
Jap Herron: A Novel Written from the Ouija Board
by Unknown
"J Herron: A Novel Written from the Ouija Board by Twain and Hutchings" is a novel published in 1917 that medium Emily Grant Hutchings claimed was dictated by Mark Twain's spirit through a Ouija board. The story follows Jasper "Jap" Herron, a Missouri boy who rises from poverty to help regenerate his town with guidance from noble mentors. The novel sparked controversy and legal action from Twain's daughter, who sought to stop Hutchings from profiting from the famous author's name, ultimately forcing the book's withdrawal from publication.
Related Subjects
Bookshelves
Related books
Sally of Missouri
Rose E. (Rose Emmet) Young
Light from the spirit world The pilgrimage of Thomas Paine and others to the seventh circle in the spirit world
C. (Charles) Hammond
The Seven Purposes: An Experience in Psychic Phenomena
Margaret Cameron
Life and labor in the spirit world Being a description of localities, employments, surroundings, and conditions in the spheres.
Mary T. (Mary Theresa) Longley
Journeys to the Planet Mars; or, Our Mission to Ento
Sara Weiss
Strange Visitors A series of original papers, embracing philosophy, science, government, religion, poetry, art, fiction, satire, humor, narrative, and prophecy, by the spirits of Irving, Willis, Thackeray, Brontë, Richter, Byron, Humboldt, Hawthorne, Wesley, Browning, and others now dwelling in the spirit world; dictated through a clairvoyant, while in an abnormal or trance state
Henry J. Horn
Dangerous Quarry
Jim Harmon
Last letters from the living dead man
David Patterson (Spirit) Hatch