More than 150 true stories of the supernatural Midwest. Readers will enter an America they never knew existed--that of ghosts, haunted houses, possession and exorcism, of vanishing people and ships, mystery lights, premonitory dreams and more. A perennial Halloween favorite.
Michael Norman is a writer who makes his home in Western Wisconsin.
He is the author most recently of "The Nearly Departed: Minnesota Ghost Stories and Legends," published in 2009 by the Minnesota Historical Society Press.
He is the co-author with the late Beth Scott of the popular Haunted America series of ghost stories, and the co-author with writer Carol Roecklein of two vocabulary books written for ages 12 and up.
This is a collection, (150), ghostly accounts of supposedly true ghost stories either collected by the authors or told to them by people that had heard of them or experienced them themselves. I say "supposedly true" because the authors state very clearly that they can't say one way or the other if they are true or not...only that the people that recounted them believe they are, or might be, true. The book is arranged nicely by the Midwest state that it came from...so if you don't have the time or the desire to read all 150 you can easily take your pick. Being that I am the "Ghost-Story Junkie" , I plowed through all 150 over the course of 3-months. Some of the stories were really frightening and some were missing a great deal of the fright feature that you would expect. One that may have had some elements of truth to it was from Illinois entitled "Buried Alive". It was interesting since the time period that it was set in, the methods of ascertaining death from trance or catatonia were often lacking and bodies were often not treated as they are today, so a person believed to be dead, could sometimes regain consciousness. There were also several stories relating to Abraham Lincoln in "Lincoln and the Supernatural" that had interesting historical elements. They say that guests in the Lincoln bedroom of the White House have reported encountering the 16th, President. Since Michigan is my adopted state, I was most interested in the stories from there. Many of Michigan's 19 stories are about ships on the Great Lakes. However, "The Soul Of Stephen Strand" is a nicely developed story of reincarnation or possession. I also liked a few of the Minnesota stories, "The Horrors of Heffron Hall" tells the tale of St. Mary's College in Winona where some of the evils that were alleged to have been perpetuated by the catholic priests are said to have their victims as permanent guests. One of the milder ones was "The Levitation of Archie Collins" that talks about theater and magic shows and shows that it is sometimes hard, if not impossible, to tell whether the show is real or not. Overall if you are a "ghost story junkie" like yours truly, you will find something in this book to keep you awake with the lights on.
3 Mediocre Stars This is a compendium of ghostly accounts from IL, IN, IA, KS, MI, MN, MS, NE, OH,& WI gathered by Beth Scott & Michael Norman from "remote & diverse" sources credited in a 10pg bibliography at the back of the book. The edition I read was the hardcover published in 1992 by Barnes & Noble; originally published in 1985.
Some of the more memorable accounts include:
👻 "Ressurection Mary", a young Polish girl who died in an automobile accident in 1934 on her way home from a night of dancing at the O. Henry Ballroom in Chicago. She made her first appearance in 1939 as she proceded to hitch rides to the ballrom where she danced all night with some of the men. Afterwards she would ask for a ride, directing her impromptu beau to head north on Archer Avenue, only to disappear from the vehicle as it passed Ressurection Cemetery. But Mary was not always discourteous, at least one man reported receiving a kiss goodnight.
👻 Indiana Governor James Whitcomb, an avid book collector, bequeathed his private library to DePauw University in Greencastle stipulating that the books never be removed from the library building. Over the years several students proclaimed being awakened at night by a spectral body lashing out at them, wailing and moaning a book title from the Whitcomb collection. In each case the student had pilfered the book whose title was bemoaned by the spectre.
👻 "Menage A Trois", a tickling ghost that haunted Gert & Billy Plummers bed in Witchita, Kansas. Seven witnesses were gathered to witness the phenomenon. When the ghost was asked to tap the bed post, headboard, or any other specified part of the bed a specific number of times it did so promptly. Rather than suffer the nightly tickling disturbances the couple carted their bed to the Witchita dump. Alone together in their new bed the couple has, happily, been tickled only by eachother.
👻 Patience Worth, whose spirit was channeled in 1913 by a St. Louis, Missouri housewife named Pearl Curran. For nearly 25 years Patience Worth dictated to Mrs. Curran over 5,000 poems, a play, numerous short stories, and several published novels. "Experts" who studied Pearl Curran doubted that she could have produced the works herself being that she was a woman of limited education, with no knowledge of the language used or the history and subject matter penned by Patience Worth.
👻 The Headless Biker of Elmore Ohio who may not be as daunting as the Headless Horseman of Sleepy Hollow, but he rides closer to home.
Somewhat unsatisfying & dismaying is the authors' note that they "in some cases, expanded upon the original circumstances to create scenes which may not have actually taken place."
I read this when I was younger. Some creepy stories.
I remember then one about the hand print that was permenately on a window and could be cleaned off. Another of a lady on the side of the road, she was really a ghost. And another about a really scary house with ghosts.
A nice little collection of "spooky" stories. Mostly ghost stories, things I could see being told around a campfire. I don't know what to think about ghosts, but that doesn't really matter. The ghost stories weren't the ones that really weirded me out. The story about the unexplained fires and spontaneous combustion freaked me out. The story about the psychic detective was especially interesting. And the stories about weird reincarnations and body-switching REALLY freak me out.
There's no way to tell if any of these stories are true, or just old local legends, but that doesn't make them any less interesting. It's probably a mix of truth and legend. Most of the stories seemed to be from the mid-1800s to the early to mid-1900s. That makes it sort of difficult to research them in much depth. I mean, I'm interested, but not THAT interested. I googled a few of the stories, but I'm not interested enough to hunt down all the books in the bibliography. Maybe just the stuff about the body-switching, that was the story that really fascinated me.
Anyway, overall a good collection of midwest ghost stories, though I was a bit disappointed with the selection of stories for Ohio (though I might be biased, being from Ohio).
A large collection; divided state by state, of ghost stories from across the American Midwest. These stories are written along the lines of local folklore and legends. This is not a bad thing; but if you are looking for a more scientific analysis of ghostly phenomena, I would take a pass on this book.
But it is a lively and entertaining book, lots of stories, lots of local history tidbits. With a healthy suspension of disbelief, this is an enjoyable volume.
SO...very long book. Well written. The stories in this book are just that...ghost stories. They are the stories and legends told in the places mentioned. The authors did not intend this to be a documented telling of "true hauntings," replete with investigations and deep history searches, they intended it to be a bunch of really interesting tales that are told on dark and stormy nights. And they are highly successful in doing just that.
I gave it four stars for that reason. I much prefer investigative works of this type, or first-person accounts, but one cannot deny that these tales were very well told, indeed.
I really had fun reading this. Yes, it's dated (the book was published in the mid 80's) and the stories are primarily from the 1800's to the mid 1900's, but that doesn't make them any less creepy or entertaining. I appreciated how the authors separated the stories into the states they came from, and the states were in alphabetical order. The stories weren't written very well, but they didn't feel repetitive or stale. Every one felt new and fresh, and I was never bored or wanted to stop reading- however, at the same time, the selections aren't long and it was easy to pick up and put down. I'd recommend this to anyone who loves ghost stories, or is looking for something easy to read after plowing through a long or particularly difficult novel.
Copyright 1988. This is a reread, but many years since I last read it. 10 chapters with a different state for each chapter. 150 short stories.
This IS a reread, but the only story I remember is The Corpse In The Closet in the Michigan chapter. Usually that means I didn't like the book so much, but I think it's because I read too many ghost stories. I haven't read these stories in any other book (that I remember). The stories are told in an easy to read manner & are for the most part spooky. I wasn't kept awake though, so the horror level is low. This is a good book to read this time of year!
Update: Nope, I just can't do it. This is now the second book that I am purposefully not finishing. I was just looking through some other folks' shelves, and you know, there are just too many good books to get to. Or even not so good books, just not fucking Midwesterny BORING books.
About 1/4 of the way through: I am reading this book now 'cause I wanted something not-too-strenuous but scary to read before I go to sleep. But it's just not scary. It's basically just recounting ghost stories from all the Midwestern states. And what do ya know, they all have pretty much the same ghost stories as everywhere else in America... I may have to not finish this. I've made it into Iowa and it really is just the same story over and over.
PS. Southern ghost stories are much better. It's the humidity.
I remember kids checking this book out of the library in elementary school. In an attempt to get into the Halloween spirit this year, I checked it out again. I think these stories were much scarier in the third grade. The stories aren't particularly well written, although some are curious indeed. And it is always neat when you recognize a nearby site mentioned (for me the Summit mansion in St. Paul). Still, I ended up getting bored and returning it to the library...Maybe I will read the rest of the states next Halloween.
Aside from an annoying addiction to exclamation points, the authors write well--so why do I feel the results are lacklustre? Somehow the stories are too cozy, too undisturbing. The problem is not one of content, but one of style: Hauck has covered some of the same hauntings, and his accounts have a kick which eludes Scott and Norman, partly because he does not try to spin them out into short stories, but also because he knows how to highlight a dramatic detail: for instance, in telling about the Mason Court Apartments affair, Hauck zeroes in on the "two gray fingers" protruding through the floorboards--the most horrific element in the narrative, which pretty much gets lost in a welter of irrelevant detail in this book (the authors even miss the greyness of the fingers, an important touch). All in all, pleasant, if insipid fare.
This is a neat little collection of places in the Midwest that had odd things happen in them. A lot of the stories are centered on ghost/ poltergeist activity, or mysterious things that happened at some point in time like a spontaneous combustion. But there is a story in here that talks about 'The Light" by Watersmeet. Well, it's the exact same thing in another state :). None of the stories are really spooky or evil. A lot are innocent haunts involving civil war soldiers and normal thumps and footsteps in the night. Overall a fun read when you really have nothing else around that is enticing. In other words, I wouldn't go out of my way to read it.
It's October so it's time for scary books about things which go bump in the night.
I wasn't up for a heavy read (The Exorcist, for example). I needed something light and easy-to-pick-up-where-I-left-off. This fit the bill.
The stories are brief and cover America's heartlands. Some of the stories are old legends; others are (relatively) new encounters. A few were good enough to make me put the book down.
I liked the mix. I would recommend this book to anyone looking for a nice book of scary stories with a grain of truth to them.
Haunted Heartland By Beth Scott and Micheal Norman is a collection of spooky stories accumulated from the best part of America, The Midwest. Throughout the collection you will see the specific flavor that the Author broadcasts unto the reader as in some stories it will be creepy and detailed about some ghost then on another story the Author will switch to an almost comedic and nonchalant account of the haunting's being depicted in that story. It's a perfect read for October and I recommend it to anyone who loves The Midwest or Based Michigan. I give it a 5/5/ it was pretty good.
A good, entertaining collection of ghost stories and legends from the Midwest. Stories are organized by state and are based on published reports, oral histories, and testimony of participants or their descendants. The authors are candid in their purpose to merely document - not prove or disprove - the veracity of the tales. A recommended read for those interested in local history, or "true" ghost stories.
Since this is a collection of stories, I have not read the entire book. Most of the stories were just fun to read but there were a few that really creeped me out. One of the stories was about a haunted house in northern Wisconsin. This house was profiled in Life magazine back in the early 80's and there was a picture of the house. I remembered back then being creeped out just looking at that house!
This is a pretty good ghost story book. I pick it up from time to time, usually aroud halloween or when the weather decides to turn just a tad bit cooler and its good to scare yourself. Sometimes though, this book gets into the history of the place more than it really needs to and I find my mind wandering. I read these for light reading, not for a history!
If you love to tell ghost stories, watching hauntings on tv , THIS BOOK is For YOU! Each tell is based upon a family's true life experience with the OTHER SIDE. With all the chills and thrills and things that creep by our bed while we sleep at night, this book will definitely have you turning on ALL THE LIGHTS as your reading it.
Boring. More historical than haunted. The places written about are too popular and for for generations have been know as being "haunted". More folk tale than anything of substance.
Haunted Heartland by Beth Schott and Michael Norman is a collection of stories that are related in an almost newspaper like form; they are not expressed (other than an annoying use of exclamation points) to raise suspense or thrills, but merely related in a straightforward manner. On the other hand, although there is a fairly extensive bibliography, they are not actually documented for any purpose than to show people told them. The authors even claim not to know whether any of this material is true or not--only that someone believed it enough to tell it. The stories themselves vary in interest. They are organized alphabetically by state, starting with Illinois. Of the 23 stories from this state, "Buried Alive" was interesting since at the time methods of ascertaining death from trance or catatonia were lacking and bodies were not mummified so a person, believed to be dead, could regain consciousness. The several stories relating to Abraham Lincoln in "Lincoln and the Supernatural" were interesting historical notes. Of the 14 Indiana stories I found "The 'Unofficial' Librarian" who kept the collection of Governor Whitcomb in De Pauw University in Greencastle intact the most entertaining. Of the 9 Iowa stories, certainly "The Possession of Emma Schmidt" is the most classic. However, I don't think it is as well-documented as the possession incident in St. Louis (Missouri is in the group of states covered in this book) which was grossly modified (even changing the gender of the victim) into a movie. But the real incident occurred in Alexian Brothers Hospital and the wing in which the exorcism occurred was locked off from the rest of the hospital for its duration. The 14 Kansas stories seem to cover a lot of college stories--probably because of a collaborator on campus (Kansas State U in Manhattan is most frequently mentioned) who collected the stories for the authors. It does include a nice Indian story, "The Legend of White Woman Creek), and a pony express story, "Phantom Riders of the Pony Express" as well however. Many of Michigan's 19 stories are about ships on the lakes. But "The Soul Of Stephen Strand" is a nicely developed story of reincarnation or possession. Of the 11 Minnesota stories, "The Horrors of Heffron Hall" uses St. Mary's College in Winona to show some of the evils that can be perpetuated by the catholic priests, and "The Levitation of Archie Collins" uses theater, magic shows, to show it is sometimes impossible to tell whether an act is real or make-belief. Missouri with 12 entries, starts with the well-known story of Pearl Curron who became the automatic writer of Patience Worth in "Patience Worth." It includes a wonderful story of two giant mastiffs who helped a physician travel through the snow in "Sentries in the Night", and tells of Samuel Clemens premonition of the events of his death in "Mark Twain, Psychic." The 7 Nebraska entries are all short ghost stories, as are many of the 11 Ohio entries, but the last one, "Old Raridan" is about a wolf. Wisconsin has 13 rather unique entries, but "The Psychic Detective" about Arthur Price Roberts is an interesting story about a unique man--a truly psychic detective. The book as a whole? A mixed bag. Some good, some boring stories presented without much appeal. Someone looking for ghost stories would not get enough emotion from any of them. Someone looking for scholarship would be dismayed that the authors are telling what they heard, not checking for accuracy. But it is an interesting collection of maybe folk tales of ghosts from the 10 states.
Never did I expect what came to me in the pages of this book. Forget all the descriptors like "amazing," or "tantalizing," or for a book like this, "spooky" or "scary," those would be pedestrian to say the least. What the authors did for me in presenting each of the documented accounts of supernatural events occurring in the midwestern states was simply staggering. I'm 67 years old and have had this book in my collection since it first came out around 1985 and for some reason, of the more than 50 books in my collection of vintage ghost stories (most of which are nearly 100 years old and obviously in hardcover editions), I chose this one, and I wonder if ANY of the other ghost story books that I own could possibly measure up. In fact, I actually had two nightmares while I was reading it, in a span of over two months, which I attribute to reading this book; THAT is how powerful these understated little vignettes actually are. I won't go into detail about any of them but two of the stories stand out. In St. Louis during the first decades of the 20th century, a woman from a poor rural background was inspired by a spirit to write novels and poetry. The woman was not completely uneducated but she did not get past the eighth grade, according to the story. The spirit that came to her "inspired" her to write volumes of literature, often in a language that was typical of a certain period. And finally the very last story of the book took place in Milwaukee where I lived and taught for 15 years focuses on the psychic detective Doc Roberts. Unbeknownst to me, there was a string of bombings in Milwaukee during the 1930s. Doc Roberts helped solve the case by predicting exactly when it would end and how. That by itself was interesting enough, but one detail stood out. When I first moved to Milwaukee in 1984, I lived in the upper flat of a duplex near Washington High School, by that time no longer a predominantly white neighborhood. My landlady, Emma Rutkowski, had lived in the house ALONE longer than I had been alive, just as a side note to my narrative here. The Doc Roberts story predicted that the bombers would blow themselves up by accident; the leader of the duo was named Hugh "Isie" Rutkowski, the same as my landlady's, so I felt an instant personal connection with the story. I will explore whether there was a connection in the coming weeks.
This book's stories are told in a way that offers the reader objective accounts, told in close to a documentary style but with an emphasis on thorough descriptions. It does not lend to any sort of sensationalism. Each story comes "as a matter of fact" and gives the reader plenty to ponder with respect to the world we live in and the unseen inhabitants of our world, inhabitants who may have been among the living at one time and chose to remain with us for reasons that were predominantly negative.
Haunted Heartland is a spooky, easy-to-read book filled with short stories spanning across America's Midwest. Each chapter represents a different Heartland state and each state brings a new bunch of tales. While the stories vary in interest to me, personally, I can appreciate that each is a genuine urban legend from that area rather than something made up for that particular book. I like this book's short story format because I have troubles paying attention to longer, overarching stories in books. It becomes a chore to sit through and a pain to keep track of. The short story method eliminates such a feeling. The stories themselves are urban legends collected over the years such as the tale of a man whose hand got imprinted in a glass window even after his death, These continue on to be about anything between the starcrossed love and haunting of a Native American man and his wife and a headless horseman-esque figure in the dark in Illinois. The variety in the spooks was one of this books' biggest benefactors. as they weren't all about some cheesy ghost or particularly restless spirits. This allowed me to enjoy the variation of things that could haunt Midwestern America.
Lent to me for spooky season, this was the perfect read filled with imaginative hauntings, some will linger with you and it often made me wonder....what if I were the one witnessing the events? How would I have reacted?? One notable night, we experienced remnants of hurricane Helene and lost power for 5 hours. I read this, in a circle of candles, watching the perfect darkness outside while the wind roared.....an immersive experience. One of the accounts traces the ownership of Franklin Castle, which for a short time I lived down the street from! Fascinating. So many of these places are still standing and able to be visited~ something I think would have only improved the stories is photos!
Maybe more like 3.5 stars. I love ghost stories, but there is almost too much here to process; by the end of the book I had fatigue. The tales are couched in much detail, but it’s not clear how the authors know these details or whether they are embellishing for the sake of atmosphere. And in some cases there is hardly anything worth reporting aside from one or two odd incidents. There is at least one story that I felt sure was entirely made up, not by these authors but by the owners of the house being described. (Who finds a dead body and decides to just leave it behind the wall of the house? Only someone making up the story of having found a dead body.) In all, an average collection.
This book was very interesting. Michael Norman truly takes you on a journey through the pages of this compilation of hauntings in the American Midwest. He doesn’t waste any time getting into the details of these paranormal stories and legends people have reported. If you’re thinking this is a detailed ghost hunting investigational book, you may be disappointed. Just the stories and just the brief history behind them. Nevertheless, I found some of the stories to be bone-chilling. Later I would like to read another one of Michael Norman’s’ “Haunted America,” books they’re so addictive. But for right now, I’m satisfied. Check this book out if you’d like to get creeped out.
This is a very old paperback book of mine that I remember buying from my Mom's former store years ago when I was young, that I haven't read in years, or at least not all of it. It's a must-read for anyone who enjoys a good, as well as historic, ghost stories that are all based on actual events that occurred in many parts of the U.S, alphabetized according to state. Some of the stories will shock you! I highly recommend it.