Haunted Dixie: Great Ghost Stories from the American South
Frank D. McSherry, Jr. & Charles G. Waugh & Martin H. Greenberg
| First published | 2008 |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Fall River Press |
| Format | Hardcover |
| Type | Anthology |
| Cover art | Charles Maraia & Angelo Gilardelli |
| Pages | viii+211+[2] |
| Price | $7.98 |
| ISBN | 9781435104570 |
- No Canadian price.
- Price from UPC code on back of book.
- Published for Barnes & Noble by Fall River Press ("Instant Remainder").
- Previously published as More Dixie Ghosts: More Haunting, Spine-chilling Stories from the American South.
- Cover art credited on back flap of dustjacket.
- Page [213] lists the first appearance of each story. It is numbered in the table of contents but not on the page itself.
- The table of contents lists the state in which each story takes place but this is not reflected in the body of the book so is not listed here.
- "1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2" on copyright page.
- Goodreads puts the publication date at 2008-03-27.
| Page | Title | Author(s) | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lost Boys | Orson Scott Card | Short Story |
| 18 | What Say the Frogs Now, Jenny? | Hugh B. Cave | Short Story |
| 27 | First Dark | Elizabeth Spencer | Short Story |
| 45 | The Tree's Wife | Mary Elizabeth Counselman | Short Story |
| 56 | The Chrome Comanche | Alan Dean Foster | Short Story |
| 70 | Toad's Foot | Manly Wade Wellman | Short Story |
| 86 | The Ghost Whistle | Eugene K. Jones | Short Story |
| 103 | The Crocodile | Gouverneur Morris | Short Story |
| 121 | The Jabberwock Valentine | Talmage Powell | Novelette |
| 150 | Through the Ivory Gate | Mary Raymond Shipman Andrews | Novelette |
| 170 | A Tragedy of South Carolina | Sarah Morgan Dawson | Short Story |
| 185 | Sleeping Beauty | Robert Bloch | Short Story |
| 197 | The Burlap Bag | Davis Grubb | Short Story |
| 209 | Two Military Executions | Ambrose Bierce | Short Story |
| 213 | Acknowledgments (Haunted Dixie: Great Ghost Stories from the American South) | uncredited | Essay |
| vii | Into the Shadowy South | Frank D. McSherry, Jr. | Essay |