Experiences in Spiritualism with Mr. D. D. Home by Viscount Adare is one of the most detailed and compelling firsthand records of the Victorian spiritualist movement - a document that captures both the wonder and controversy surrounding one of the century's most extraordinary figures, the medium Daniel Dunglas Home. Published privately in 1869, this rare and fascinating volume chronicles Adare's personal observations of seances, levitations, and psychic phenomena witnessed in the intimate setting of parlors and drawing rooms across England and Europe. Written with the precision of a diary and the candor of a sincere investigator, Adare's account provides a meticulous chronicle of events that defied the scientific understanding of his age. He describes objects moving without touch, musical instruments sounding in midair, and Home himself calm, self-effacing, and seemingly unassailable in his honesty levitating before witnesses of impeccable reputation. Yet the tone throughout is not credulous but questioning: Adare, an intelligent and educated nobleman, sought to record what he saw without embellishment, leaving readers to draw their own conclusions about the nature of reality and the unseen world. Beyond its record of phenomena, Experiences in Spiritualism is a portrait of a time when science, religion, and mysticism converged in the search for proof of the soul's immortality. Adare's measured prose gives the work a curious power at once skeptical and reverent, personal and historical. For readers interested in psychical research, nineteenth-century occultism, or the history of mediumship, this book remains an essential and genuinely haunting document a window into an age when the boundaries between matter and spirit seemed, for a moment, to tremble.