"

Bibliography

Sources

“Arkansas Legend: The Gurdon Light.” Uploaded by KARK-TV, October 31, 2011. https://www.kark.com/about-us-2/arkansas-legend-the-gurdon-light/

“Arkansas Urban Legends” https://www.arkansas.com/articles/arkansas-urban-legends

Boggy Creek Monster Site, maintained by Lyle Blackburn http://www.foukemonster.net/index.htm

Brown, Alan. 2002. Haunted Places in the American South. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. Brown includes mention of the Allen House in this compilation of legends from the southern states.

Campfire Tales: Phantom Hitchhiker of Highway 365

Coon, Lisa. 2008. “The Tale of Ladell.” This ballad was composed and performed by Coon and can be heard on streaming on-line sites.

Copeland, Curtis. “Paranormal” State of the Ozarks http://stateoftheozarks.net/showcase/magazine/culture/paranormal/

“Gurdon Light,” Encyclopedia of Arkansas, June 16,  2023, https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/gurdon-light-1198/

Hibbard, Sharon. “Folklore: A Study and Tales from the Ozarks” an Honors Thesis written in 1975 at Ouachita Baptist University, now available digitally from Scholarly Commonshttps://scholarlycommons.obu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1481&context=honors_theses

“Maple Hill Cemetery” https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/54904/maple-hill-cemetery

 Mobley, Andrew. “’That’s no deer’: Fouke Monster legend haunts swamplands of southwest Arkansas with new alleged evidence” from KATV.com published October 23, 2023. https://katv.com/news/local/new-evidence-fouke-monster-haunts-southwest-arkansas-swamplands-boggy-creek-monster-bigfoot-sasquatch-the-legend-of-boggy-creek-movie-denny-roberts-miller-county-monster-mart-william-lunsford-crabtree-track-howl-recording-swamp-cryptid-1970s-sulphur-rive

“Monster Mart” from Arkansas.com, https://www.arkansas.com/fouke/shopping-wellness/monster-mart

Myers, Arthur. 1985. The Ghostly Register. Chicago: Contemporary Books.

Packard, Christopher, “The Hoop Snake: America’s oldest terrestrial cryptid” https://www.christopherpackard.com/post/hoop-snake-america-s-oldest-terrestrial-cryptid

Polston, Mike. “William Murphy Loudermilk” from The Encyclopedia of Arkansas https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/william-murphy-loudermilk-2807/

Randolph, Vance. Ozark Superstitions Galena, MO. 1946.

Randolph, Vance. We Always Lie to Strangers ; Tall Tales from the Ozarks, published in New York by Columbia University Press in 1951.

Risker, Hannah. “Spooky Sites Around A-State” from A-State Herald, https://astatetheherald.com/2020/10/28/spooky-sites-around-a-state/

“Snawfus” Encyclopedia of Arkansas https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/snawfus-15128/

Spencer, Mark. 2012. A Haunted Love Story: The Ghosts of the Allen House. Woodbury, MN:Llewellyn Books.

“Supernatural State: https://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2013/sep/28/the-supernatural-state/

Tesky, Magdalena. “Ghost Legends” from The Encyclopedia of Arkansas https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/ghost-legends-2651/

Thompson, Amy Michelle. “Fouke Monster” from Encyclopedia of Arkansas https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/fouke-monster-2212/

Turnbo, S.C.  “A Hoop Snake,” published digitally at The Libraryhttps://thelibrary.org/lochist/turnbo/V28/ST817.html

Unsolved Mysteries (2:12 to 13:08) : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Drzj1Ij46X4

Underwood, Edward L., Haunted Jonesboro from the History Press, August 2011.

Wilson, Carolyn. 1966. The Scent of Lilacs. New York: Ace Books.

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

Documenting Community Stories: Arkansas Legends and Lore Copyright © 2025 by Lauren Adams Willette is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.