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Reading, Wellington, and whatever else – teenblog@wcl.govt.nz

Tag: paranormal

Most Haunted Places in Wellington

Black and white photograph, lines of tables and bookcases lining the walls. Someone at a table is lit up by light coming through a window, behind them are two blurry figures

Do you believe in ghosts? The paranormal? A place being haunted? Don’t answer – I can’t hear you and it doesn’t really matter. Everyone will agree that some places just have a haunted vibe, and that’s what counts.  Wellington has a lot of history, and a turbulent past brings with it a lot of ghosts, figurative or otherwise.

So here are the top 5 haunted (with vibes) locations in Wellington (that you can go to):

  1. Ewart Hospital Nurses’ Home (Former) – you will note the ‘former’ in brackets, as it’s no longer home to anything but decay. The haunted vibe here is extreme – James Gilberd, from the Strange Occurrences Society, says it has the most haunted feel of any place they’ve investigate.
  2. Truby King Park – Sir Truby and Lady King built their home here in the 1920s and now it is a public park. Not many gardens come with a mausoleum, and the plants from a century ago are still flowering. Time marches on, but not for the Truby Kings, who rest there still.
  3. Bolton Street Cemetery ki Paekākā & Karori Cemetery – well, obviously
  4. Click on this link to a photo on Wellington RECOLLECT – What if someone sent you a link to a creepy picture on a website and you had to share it within a week or else misfortune will strike? How about that?
  5. Te Awe Library on Brandon Street – on one hand, Te Awe Library doesn’t feel haunted. BUT trust me, it is, and there is going to be an official ghost investigation as part of this years’ Lōemis to find out!

There you go. If any of these grabbed your fancy you may be interested in Wellington City Library’s next addition to the collection; Ghost Investigation Kits. (Readers of this blog are the first to know!)
Black and white photograph of a weatherboard house. A burred shape appears in the lower left hand side.

Love and Paranormal Entities: New Teen Books in the Collection

We’ve got lots of fresh, new stories amongst our new books in the collection this month.  From ghost stories and social media, to rebound relationships and dealing with racism, there are a lot of new themes to explore.  Take a look at this selection from our new books below…

Comics

Ghost roast / Gibbs, Shawnelle
“Fifteen-year-old Chelsea, daughter of a paranormal specialist, risks her hard-won popularity and more when she is drawn into a paranormal romance after discovering her own ability to communicate with ghosts.” (Catalogue)

In utero / Gooch, Chris
“Twelve years after a disastrous explosion, young Hailey is dropped off by her mum at a holiday camp in a dilapidated shopping mall. Alienated from the other kids, she connects with an eerie older teen named Jen… but soon dark horrors awaken, and the two new friends are caught up in a cataclysmic battle between two terrifying creatures who have been lying dormant all this time.” (Catalogue)

Voyage de gourmet / Tobin, Paul
“Layne Green is a social media sensation of a cook. He’s selected to compete on a reality TV show called Voyage de Gourmet – a globe-trotting foodie adventure. However, his partner is his former best friend, Jiang-Mi Pipper, someone that he really wronged with some of his posts. Can the two find forgiveness, flavor, and themselves on this journey?” (Catalogue)

A condition called love. 1 / Morino, Megumi
“Hotaru is a 16-year-old high school first year who has always been ambivalent about love, preferring instead to have a lively life with her family and friends. So when she sees her schoolmate, Hananoi-kun, sitting in the snow after a messy, public breakup, she thinks nothing of offering to share her umbrella. But when he asks her out in the middle of her classroom the next day, she can’t help but feel that her life is about to change in a big way…” (Adapted from Catalogue)

Fiction

Artifacts of an ex / Chen, Jennifer
“When Chloe Chang gets dumped via USPS after moving across the county from NYC to LA, she doesn’t throw her box of memories in the garbage. Instead, she starts buying other teenagers’ break-up boxes to create an art exhibit, Heartifacts. On opening night she spots Daniel Kwak illicitly filming his best friend’s reaction to his ex’s box. They spark, but Daniel is dead set on not being another rebound. Five times he’s been the guy who makes the girls he’s dating realize they want to get back with their ex, and he believes Chloe isn’t ready for a new relationship.” (Catalogue)

Twelve bones / Talbot, Rosie
“The thing about death is … it sneaks up on you. Seventeen-year-old seer Charlie and his new boyfriend, Sam, know that the dead can’t hurt the living. It’s ghosts who need protection from dangerous soul catchers – and the boys have promised to keep them safe. But when a powerful force interferes with their defences, and a brutal attack leaves them questioning everything they know, the boys realize there is more at stake than they ever imagined.” (Adapted from Catalogue)

Shut up, this is serious / Ixta, Carolina
“Belen Dolores Itzel del Toro wants the normal stuff: to experience love or maybe have a boyfriend or at least just lose her virginity. But nothing is normal in East Oakland. Her father left her family. She’s at risk of not graduating. And Leti, her super-Catholic, nerdy-ass best friend, is pregnant–by the boyfriend she hasn’t told her parents about because he’s Black and her parents are racist.” (Catalogue)

Caught in a bad fauxmance / Rose, Elle Gonzalez
“From debut author Elle Gonzalez Rose comes a fresh, fun contemporary rom-com about an aspiring artist who agrees to fake date one of his family’s longtime enemies, in the hopes of gathering intel strong enough to take down their rivals and keep the family cabin they gambled in a risky bet.” (Adapted from Catalogue)

Non-Fiction

The art of being a brilliant teenager / Cope, Andrew
The Art of Being A Brilliant Teenager teaches you how to become your very best self–and how to figure out who that is, exactly. Stay cool under all the pressures you’re facing, and plot a map for the future that takes you wherever it is you want to go. Become proactive, determined, successful and most importantly: happy! The bottom line is this: it’s easy to be the average version of yourself, but is that really all you want?” (Adapted from Catalogue)

For more new items in the collection, go to: What’s new / March 2024 (wcl.govt.nz)