Creepy Crawly Provincetown: A Grave Distractions Walking Tour

· Grave Distractions Pub.
Ebook
78
Pages

About this ebook

Are you planning a trip to Provincetown, Massachusetts any time soon and looking to do an extraordinary way to remember your vacation? We’ve got you covered. Creepy Crawly Provincetown: A Grave Distractions Walking Tour is a hauntingly delightful guidebook to 22 different sites in and around Provincetown that have long been known by locals as being visited by ghosts and other supernatural apparitions. The guidebook is perfect for individuals, groups, or families wishing to add a unique dimension to their Provincetown vacation experience. Each entry contains a short history of each site, photographs, Google Maps links and GPS coordinates to assist you on your Provincetown ghost tour. Also included with each paranormal site entry are social media and popular review website listings making it easy to share your experiences with your friends and family. Also included in this text is a beginner’s guide to ghost hunting and safety precautions to take while visiting Provincetown’s repository of haints and haunts. Finally, we’ve included a listing of local not so supernatural events if you’re looking to pass your day in Provincetown taking part of neighborhood festivities.

Creepy Crawly Provincetown: A Grave Distractions Walking Tour was written by esotericist, contributor to Atlantis Rising magazine, and frequent vacationer to Provincetown, Jeff Nisbet. The author would like to remind anyone taking this walking tour to stay safe, respect private property, and be of a stout heart. Because you never know what tales you’ll be able to tell when you uncover the spectral underbelly of Provincetown, Massachusetts. 


About the author

Jeff Nisbet was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, and lived there until he was 11 years old, when he emigrated to the United States. Having been happily married to his best friend for 45 years, Jeff has two fine adult children and two granddaughters—the apples of their grandfather’s eye. Nearly 20 years ago, while researching his family’s Scottish roots, Jeff discovered that one of the historical luminaries of the Nisbet clan had been the 11th Grand Master of Scottish Freemasonry. In the years since, Jeff has researched numerous sources about Scottish history, the part the Freemasons played in it, and, by a much-disputed association, the mysterious medieval order of warrior monks known as the Knights Templar. Jeff is presently writing a book about Rosslyn Chapel, the tiny Scottish church made much of in Dan Brown's blockbuster novel, The Da Vinci Code, and the occult symbolism to be found in its architectural fabric. In articles Jeff has written over the years one common thread as emerged– that many of the ancient tales we now call myths are rooted in fact, and that much of the history we learn in school is an embroidery of half truths meant to conceal, among other things, the subtexts that the myths were created to eventually reveal. Jeff’s articles have been published in Atlantis Rising, Duat, the Journal of the Rennes Alchemist, and the Temple Booklet. Also Jeff’s work has been translated for Italy’s Hera, Graal, and Fenix magazines, and Holland’s Frontier magazine. Fourteen of Jeff’s early articles can be read at www.mythomorph.com, and he can be contacted via that site’s “About the Author” page.



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