know about you, but that just rocks my world. What ARE they? Are they the projected repressed sex energy of frustrated adolescents? Are they ghosts? Are they some other kind of extra-dimensional entity? Is it all just a fraud, a fad, perpetrated by people who wanted media attention before the advent of reality TV?

So I’ve always wanted to so something, sometime, about the whole Rhine/Duke/ESP/poltergeist thing.

And then a few years ago my significant other handed me a column torn out of the newspaper about a lecture on the Duke campus called: “Secrets of the Rhine Parapsychology Lab” and said, “You should go to that.” Because he knew I liked that kind of thing, but he had no idea that I’ve been obsessed with Rhine since I was – seven, eight, whatever.

And I did go to the lecture, and I was stupefied to learn that after the parapsychology lab officially closed in 1965, when Dr. Rhine reached the mandatory age of retirement, seven hundred boxes of original research files were sealed and shut up in the basement of the graduate library, and had only just been opened to the public again.

Is that a story or what?

All those questions that instantly spring to mind. Why did the lab close, really? (Well, in truth, Dr. Rhine retired. But what if…) Why were the files sealed? Was someone trying to hide something? And most importantly - What the HELL is in those boxes? SEVEN HUNDRED boxes?

So you know that question authors love: Where do you get your ideas?

That’s where I got my idea for The Unseen

But it all started with a childhood obsession and years of random research on the subject that suddenly caught fire with some specific field research and one choice factoid.

And now it’s your turn to tell me!   Have you ever experienced a crisis apparition, a precognitive dream or visitation, or sympathetic pains? Or do you know anyone who has? Do you believe these things happen?  Or do you have an alternate, rational explanation?

- Alex


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