'A fascinating testimony to our nervous hunger to map the hazy haunted territory at the edges
of the rational... engrossing entertaining and distinctly unsettling' Sarah Waters
'Shiversomely eerie... so impressive in its research and remarkable in all it uncovers' Tom
Holland Late one evening the telephone rings and on the line is a stranger. They tell you
that your nine-year-old son gave them your number. Your heart stops. You tell them that your
son has been dead for almost 20 years. They know this they say. He wants you to come and see
him. What do you do when reality begins to fray around you? Where do you go when science
cannot explain your experiences? The Society for Psychical Research was founded in 1882 to
tackle these very questions and to shine light on the shadowy world of the supernatural.
Distinguished members have included prime ministers and Nobel Prize-winning scientists. But
the most prolific of all the SPR's paranormal investigators was a young British naval officer
named Tony Cornell. A rationalist and a sceptic he became haunted by a wartime encounter in
India that changed everything . Between 1950 and 2010 he became perhaps the world's most
prolific investigator of psychic phenomena and paranormal events. Alongside his colleague the
psychologist Alan Gauld they combined the roles of detectives exorcists and psychiatrists
returning time and again to the unsettling spaces that exist on the very periphery of our tidy
rational lives: Ghosts. Poltergeists. Psychic powers. Drawing on a previously untapped archive
of Cornell's case files which survive as a unique repository of encounters reported by
ordinary people Chasing the Dark is the compelling story of our relationship with the
supernatural. What do these atmospheric and often chilling cases teach us about who we are and
the anxieties that consume us? And why do the dead still find ways to make themselves known?