
Pleasing Terrors
Storytelling Podcasts
Join acclaimed ghost storyteller Mike Brown for a bi-weekly tour through the shadows of history. The Pleasing Terrors Podcast features stories about haunted places, creepy history, and forgotten folklore.
Location:
United States
Description:
Join acclaimed ghost storyteller Mike Brown for a bi-weekly tour through the shadows of history. The Pleasing Terrors Podcast features stories about haunted places, creepy history, and forgotten folklore.
Language:
English
Episodes
Charleston Gothic: Part 6- Ghostly Alchemy
2/22/2026
A wax figurine forgotten in museum storage. A book of poems that prophesied a ghost. A woman on a beach who found something she wasn't looking for. In the final episode of the Charleston Gothic series, the investigation returns to where it began — the Dock Street Theatre — and follows the last of three trails through Charleston's tangled relationship with Edgar Allan Poe. Along the way, a century-old literary vision resurfaces, a forgotten poet speaks truths the city wasn't ready to hear, and the question that launched the series finally gets its answer.
Sources referenced in the episode:
Books
Israfel: The Life and Times of Edgar Allan Poe by Hervey Allen (1926)
Carolina Chansons: Legends of the Low Country by DuBose Heyward and Hervey Allen (1922)
The Arrow of Lightning by Beatrice Witte Ravenel (1926)
The Dreamer: A Romantic Rendering of the Life-Story of Edgar Allan Poe by Mary Newton Stanard
Edgar Allan Poe's Charleston by Christopher Byrd Downey
Poe's Brother: The Poems of William Henry Leonard Poe by Hervey Allen and Thomas Ollive Mabbott
Ghosts and Legends of Charleston by Denise Rolfe (2010)
Poe-Land by J.W. Ocker
Sheppard Lee, Written By Himself by Robert Montgomery Bird (1836)
Poems
"Edgar Allan Poe" by DuBose Heyward (from Carolina Chansons)
"Alchemy" by Hervey Allen (from Carolina Chansons)
"Poe's Mother" by Beatrice Witte Ravenel (from The Arrow of Lightning)
Articles
"A Source for 'Annabel Lee'" by Robert Adger Law (1922)
Plays
Nevermore by Julian Wiles (1994)
Scholarly Work
Thomas Ollive Mabbott's annotated edition of Poe's works (notes on "Annabel Lee")
Louis Rubin's new edition of Beatrice Witte Ravenel's poems (1969)
Historical Sources
Charleston Evening Post coverage of the 1923 Charleston Museum diorama unveiling
"The Mourner" an anonymous poem, Charleston Courier (1807)
People Referenced as Sources/Informants
Eric Lavender, Charleston tour guide
Christopher Byrd Downey, author and historian
Scott Peeples, Poe scholar (quoted via Ocker's Poe-Land)
Duration:00:46:48
Charleston Gothic: Part 5- The Unfortunate Pirate
1/24/2026
Episode 51: The Unfortunate Pirate
For over a century, "Annabel Lee" has been read as Edgar Allan Poe's final love poem—a haunting elegy to his child bride Virginia, written months before his death. But what if we've been wrong about the poem's true subject all along?
In this episode, Mike follows a trail of evidence from a forgotten 1827 tale about a murderous pirate to the windswept shores of Sullivan's Island, where Poe was stationed as a young soldier. Along the way, he uncovers a family accusation that pursued Poe his entire life, a poem he was forced to burn, and the testimony of a woman who nursed him through his darkest hours.
What emerges is a radical reinterpretation of America's most famous poem of loss—and a story about what it means to defend someone you love when the whole world has turned against them.
The grave of Annabel Lee has finally been found. It was never where anyone thought to look.
Sources Referenced in Episode 51: The Unfortunate Pirate
Primary Sources & Archival Materials
Ellis & Allan Papers, Library of Congress (John Allan's 1824 letter to William Henry Leonard Poe)
Charleston Courier, December 4, 1807 ("The Mourner" by D.M.C.; theatrical advertisements for Placide's company)
Charleston News and Courier, September 15, 1912 (account of the Pirate's House legend)
The North American (Baltimore periodical containing "The Pirate" by W.H.P., published November 27, 1827)
Flag of Our Union (Boston, 1849 — publication of "To My Mother")
New York Tribune (publication of "Annabel Lee," October 1849)
Broadway Journal, 1845 (Poe's defense of his mother's profession)
John Henry Ingram correspondence with Marie Louise Shew (1875–1877)
Works by Edgar Allan Poe
"Annabel Lee" (1849)
"To My Mother" (1849)
"Song" (from Tamerlane and Other Poems, 1827)
"To M. L. S." (1847)
"To Marie Louise" (1848)
The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket
Secondary Sources & Biographies
Hervey Allen — Poe biographer (collaborated with Thomas Ollive Mabbott)
Thomas Ollive Mabbott — Poe scholar (1927 discovery of W.H.P. works in The North American)
Robert Adger Law, "A Source for 'Annabel Lee'" (April 1922) — article tracing the poem to the Charleston Courier
John Henry Ingram — early Poe biographer
J.W. Ocker, Poe-Land: The Hallowed Haunts of Edgar Allan Poe
Scott Peeples — Poe scholar (quoted in Poe-Land)
Contemporary Accounts & Memoirs
John Sartain — account of Poe's 1849 Philadelphia breakdown
N.P. Willis — description of Maria Clemm as "Edgar's sole ministering angel"
Marie Louise Shew — correspondence and forty pages of notes from Fordham
Mary Starr — recollections of the Poe household in Baltimore
Samuel Mordecai — letter describing fashionable visitors to Elizabeth Poe's deathbed
Colonel James House — March 30, 1829 letter requesting Poe's discharge
Historical & Architectural References
Robert Mills — architect of the Fireproof Building (Charleston, 1827) and Monumental Church (Richmond, 1814)
Richmond Theatre Fire accounts (December 26, 1811)
Previous Episodes Referenced
"Night Sea Voyage" (Dock Street Theatre, Julian Wiles's Nevermore!)
"Buried Treasures" (Charleston's Gold-Bug mythology, Alexander Lenard)
"Juliet's Tomb" (Alexander Lenard's biography, the A.L.R. tombstone)
"Tekeli" (Robert Adger Law's discovery, Eliza Poe's Charleston performances, Tekeli connection)
Duration:01:22:05
Charleston Gothic: Part 4- Tekeli
1/11/2026
CHARLESTON GOTHIC Episode 4: Tekeli
The Charleston Library Society has survived fires, hurricanes, earthquakes, and war—emerging each time with its treasures intact. Among those treasures: the world's most complete archive of Charleston newspapers from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
In this episode, we enter the stacks where a ghost named Hinson is said to wander, where Henry Timrod's blood-stained manuscript bears witness to a poet's final days, and where a century-old scholarly article waited decades for someone to understand what it revealed.
What was Edgar Allan Poe really searching for when he visited Charleston's archives during his time at Fort Moultrie? For over a hundred years, the legend said he came looking for pirate treasure—the buried gold that would inspire "The Gold-Bug." But a 1922 discovery by a Texas scholar suggested something far more personal.
Following threads that connect the Poetry Society of South Carolina, a Harvard-trained philologist, and the vanished stage of the Charleston Theatre, we trace Poe's footsteps to a secret hidden in plain sight—one that may unlock the strangest passage he ever wrote.
The answer lies where it has always been: in the newspapers, in the archives, in the advertisements for a play called Tekeli.
Sources:
Books
- Allen, Hervey. Israfel: The Life and Times of Edgar Allan Poe (1926)
- Allen, Hervey and DuBose Heyward. Carolina Chansons (1922)
- Allen, Hervey and Thomas Ollive Mabbott. Poe's Brother: The Life and Poetry of William Henry Leonard Poe (1926)
- Downey, Christopher Byrd. Edgar Allan Poe's Charleston (2020)
- Kopley, Richard. Edgar Allan Poe: A Life (2025)
- Mabbott, Thomas Ollive, ed. Collected Works of Edgar Allan Poe, Volume 1: Poems (Harvard University Press, 1969)
- Poe, Edgar Allan. The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket (1838)
- Ravenel, Beatrice Witte. The Arrow of Lightning (1926)
Academic Articles
- Law, Robert Adger. "A Source for 'Annabel Lee'" Journal of English and Germanic Philology, Volume 21 (April 1922)
- Peeples, Scott and Michelle Van Parys. "Unburied Treasure: Edgar Allan Poe in the South Carolina Lowcountry." Southern Cultures (2016)
Newspapers & Periodicals
- Charleston Courier (December 4, 1807)
- Charleston Courier (March 22, 1811)
- Charleston Mercury (2011)
- News and Courier (February 6, 1889)
- News and Courier (1938)
- Southern Patriot (July 25, 1833)
- Russell's Magazine
- Southern Literary Messenger
- Texas Review / Southwest Review
Archival & Primary Sources
- Charleston Library Society archives
- Journal of English and Germanic Philology, Volume 21 — inscribed "Gift of author, Oct. 1934"
- Surveyor's plat for Captain William C. Hammer (February 16, 1867)
- Affidavit dated September 5, 1745 (Cid Campeador treasure deposition)
Plays
- Hook, Theodore Edward (libretto) and James Hook (music). Tekeli; or, The Siege of Montgatz
Television
- "Time Enough at Last." The Twilight Zone (1959)
Reference Works
- South Carolina Encyclopedia (entry on Henry Timrod)
Interviews & Personal Communications
- Christopher Byrd Downey (conversation at Owlbear Café)
- Danielle Cox, Digital Historian, Charleston Library Society
- Scott Peeples, phone interview
Duration:01:01:24
Charleston Gothic: Part 3- Juliet's Tomb
12/28/2025
Find the grave of Annabel Lee and you find the ghost of Edgar Allan Poe!
In this episode, a hand-drawn map pulls us through a locked iron gate into Charleston's most overgrown churchyard, where legends gather like mist and names disappear into leaves. A lady in white wanders the paths. Sixty-four people have collapsed before this very gate.
We follow the trail of Annabel Lee—the girl Poe loved, or invented, or summoned—and uncover the stranger story beneath the legend: a visiting scholar who survived war and exile, stood before Juliet's Tomb in Verona, and quietly planted a grave that may never have existed.
The map points toward a burial—but the real treasure may be hidden elsewhere. What if the grave was a lie but the lie was true?
Sources:
The Ghosts of Charleston by Julian Buxton
Edgar Allan Poe's Charleston by Christopher Byrd Downey
A History Lover's Guide to Charleston by Christopher Byrd Downey
Unburied Treasure: Edgar Allan Poe in the South Carolina Lowcountry
Scott Peeples, Michelle Van Parys
Southern Cultures, Vol. 22, No. 2
Haunted Charleston by Sarah Pitzer
Nevermore! Edgar Allan Poe- The Final Mystery by Julian Wiles
Source for Alexander Lenard:
Primary Sources by Alexander Lenard
Die Kuh auf dem Bast (Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, 1963)
The Valley of the Latin Bear (New York, 1965) - English translation
Am Ende der Via Condotti: Römische Jahre (München: DTV Verlag, 2017) - translated by Ernö Zeltner
Stories of Rome (Budapest: Corvina, 2013) - translated by Mark Baczoni
O Vale Do Fim Do Mundo (São Paulo: Cosac Naify, 2013) - translated by Paulo Schiller
Die römische Küche (München, 1963)
Sieben Tage Babylonisch (Stuttgart, 1964)
A római konyha (1986)
Winnie Ille Pu (Latin translation of Winnie-the-Pooh)
Völgy a világ végén s más történetek (Budapest: Magvető, 1973)
Secondary Sources - Books and Academic Articles
Siklós, Péter. "Von Budapest bis zum Tal am Ende der Welt: Sándor Lénárds romanhafter Lebensweg" (online)
Siklós, Péter. "The Klára Szerb – Alexander Lenard Correspondence." The Hungarian Quarterly 189 (2008): 42-61
Sachs, Lynne. "Alexander Lenard: A Life in Letters." The Hungarian Quarterly 199 (Autumn 2010): 93-104
Lénárt-Cheng, Helga. "A Multilingual Monologue: Alexander Lenard's Self-Translated Autobiography in Three Languages." Hungarian Cultural Studies 7 (January 2015)
Vajdovics, Zsuzsanna. "Gli anni romani di Sándor Lénárd." Annuario: Studi e Documenti Italo-Ungheresi (Roma-Szeged, 2005)
Vajdovics, Zsuzsanna. "Alexander Lenard: Portrait d'un traducteur émigrant." Atelier de Traduction 9 (2008): 185-191
Rapcsányi, László & Szerb, Klára. "Who Was Alexander Lenard? An Interview with Klára Szerb." The Hungarian Quarterly 189 (2008): 26-30
Lenard, Alexander. "A Few Words About Winnie Ille Pu." The Hungarian Quarterly 199 (2010): 87-92
Humblé, Philippe & Sepp, Arvi. "'Die Kriege haben mein Leben bestimmt': Alexander Lenard's Narratives of Brazilian Exile." In Hermann Gätje / Sikander Singh (Eds.), Grenze als Erfahrung und Diskurs (Tübingen: Narr Francke Attempto, 2018)
Badel, Keuly Dariana. "Writing oneself and the other: A biography of Alexander Lenard (1951-1972)." Proceedings of the XXVI National History Symposium – ANPUH (São Paulo, July 2011)
Nascimento, Gabriela Goulart. "Erich Erdstein and the hunt for Nazis: A study on the book 'The Rebirth of the Swastika in Brazil.'" Federal University of Santa Catarina (Florianópolis, 2021)
Mosimann, João Carlos. Catarinenses: Gênese E História (Florianópolis/SC, 2010)
Kroener, Sebastian (Ed.). Das Hospital auf dem Palmenhof (Norderstedt, 2016)
Ilg, Karl. Pioniere in Brasilien (Innsbruck/Wien/München, 1972)
Lützeler, Paul Michael. "Migration und Exil in Geschichte, Mythos, und Literatur." In Bettina Bannasch / Gerhild Rochus (Eds.), Handbuch der deutschsprachigen Exilliteratur (Berlin/Boston, 2013): 3-25
Said, Edward. Culture and Imperialism (New York, 1993)
Said, Edward....
Duration:00:55:26
Charleston Gothic: Part 2- Buried Treasures
12/14/2025
In this episode, we follow the Annabel Lee legend backward: from modern ghost tours to nineteenth-century poetry, from pirate treasure maps to academic footnotes, from Sullivan's Island beaches to a forgotten corner of a graveyard. What emerges is not a simple ghost story, but an obsession—shared by scholars, storytellers, and an entire city convinced that something precious was buried in the South Carolina Lowcountry and must be found.
Edgar Allan Poe's Charleston by Christopher Byrd Downey
Synchronicity: An Acausal Connecting Principle By C.G. Jung
Unburied Treasure: Edgar Allan Poe in the South
Carolina Lowcountry
Scott Peeples, Michelle Van Parys
Southern Cultures, Vol. 22, No. 2
Nevermore! Edgar Allan Poe- The Final Mystery by Julian Wiles
The New York Evening Post
The Charleston News and Courier
The Sullivan's Island Edition of The Gold-Bug by Edgar Allan Poe, Frank Durham and Elizabeth Verner Hamilton
Duration:00:17:39
Charleston Gothic: Part 1- Night Sea Journey
11/19/2025
The Descent has led us to Charleston, and to a haunted historic theatre where we finally uncover a clue—one that may bring us closer to the ghost of Edgar Allan Poe.
Sources:
The Ghosts of Charleston by Julian Buxton
Charleston Ghosts: Hauntings in the Holy City by James Caskey
Complex, archetype and symbol in the psychology of C.G. Jung by Jolande Jacobi
The Mad Booths of Maryland By Preston Kimmel
The Afterlife of Edgar Allan Poe by Scott Peeples
Nevermore! Edgar Allan Poe- The Final Mystery by Julian Wiles
Duration:01:02:58
The Descent: Part 3- Lost
11/4/2025
In this episode we visit the most haunted house of Edgar Allan Poe and then retrace his path to the threshold of a secret world.
Sources that were either referenced directly or consulted during the writing of this episode:
Ghosts of Philadelphia by Charles J. Adams III
A Mystery of Mysteries: The Death and Life of Edgar Allan Poe by Mark Dawidziak
The Final Days of Edgar Allan Poe: Nevermore in Baltimore by David F. Gatlin
True Tales of the Unknown: The Uninvited, published in 1989 and edited by Sharon Jones
The Ghostly Register by Arthur Meyers
The Man of the Crowd: Edgar Allan Poe and the City by Scott Peeples
The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket by Edgar Allan Poe
Haunting Poe: His Afterlife in Richmond and Beyond by Christopher P. Semtner
The Poe Shrine: Building the World's Finest Edgar Allan Poe Collection by Christopher P. Semtner
Duration:00:49:42
The Descent: Part 2- Spiral
10/20/2025
In this episode we continue our search for the ghost of Edgar Allan Poe and retrace his path through the final, ill-fated months of his life.
Sources that were either referenced directly or consulted during the writing of this episode:
Ghosts of Philadelphia by Charles J. Adams III
A Mystery of Mysteries: The Death and Life of Edgar Allan Poe by Mark Dawidziak
True Tales of the Unknown: The Uninvited, published in 1989 and edited by Sharon Jones
The Man of the Crowd: Edgar Allan Poe and the City by Scott Peeples
Haunting Poe: His Afterlife in Richmond and Beyond by Christopher P. Semtner
The Poe Shrine: Building the World’s Finest Edgar Allan Poe Collection by Christopher P. Semtner
Duration:01:10:36
The Descent (Part 1)
10/6/2025
In this episode we embark on a search for the ghost of Edgar Allan Poe, guided by Henry David Thoreau and the mystery of the Hollow Earth. Our quest begins with a visit to a haunted saloon and an apartment building that is hiding a dark past.
Duration:00:45:07
Charleston Gothic (Part 1)
1/17/2024
In this episode, we take a look at Edgar Allan Poe's "The Gold Bug," a story about an encrypted map that leads to a buried pirate treasure. We will visit a haunted theater and discuss a play a play about the death of Poe that was first performed there in 1994. The story, the ghosts, and the play are all clues that lead to a hidden treasure that Poe was attempting to find in Charleston in 1828. This is the first installment of a two-part story.
Works Cited:
Buxton, Julian T., The Ghosts of Charleston , Beaufort Books, 2001
Caskey, James, Charleston’s Ghosts: Hauntings in the Holy City, Manta Ray Books LLC., 2014
Dawidziak, Mark, A Mystery of Mysteries, St. Martin's Press, 2023
Downey, Christopher Byrd, Edgar Allan Poe’s Charleston, History Press, 2020
Downey, Christopher Byrd, A History Lover’s Guide To Charleston, The History Press, 2023
Hecker, William F., Private Perry and Mister Poe: The West Point Poems, 1831 Louisiana State University Press, 2005
Jacobi, Jolande, Complex/Archtype/sSymbol in the Psychology of C.G. Jung, Bollingen Foundation Inc., 1959
Main, Roderick Jung on Synchronicity and the Paranormal, Princeton University Press, 1997
Pitser, Sarah. Haunted Charleston, Morris Book Publishing, LLC., 2013
Poe, Edgar Allan, Complete Tales and Poems, Maplewood Books, 2013
Wiles, Julian, Nevermore, The Dramatic Publishing Company, 1998
Jacobi, Jolande, Complex/Archtype/sSymbol in the Psychology of C.G. Jung, Bollingen Foundation Inc., 1959
Main, Roderick Jung on Synchronicity and the Paranormal, Princeton University Press, 1997
Duration:01:00:26
The Mermaid Returns: Part 3
12/21/2022
The conclusion of the three part series which combines history, ghosts, true crime and fairytales.
Duration:00:46:02
The Mermaid Returns: Part 2
12/10/2022
The second episode in a three part series about one of Charleston's lost stories. It is a true story that combines history, true crime, ghosts and fairy tales.
Duration:00:51:23
The Mermaid Returns: Part 1
11/30/2022
This is the first in a three part series about one of Charleston, South Carolina's lost stories. It combines history, ghosts, true crime, amd fairytales.
Duration:00:49:32
Here Are Dragons
3/29/2021
This episode features the untold story of the origin of King Kong.
Duration:00:47:43
Last Breath
10/30/2020
This episode tells a story about pirates and a haunted dungeon.
Duration:01:00:35
The Mermaid
7/24/2020
This episode tells the story of the Charleston mermaid.
Duration:00:47:20
Corpsewood
10/23/2019
This is a story about a German fairytale and a brutal murder in northwestern Georgia.
Suggested reading:
The Corpsewood Manor Murders In North Georgia by Amy Petulla
Duration:00:46:38
Through A Glass Darkly
9/17/2019
This a story about the Titanic, Victorian sex trafficking and a mummy's curse.
Duration:00:34:38
Shadows of Savannah Part 2: The Dead Time
8/15/2019
Haunted houses, midnight witchcraft and famous murder in historic Savannah, Georgia.
Duration:00:38:14
Shadows of Savannah (Part 1): Most Haunted
2/21/2019
In this episode I visit some of Savanah's most haunted locations.
Suggested Reading:
Haunted Savanah: America's Most Spectral City by James Caskey
Haunted Savannah by Georgia R. Byrd
Duration:00:33:54