Ghost Roads and Death Signs of the Scottish Highlands pulls you into a world where death moved along known tracks, where the landscape itself shaped belief, and where warning signs were read with the same seriousness as weather.
Across glens, moors, sea lochs, and mountain passes, Highland communities carried their dead to sacred ground and listened for what might come before the knock at the door. This book explores the lived tradition behind corpse roads and funeral journeys, the uneasy knowledge of second sight, the meaning of death omens, and the powerful protection of churchyards and burial places. It follows the routes where memory clings to stone and heather, and it traces the older conviction that certain crossings, sounds, and lights belonged to the threshold between life and loss.
Inside you will discover:Coffin roads and burial routes and what they reveal about distance, kinship, and duty
Second sight and foreknowledge of death including visions of funerals, shrouds, and approach
Death omens and household warnings from knocks, dreams, and animal behavior to uncanny silences
Corpse candles and lights of the dead and why certain paths seemed marked before burial
The restless dead and the fears surrounding improper burial, sudden death, and unfinished bonds
Churchyards and consecrated protection where the dead were settled among their own
Haunted crossings and forbidden paths where routes carried dread long after use
Mountain presences and spirits of place tied to mist, water, and the solitude of high ground
The soundscape of death including footsteps, voices, and processional hearing before sight
For readers drawn to Scottish folklore, death customs, and haunted landscapes, this is a journey into the Highland belief world where the road to the grave was never merely a road, and where the past still speaks through place.