The perfect travel companions.
HarperCollins
It’s the classiest way to part with $3.6 million.
You might know it better as the 19th-century earworm "Here Comes the Bride," aka one of the most popular wedding processional songs.
Moments in Time / Via momentsintime.com
Moments in Time, an online autograph and historical document dealer, acquired the manuscript by way of a wealthy collector who won it at auction roughly 35 years ago.
Gary Zimet, the company's owner, told BuzzFeed Life that so far, seven people have made offers, but they haven't offered the full asking price. The first person to do so will be the lucky owner.
Moments in Time / Via momentsintime.com
The song didn't really catch on until it was played as the processional at Victoria, Princess Royal's wedding to Prince Frederick William of Prussia in 1858.
Zimet told BuzzFeed Life that he's hoping that the buyer will be a "billionaire who wants ultimate wedding gift for his daughter."
Joseph M. Schenck Productions
Michael Derrick Hudson
The pseudonym Michael Derrick Hudson chose to pen his poems with belongs to a Fort Wayne woman he possibly crossed paths with in high school, according to the woman's sister.
Hudson shocked the poetry world last week when it was revealed that he was published under the name Yi-Fen Chou. Hudson said he used the pseudonym as a “strategy” to increase his chances of getting his poetry published.
Ellen Y. Chou confirmed with BuzzFeed News that the poet was using her sister's name without her consent, as first reported by The News Sentinel.
“I think what he did was highly fraudulent and unethical,” Ellen Y. Chou, Yi-Fen Chou’s sister, told the newspaper.
Chou told BuzzFeed News that Hudson and her sister both attended Wayne High School in Fort Wayne, Indiana, although Yi-Fen has no recollection of being in any classes with the poet.
"She simply asks Mr. Hudson to stop using her name immediately and permanently," Chou said, adding that her sister does not want to speak publicly as she does not want to "tarnish her professional reputation through any association with him."
Hudson’s poem “The Bees, the Flowers, Jesus, Ancient Tigers, Poseidon, Adam and Eve” was selected for The Best American Poetry 2015. In his bio for the anthology, Hudson said the poem was rejected 40 times when he first wrote it. When using the pseudonym, however, the poem was rejected just nine times before Prairie Schooner took it.
The anthology’s guest editor, Sherman Alexie, defended his decision to publish the poem, even after learning the true identity of Yi-Fen Chou.
“I’m a brown-skinned poet who gave a better chance to another supposed brown-skinned poet because of our brownness,” he said in a blog post, adding that nepotism is “as common as oxygen” in the poetry world.
Chou doubted Hudson’s assumption that being Asian would get him noticed.
“He seems to think we have it easy, but we don’t,” she told the New York Times. “We all worked very hard to achieve our own success. I’m just appalled by his actions.”
LINK: White Writer Makes “Best Poetry” — With An Asian Pen Name
LINK: “Best American Poetry” Guest Editor Sherman Alexie Apologizes For “Pseudonym Bullshit”
Don’t read these true-life ghost stories in the dark. You’ve been warned.
In this book, Roger Clarke explores many of the world's most famous hauntings, believers, and skeptics, including everything from Harry Houdini to ghost hunting technology to haunted WWI submarines. Clarke's comprehensive account of the modern history of ghosts is as informative as it is fascinating.
Amazon
In December 1975, the Lutz family moved into a doomed household — the place where just a year earlier, a man had murdered his entire family. The Lutzes lasted 28 days in the house before fleeing in terror. Anson's book relays the gripping true story of one of America's most infamous haunted houses.
Pocket Star
Mary Roach, now famous for her irreverent and smart explorations of human bodies and behavior, examines the afterlife (and the possible paranormal) with humor and hope. A satisfying read for skeptics and believers alike.
W. W. Norton & Company
Now a movie starring Eric Bana, this book is the strange and fascinating story of an NYPD vet who claims to have spent considerable time on the force assisting in cases of demonic possession (among other supernatural incidents).
St. Martin's Griffin
Ready for a challenge?
Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed
The puzzle that will tease your brain *and* allow you to be creative, Roundominoes is so pretty that you'll want to put it on display when you're not attempting one of the challenges.
Price: $44.95
Whether you root for the Starks, Lannisters, or Greyjoys, you'll enjoy this 4D version of Westeros that features three levels of puzzle for you to put together.
Price: $36.90
An addictive puzzler of a game you can play by yourself (how many pieces can you stack?) or in a group. Magnetic repulsion is cool.
Price: $29.99
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