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Classic Ghost Stories

Episode 48: The Dining Room Ghost by Megan Taylor

Classic Ghost Stories

Tony Walker

Fiction, Drama, Science Fiction

4.9686 Ratings

🗓️ 9 May 2020

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Megan TaylorMegan is a British author, who has four novels, the latest being https://amzn.to/2z94akj (We Wait) UK link and https://amzn.to/2XQOFI1 (We Wait) USA LinkMegan lives in Nottingham, England. She teaches Creative Writing workshops has published four novels: We Wait (the latest, which is a haunted house story), The Woman Under the Ground which is a collection of short stories, The Lives of Ghosts and **The Dawning. They are all very well reviewed and there is great praise for the writing.In the interview we talked about a love for the short story form and for ghost stories in general, though not all of Megan's work is in the ghost/horror genre.The Dining Room GhostIt was good being able to talk to the author about what she intended in the story rather than me guessing what long dead writers meant in theirs. The Dining Room Ghost was partly inspired by Megan half-seeing something when overtired coming down the stairs with her young baby. We talked about the silent woman ghosts, often with long hair, sometimes drowned that keep cropping up in horror but she said she wanted the ghost to be the silence and quiet in a house of screaming babies and the busy head of the young mother. The mother seems to want silence and peace above all, and there is just one way to get it!There is ambiguity about the ghost: is it a ghost or is it a post natal psychosis? In that there is a strong pedigree of ghost stories with unreliable narrators; The Yellow Wallpaper being one and The Horlaanother among the stories we have read out. This is a theme in our culture as a whole -- are people who see ghosts simply mad, or do they reveal a whole other realm by their seeing what the rest of us cannot?We talked about a Freudian interpretation where the ghost is a dissociated part of the narrator -- her Shadow if you like (though that is a Jungian term that Freud would not have liked!). The emotions embodied in the ghost, murderous waiting amongst them, belong properly to the narrator, but she cannot tolerate them so she splits this desire to destroy the baby (and thus have quiet) off from herself and creates this spirit.It occurred to me that her standing by the patiently ticking clock introduced a kind of inevitability to the ending which we did not at first suspect, but given the clock was there all along as a kind of hint, perhaps we should have known that the time of silence would finally come.Quite a disturbing story then. Authors!Writers of ghost stories, weird tales, folk horror and other sorts of unnerving fiction, feel free to contact me through the Classic Ghost Stories Podcast Facebook page/direct message if you would like your story read out and to be interviewed on a future episode of the podcast.Support Us!Ways to support Tony to keep doing the show:https://www.podchaser.com/podcasts/classic-ghost-stories-923395 (Share and rate it!)http://bit.ly/2QKgHkY (Buy Tony a coffee) to help with the long nights editing!Become a  http://bit.ly/barcudpatreon (Patreon) to get additional stuff and allow the show to go on in the long term. Facebook GroupWhy not join Classic Ghost Stories Podcast on https://www.facebook.com/classicghoststories/ (Facebook) for the lastest news?MusicBeginning music ‘Some Come Back’ is by the marvellous  https://theheartwoodinstitute.bandcamp.com/album/witch-phase-four (Heartwood Institute) . The end music is by MYUU Bad EncounterSupport the showVisit us here: www.ghostpod.orgBuy me a coffee if you're glad I do this: https://ko-fi.com/tonywalkerIf you really want to help me, become a Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/barcudMusic by The Heartwood Institute: https://bit.ly/somecomeback Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

The Dying Everybody dies, don't they?

0:10.5

Everybody come back.

0:12.6

Isn't that so?

0:14.4

You tried to get into the locked drawer today, didn't you?

0:17.1

How do the dead come back, mother?

0:20.1

What's the secret?

0:23.8

The dining room ghost by Megan Taylor.

0:27.0

Every night the woman is there.

0:32.8

Every single night as you follow the crooked Victorian steps that wind down from the nursery with the baby hot and heavy on your shoulder.

0:35.9

You know that she will be there, waiting.

0:39.8

She's always in the same place, in the dining room. She keeps to her own particular corner,

0:45.0

hovering with the shadows beside the ticking grandmother clock that came with the bricks and

0:49.2

mortar. Another period feature you tell your husband when he phones. Always she in that same grey spot with her head bowed and her shoulders hunched her hands knotted at her thighs

1:02.1

beneath her long dress her feet are bare and stained between the dirt that strings up from her soles seaweed, her ankle bones shine.

1:11.6

They're so pale as to be almost blue.

1:14.6

Her toenails glint like broken glass.

1:18.6

Her feet are her most distinctive feature.

1:22.6

The patches through the grime are the only sections of her skin that you can see clearly.

1:33.0

Her angled hands are sketchy, roped against a cloud-like dress, and because of the way which her head droops, you have never once yet seen her face. For many nights, you have dreaded that.

1:40.7

That moment, when her head will rise, when finally you'll feel her gaze on yours, you have dreaded it so sharply, so repeatedly, that at times the fear has twisted as a blade might.

1:53.0

And get over it, you think then. Just get it done.

1:58.0

Although perhaps it's simply because her hair is so unnerving, while she holds the rest of

...

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