Selling Dead People's Things: Inexplicably True Tales, Vintage Fails & Objects of Objectionable Estates
Selling Dead People's Things: Inexplicably True Tales, Vint…
Selling Dead People’s Things is a wry behind-the-curtain peek into the world of antiques and their obsessive owners—while still alive and a…
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Oct. 27, 2024

Selling Dead People's Things: Inexplicably True Tales, Vintage Fails & Objects of Objectionable Estates

Selling Dead People's Things: Inexplicably True Tales, Vintage Fails & Objects of Objectionable Estates

Selling Dead People’s Things is a wry behind-the-curtain peek into the world of antiques and their obsessive owners—while still alive and after their passing.
  
 An amusing observer of the human condition, author Duane Scott Cerny entertains in...

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Mysterious Radio: Paranormal, UFO & Lore Interviews

Selling Dead People’s Things is a wry behind-the-curtain peek into the world of antiques and their obsessive owners—while still alive and after their passing.
  
 An amusing observer of the human condition, author Duane Scott Cerny entertains in illuminating, scary, sad, or frightfully funny resale tales and essays. Whether processing the estate of a hoarding beekeeper, disassembling the retro remains of an infamous haunted hospital, or conducting an impromptu appraisal during a shiva gone disturbingly wrong, every day is a twisted treasure hunt for this 21st-century antiques dealer. 
 While digging deep into the basements, attics, and souls of the most interesting collectors imaginable, traveling from one odd house call to the curious next, resale predicaments will confound your every turn. Be careful where you step, watch what you touch, and gird your heart—Antiques Roadshow, this ain’t!
  
 The Dybbuk box, or Dibbuk box (Hebrew: קופסת דיבוק, romanized: Kufsat Dibbuk), is a wine-cabinet claimed to be haunted by a dybbuk, a concept from Jewish mythology. The box gained notoriety when it was auctioned off on eBayby owner Kevin Mannis, who created a story featuring Jewish Holocaust survivors and paranormal claims as part of his eBay item description. Mannis' story was the inspiration for the 2012 horror film The Possession.
 In 2021, Mannis told Input magazine that the Dybbuk Box story was entirely fictional.

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