The Haunted House Diaries: The True Story of a Quiet Connecticut Town in the Center of a Paranormal Mystery. William J. Hall, 2015.
The first 173 pages of this book are absolutely riveting. We are treated to perhaps the most well-documented, pervasive haunting across time of a 1793 New England home: The Fillie home in Litchfield, CT.
Starting in 1966 when she was sixteen years old, Donna Fillie recorded her observations of strange and paranormal events in her home on any scrap of paper she could find: from the backs of envelopes, to her kids’ school papers. She continued her documentation all the way through the winter of 2015.
Fillie’s verbatim notes are straightforward, honest and intelligent. She and her family take experiences in stride that would send others scrambling for a new home.
For instance, the Fillies have witnessed strange, elongated figures; jewelry gone missing and returned in different places; orbs; toys moving on their own; clocks that shouldn’t work ticking away; weirdly shaped creatures; voices laughing, groaning, and even talking; footsteps following family members throughout the house; even UFOs. Fillie emphasizes that the family is not afraid, but desperately looking for answers.
Fillie’s integrity shines through her writing, as does her frustration with all the bizarre events taking place around her family. She simply wants to know. What does it all mean? If spirits or entities can do all these things – from levitating glassware to raining money – why can’t they communicate more clearly?
It is the latter part of the book that is a letdown. It struggles with organization and almost undermines Fillie’s heartfelt and carefully documented account.
Author William J. Hall, a performing magician and paranormal investigator, begins by cautioning us to be aware of our preconceived beliefs regarding paranormal. How we interpret things is dependent on our life context and our own belief systems. Yet Hall himself offers some potentially controversial beliefs from his own perspective as givens for us. The existence of a multiverse. Possessions, and extending that, evil, are in the eye of the human-centered beholder and “can always dispelled without the use of any religion.”
We are then offered opinions on select elements of the hauntings in Fillie’s diary by two experts in the field, Paul Eno and Shane Sirios. If you have not heard of them before reading this book, you are not given much of a background introduction to their work here. Eno is known for his radio show, Behind the Paranormal, and Sirois is the founder of trueghost.com. According to Hall, Sirios’ near-death experience has made him sensitive to otherworldly things and he has a 100% success rate “resolving” paranormal problems and parasites for people without using religion.
The investigation section covers a scant sixteen pages and is mostly impressions of things that Sirios senses in and around the home, such as someone running outside, a sensation of non-human entities, the perception of a protecting entity Native American spirit in backyard, and the feeling that the land is a portal to the multiverse.
It seems this investigation has taken place across multiple visits to the home, but the reader doesn’t get a good sense of its chronology or how it took place. What methods were followed, what experiments were tried, what evidence was accumulated? There are a few photographs, and references to EVP recording data that seems to validate the presence of a “Harry” who might have originally helped build the house. But after reading Fillie’s methodical documentation, the investigation and analysis part of the book seems like a hodgepodge.
What begins as a fascinating account of one family’s dissolves into a mixed bag of opinions and snippets of investigation. The Haunted House Diaries is definitely worth reading for the first half, and is frustratingly interesting for the second.
September 15, 2019 at 8:27 pm
Thank you for appreciating the accounting of my diary. It’s appreciated. I am currently continuing to record experiences in our home and now have been conducting environmentally controlled EVP recordings many of which do not need headphones to hear. At this point in time I have well over 500 sound bites that have proven to me what no living person can.
LikeLike