Photo: Ansley Murphy

We, the writers of the Flyer, report the news, and sometimes we make the news. Case in point: Our reporter Toby Sells wrote a book. (Yay, Toby!) Itโ€™s called Haint Blues: Strange Tales From the American South (available on Amazon), and itโ€™s about, well, strange tales from the South โ€” UFO abductions, ghosts, Bigfoot, psychic horses, you get the gist. Itโ€™s the stuff that Sells just doesnโ€™t stop talking about and now heโ€™s written 20 chapters of it for anyone to read.

โ€œIโ€™ve been into unexplained and folklore stuff since I was in third grade,โ€ he says in an official interview (not during an off-the-record office gossip session, for the record). โ€œI wonโ€™t go into the whole story, but a friend of mine showed me the movie The Legend of Boggy Creek when I was at his house for a sleepover in third grade. I think I told you this before [Yes, Toby, you have]. That was my paranormal gateway drug. And I just started consuming every bit of media that I could find after that.โ€

Yes, that meant watching Unsolved Mysteries but that also meant digging into the archives and doing good old-fashioned research that eventually led him to creating the scripted podcast Haint Blues. โ€œThe show got, literally, dozens of listeners,โ€ Sells says (brags?), adding that he recorded his last episode in 2020. โ€œThose scripts kind of sat on the shelf for a little while, and then I was reading one day about average word length of books, and I was doing the math and thinking about how many scripts I had. Those were about 3,000 words each. And I thought, well, itโ€™s getting pretty close. โ€ฆ I thought maybe thatโ€™s a way I could share these stories with people. And so I went back to the scripts and rewrote everything in a more nonfiction, prose style, but it still sounds really conversational and still sounds folksy. Itโ€™s really laid-back and Southern and comfortable.

โ€œYou know,โ€ Sells continues, โ€œall these stories, somewhere down the line, if theyโ€™re not just completely fabricated, involved real people at one point, and you want to treat that as respectfully as you can, and thatโ€™s what I tried to do. But I think what I really wanted to do is put these stories out as a collection of Southern culture. We all know about Southern food and Southern music, and what I hope Iโ€™ve done in the book is let everybody know that we have our own folklore traditions, too. โ€ฆ I think that stuff is as important to Southern culture as any other thing.โ€

This Friday, you can meet Sells at An Evening of Ghost Stories with Stephen Guenther, paranormal investigator and owner of Historical Haunts. Theyโ€™ll both share paranormal stories and do a Q&A, and Sells will sign books after. โ€œIf youโ€™re ready for an evening of spooky stuff, even before Halloween, come on out and join us, grab a beer,โ€ Sells says.

An Evening of Ghost Stories, Memphis Made Brewing Co. (at the Ravine), Friday, July 26, 6 p.m.