Harold Sherman

Harold Morrow Sherman
Born (1898-07-13)July 13, 1898
Traverse City, Michigan, United States
Died August 19, 1987(1987-08-19) (aged 89)
Mountain View, Arkansas, United States
Occupation Novelist, lecturer
Nationality American
Period 20th century
Genre Adventure novel
Sherman's novel The Green Man appeared in Amazing Stories in 1946
One of Sherman's relatively few mysteries, "The Up and Up", was the cover story for the August 1947 issue of Mammoth Detective

Harold Morrow Sherman (1898-1987) was a prolific American author, lecturer and psychical researcher.[1]

Biography

Harold Morrow Sherman was born on July 13, 1898, in Traverse City, Michigan. He studied at the University of Michigan for a short amount of time, then moved to Detroit to work for the Ford Motor Company. He married Martha Bain on September 26, 1920, and had two daughters: Mary and Marcia.

In 1921, Harold worked as a reporter for The Marion Chronicle in Indiana. He moved to New York City in 1924 to write several popular boys' sports and adventure books (notably the Tahara series) and to produce two plays on Broadway.

The Sherman family spent the 1950s and early 1960s in Hollywood, writing for television and lecturing on his most recent work.

He died on August 19, 1987.

Telepathy experiment

Sherman with the explorer Hubert Wilkins carried out their own experiment in telepathy for five and a half months starting in October 1937. This took place when Sherman was in New York and Wilkins was in the Arctic. The experiment consisted of Sherman and Wilkins at the end of each day to relax and visualise a mental image or "thought impression" of the events or thoughts they had experienced in the day and then to record those images and thoughts on paper in a diary. The results at the end when comparing Sherman's diary to Wilkins was claimed to be more than 60 per cent.[2]

The full results of the experiments were published in 1942 in a book by Sherman and Wilkins titled Thoughts Through Space. In the book both Sherman and Wilkins had written they believed they had demonstrated that it was possible to send and receive thought impressions from the mind of one person to another.[3] The magician John Booth wrote the experiment was not an example of telepathy as a high percentage of misses had occurred. Booth wrote it was more likely that the "hits" were the result of "coincidence, law of averages, subconscious expectancy, logical inference or a plain lucky guess."[4]

Selected bibliography

Sherman's personal papers are archived here: http://uca.edu/archives/m87-08-harold-m-sherman-collection/

Non Fiction

Adventure Fiction

Sports Fiction

Fantasy

References

  1. Introduction to the Papers of Harold Sherman
  2. Nasht, Simon. (2006). The Last Explorer: Hubert Wilkins, Hero of the Great Age of Polar Exploration. Arcade Publishing. pp. 267-268. ISBN 978-1-61608-717-3
  3. Wilkins, Hurbert; Sherman, Harold. (2004). Thoughts through Space: A Remarkable Adventure in the Realm of Mind. Hampton Roads Publishing. ISBN 1-57174-314-6
  4. Booth, John. (1986). Psychic Paradoxes. Prometheus Books. p. 69. ISBN 0-87975-358-7

External links

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