user posted image rVirginia's ghosts just won't be laid to rest. Just when author L.B. Taylor Jr. is sure that he's written about every ghost in the commonwealth, another story lands on his desk.Taylor, a 72-year-old freelance writer, recently published the ninth volume in his "The Ghosts of Virginia" series, which includes a couple of local tales. Before he widened his focus to include the whole state, he had written several books about ghosts in specific localities, including one on Fredericksburg. All told, he's written 17 ghost books."I got started by accident," Taylor said in a telephone interview from his Williamsburg home.He'd been writing nonfiction books for Simon & Schuster, who asked him to do a story about haunted houses in the United States. During his research for the nationwide book, he found a lot of material on Virginia haunts. Taylor suggested a book on Virginia ghosts, particularly those in Williamsburg, but the publishers turned him down."They said regional books don't sell," Taylor said.He went ahead and wrote "The Ghosts of Williamsburg" anyway, publishing it himself. "It's now in its 22nd printing," he said.

A private company now runs year-round ghost tours of Williamsburg, based on Taylor's book. In Fredericksburg, tours based on his book often are scheduled around Halloween. There are even a few local ghost hunters who prowl the area with cameras, trying to document some of the phenomena mentioned in his Fredericksburg book."There's been a veritable explosion of interest in the paranormal in the last 15, 20 years," Taylor said.

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