Why Legends Persist—and the Men Who Refuse to Believe ThemJonathan Smyth Isn’t Here to Entertain You
- haleyn4
- Jul 9
- 1 min read

Some stories stick because they’re easy.Because they make fear palatable.Because they keep the truth buried.
In The Case of the Screaming Tunnel, Frank F. Fiore doesn’t ask, “What if the legend is true?”He asks, “What if someone cared enough to prove it wasn’t?”
Legends Are Safe. Smyth Is Not.Prescott clings to its ghost story like armor. It keeps things tidy.Clean.Comfortable.
Jonathan Smyth rips all of that apart.
Where others see a mystery wrapped in folklore, Smyth sees red flags and loose ends. He’s not seduced by myth. He’s haunted by the details no one wants to touch.
He doesn’t just walk into the tunnel.He walks into the town’s deepest denial—and lights a match.
A Man Unafraid to Be HatedSmyth isn’t reckless. He’s relentless.And that makes people nervous.
Why?
Because deep down, they know he’s right.
The legend doesn’t hold up.The timeline doesn’t make sense.And the real story?It’s uglier than fiction—and closer than anyone wants to admit.
Fiore Gives You More Than a MysteryFrank F. Fiore writes with purpose.He builds a mystery, yes—but he also builds a mirror. A reflection of how far people will go to protect a lie that keeps them comfortable.
Jonathan Smyth breaks that mirror.And walks through the shards.
Why You Can’t Look AwayHe’s not charming.He’s not warm.He doesn’t need your applause.
But he’s unforgettable.
Because in a world built on legends, he’s the one man brave enough to say:“This doesn’t add up.”
And once you see it through Smyth’s eyes?You’ll never unsee it.







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