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* AnAstralProjectionNotAGhost; Sir Gifford's not-quite-an-afterlife as he frantically tries to tell people he isn't dead. But the few who see only see a ghost.
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[[quoteright:187:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_ka_of_gifford_hillary.jpg]]
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* AuthorTract: Wheatley's frequent lapses into the sort of right-wing libertarianism that would make AynRand look like a liberal.

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* AuthorTract: Wheatley's frequent lapses into the sort of right-wing libertarianism that would make AynRand Creator/AynRand look like a liberal.
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If you can get past the stupefying social snobbishness of the author and the fact he isn't shy about lapsing into long author discourses on politics - Wheatley was somewhere to the Right of Ghenghiz Khan and would make MargaretThatcher look liberal - this is actually quite a pacy, exciting, supernatural thriller with a lot of stuff to enthral, scare, and engage the imagination.

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If you can get past the stupefying social snobbishness of the author and the fact he isn't shy about lapsing into long author discourses on politics - Wheatley was somewhere to the Right of Ghenghiz Khan and would make MargaretThatcher UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher look liberal - this is actually quite a pacy, exciting, supernatural thriller with a lot of stuff to enthral, scare, and engage the imagination.
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* DiscoveringYourOwnDeadBody: The eponymous character realizes he is seemingly dead when he gets to see his own body - from the outside. He is later on faced with the problem of re-animating his body and getting out of the coffin.
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''The Ka of Gifford Hillary'' is a horror/supernatural story by author Creator/DennisWheatley. It concerns itself with the greatest of all mysteries: what happens after death?

The story opens with Sir Gifford Hillary and Wing Commander Johnny Norton involved in plans to counter the might of Soviet Russia,but interest soon centres on the evil Lady Ankaret and the tragedy which occurred at Longshot Hall, South Hampshire, on the night of the 9th September. Ankaret is revealed to be doubly evil: both a black magician and a Communist spy (do not try to untangle the contradiction involved in someone being both a materialist atheist ''and'' a Satanist).


A victim is struck down, and from that moment onwards the events which follow seem, at first, fantastic and unbelievable–but are later realised to be entirely logical. What does happen after death? how does Gifford Hillary cope with being - temporarily - a disembodied spirit without a body, wandering unheeded in the world? Among other things, he gets to see what his family are ''really'' like - and it ain't pretty. And why should Sir Gifford eventually find himself in prison, on trial for his life?

If you can get past the stupefying social snobbishness of the author and the fact he isn't shy about lapsing into long author discourses on politics - Wheatley was somewhere to the Right of Ghenghiz Khan and would make MargaretThatcher look liberal - this is actually quite a pacy, exciting, supernatural thriller with a lot of stuff to enthral, scare, and engage the imagination.

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!!This book provides examples of:

* AstralProjection: Sir Gifford is detached from his physical body.
* AuthorAvatar: Sir Gifford Hillary.
* AuthorTract: Wheatley's frequent lapses into the sort of right-wing libertarianism that would make AynRand look like a liberal.
* LadyOfBlackMagic: Lady Ankharet.
* SpiritWorld: Where Sir Gifford's "ka" is forced to wander for the best part of a week.

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