ASMR: Atlas of Monsters & Ghosts (a spooky read)



Roll up, settle down, and let’s explore folktales from around the world.
By Federica Magrin with illustrations by Laura Brenella

Amazon affiliate link: https://amzn.to/4bEKUbU

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24 thoughts on “ASMR: Atlas of Monsters & Ghosts (a spooky read)”

  1. I’ve been to Scylla! It is now called Scilla, a small town that takes its name from the mythical monster encountered by Odysseus. My family is from this area. Great video as always!

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  2. What a cute book. As a child, I loved ghost stories and books about the paranormal, and my children loved them too. Thank you for the introduction to this literature through a fantastic ASMR video!

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  3. Very well done! Book reading is always a great interest of mine, especially those with story telling. Could one be done that focuses on vampires? Thank you!

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  4. I'm not too far from pendle hill and we traced our ancestry back to the 1300s around pendle hill. We have walked up pendle hill so many times throughout my lifetime and I always felt so at home in pendle and the surrounding areas. This was before we had found the ancestry link. My partner always says it explains alot about me πŸ˜‚πŸ§™

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  5. We have this book!! My son adores the spooky and weird. It is slightly annoyingly too large for any of our bookshelves though, other than that I would highly recommend it.

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  6. I saw that Most Haunted episode when they went up Pendle Hill in around 2004. It was very eventful and spooky. Me and a mate went up Pendle Hill in 2010. Bizarrely, there was a Mexican restaurant on the hill. I don't know if it's still a Mexican restaurant. It was so out of place being on the hill. We went in for a few pints and there were pictures on the walls to do with Mexico, like pictures of bullfighting. It was hard to believe we were on Pendle Hill. Although when we looked out the windows we could see sheep outside grazing on the grass.

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