America's Lady of Supernatural Thrillers

“Raven's Cove, a great mystery by Mary Ann Poll. Avoid it when winds are gusting to hurricane speed outside. No extra creepiness needed.”
~Bonnye Matthews
Step aside Stephen King, Alaska’s Mary Ann Poll is here to spin new tales of the super-natural and the ungodly, as her heroes and heroines take on the forces of evil on 'The Last Frontier.' ~Jeff Babcock

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The Things That Remember Us

There are places we leave behind, objects we stop using, and moments we tuck away because life pushes us forward faster than we realize. Yet every now and then, something small catches our attention and reminds us that the past has its own way of lingering. I have always believed that the world holds more memory than we understand, and that familiar things sometimes remember us long after we have forgotten them.

Not long ago, I found an old trinket on a high shelf while dusting. It was a gift from someone I had not thought about in years. The moment I touched it, a strange wave of recognition washed over me. It was more than nostalgia. It felt alive. As if the object itself had been waiting patiently for me to notice it again. I stood there longer than I meant to, caught in a feeling that was half warmth and half something I could not quite name.

I think this happens to all of us. We pick up a book we once loved and feel a sudden tug in our chest. We step into a room we have not visited in years, and the air seems thick with a memory that has been quietly breathing behind the walls. Even a simple scent can pull an entire moment back into existence with startling clarity. It makes you wonder if memories truly disappear, or if they simply go quiet until the right moment wakes them.

As a supernatural thriller author, I have learned to listen to these moments. They are seeds for stories. Places where the seen and unseen come together. Sometimes I imagine that forgotten objects absorb pieces of our lives. A chair remembers who sat in it. A doorway remembers who crossed beneath it in joy or in fear. A necklace remembers the warmth of the hand that held it on a difficult day. These imaginings may sound fanciful, but they have guided many of my characters and shaped countless scenes.

And perhaps there is truth in them. We know that emotions cling to us. Why not to the world around us?

There is something comforting in the idea that we leave imprints behind, even in the smallest things. Something that says our lives ripple out farther than we imagine. Something that reminds us we are part of a much larger story, and that story continues even when we are not watching.

So the next time you stumble across something you have not seen in years, pause. Let yourself feel whatever rises. Do not rush past it. These moments are gifts, and sometimes, they are messages. Sometimes they are warnings. And every now and then, they are invitations into a mystery you did not know you were ready to face.

The world remembers more than we think. The question is whether we are willing to listen.

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