Carnacki The Ghost-Finder is a collection of short stories by
William Hope Hodgson, all concerning the exploits of the eponymous Thomas Carnacki, an
Occult Detective. The original 1913 edition contained six stories, which had been separately published in
The Idler magazine over the preceding few years; a 1948 edition added three more.
Carnacki brought an empirical attitude to his investigations, as well as several high-tech (for 1913) gadgets, ranging from photography to an protective device of his own invention called the electric pentacle. Unlike many occult detectives, his cases included a mix of hoaxes and genuine hauntings.
One Carnacki story, "The Horse of the Invisible", was adapted for television in 1971, in the British TV series
The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes; Carnacki was played by
Donald Pleasence.
This series provides examples of: