Spirited Investigations: The Stories of the Occult Detectives

Remember “Ghostbusters”? The 1984 film about three parapsychologists taking on supernatural phenomenon in New York sparked off a whole universe of spin-offs across various media – a reboot version comes out in July with women replacing the original male cast. But the occult detective fiction genre has always been popular and enduring too, having been […]

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Remember "Ghostbusters"? The 1984 film about three parapsychologists taking on supernatural phenomenon in New York sparked off a whole universe of spin-offs across various media - a reboot version comes out in July with women replacing the original male cast. But the occult detective fiction genre has always been popular and enduring too, having been around for over a century and half now, and some of its earliest heroes still active - even in our technological age.

The genre has always had loyal readers bringing together as it does, two uniquely human obsessions - mysteries and the supernatural, though by defying rules set by renowned detective fiction writers in the early 20th century - like "All supernatural or preternatural agencies are ruled out as a matter of course" (Second of Ronald Knox's 10 Commandment of Detective Fiction) and that "It must be realistic in character, setting and atmosphere. It must be about real people in a real world" (Third of Raymond Chandler's Ten Commandments).