Leslie Shepard (21 June 1917 – 20 August 2004) was a British author, archivist, and curator who wrote books on a range of subjects including street literature, early film, and the paranormal.[1]
Shepard, L. The Broadside Ballad: A Study in Origins and Meaning. London H Jenkins Publishers 1962.
Shepard, L. The History of the Horn: A Bibliographical Essay. Rampant Lions Press 1977.
Shepard, L. Dracula Book of Great Horror Stories. Random House Value Publishing, 1990.
Shepard, L. The History of Street Literature. David and Charles, 1973.
Shepard, L. Seascape: A Pattern of Sounds for Reading Aloud. Offcut Press, 1971.
Shepard, L. (Ed), Encyclopedia of Occultism and Psychical Research. Gale Research Company, 1979.
Shepard, L. (Ed), Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology: The World of Paranormal Phenomena. Baker Publishing Group, 1992.
Shepard, L. The News in Verse: Dreadful Crimes: A Set of Six Nineteenth-century Broadside Ballads of Appalling Murders and Other Wretched Crimes. Printed in Faithful Facsimile. Then Limited, 1972.
References
^"Leslie Shepard". The Independent. 14 September 2004. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
^Alfred Wolfsohn – Vox Humana: Alfred Wolfsohn's Experiments In Extension Of Human Vocal Range
^Shepard, L., An Empirical Therapy Based on an Extension of Vocal Range and Expression in Singing and Drama. Paper read at the Sixth International Congress of Psychotherapy, London, August 1964. Repository: Alfred Wolfsohn Voice Research Centre Archives. Curated by Leslie Shepard, Dublin, Ireland.
^Newham, P. The Prophet of Song: The Life and Work of Alfred Wolfsohn. London 1997. Tigers Eye Press.