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Weird Travel Guides

Weird U.S.: Your Travel Guide to America's Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets

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What’s weird around here? That’s a question Mark Moran and Mark Sceurman have enjoyed asking for years—and their offbeat sense of curiosity led them to create the best-selling phenomenon, Weird N.J.  But why should they stop at New Jersey when there’s so much that’s strange, odd, and utterly nutty all across the U.S.? So they’ve expanded their universe, taken their act on the road, and found stories of weirdness in every state in the nation. The result is a travel guide of sorts, but to the kind of places voyagers will never find on their everyday maps. Instead, it’s chock full of the local legends, crazy characters, cursed roads, abandoned sites, and bizarre roadside attractions. So come along and visit such unique spots as Midgetville, explore long-empty insane asylums, and go through forgotten tunnels—but keep in mind that the maniacal Bunnyman just might be hiding out in one of them. Some of what’s out there is disturbing, some of it's hilarious, but all of it is unforgettably…weird.

349 pages, Hardcover

First published October 4, 2004

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973 people want to read

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Mark Moran

160 books34 followers

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 76 reviews
Profile Image for Daniel.
8 reviews
March 28, 2012
"Weird U.S." is an excellent read. I've owned it for years, and I still discover something new every time I open it. The whole book is rather light-hearted, even when discussing very heavy subject matter such as murders and disappearances, so it's not going to change the way anyone thinks about the universe or anything. However, for anyone interested in the paranormal, mysteries, or just plain weirdness, this is the book for you. "Weird U.S." is cleverly written and full of images depicting the sites, people, and events it mentions. Each section describes a different aspect of America's weirdness; from the first (and only) Emperor of the U.S. to a ghost who loves beer, the book is full of delightful and bizarre topics. I highly recommend it for anyone who likes weirdness or humor!
Profile Image for Elyse.
492 reviews57 followers
March 11, 2016
Once again the Kings of Weird have pulled together an entertaining and chilling collection of stories. Sort of a "Best of" collection. Although no other state can beat New Jersey for Weirdness.
Profile Image for Michael.
312 reviews29 followers
February 23, 2009
Before reading this, I assumed – per a South Park episode – that Al Gore was the only person who believed in the notorious Man-Bear-Pig chimera. Now I know otherwise. Reveling in a collage of myths and neurosis, this tome is chock-full of supposed oddities that have somehow escaped the lens of a camera (in a society where seemingly every post-1987 infant pratfall or freaking dog chasing a squirrel is filmed and aired on my damn TV each Sunday!). This is the underbelly of Americana…and I love this crap!

As a compilation of weirdness, this book includes the surreal-real (Rodia’s Towers, Lizzy Borden) and the surreal-gotta-be-fake (96.9% of the rest of the content). In format, the authors non-critically expose the innumerable overlaps of stories, sightings, and BS across the nation. Crybaby bridges and “Melon-heads” are seemingly in every county. It makes me think there’s some sort of return-postage, story-spinning template mailed to everyone who lives more than 40 miles from a video rental store. It’s the equivalent of a Mr. Potato Head doll where you just plug in pre-scripted elements to make a freakish thing. I wanna play:

“So me and some buds were driving along route 34 in North Carolina. It was a hazy evening so we decided to turn off on Devils Foot Road. Down the road there used to be an asylum where a disenfranchised Rumanian chemist was turning orphans into Melon Heads in either the early 1800s or 1973. The fearless leader of the Melon Heads incited an uprising and burned the stone building down with the deranged scientist trapped inside the attic with his collection of Peruvian voodoo dolls. The lead Melon Head also happened to be a woman, and had a couple babies. She/it was seeking the love of a non-Melon Head man from a higher station in life. Assuming the man would only court her/it if she/it didn’t have babies, she threw her babies off of Crybaby Bridge right there on Devil’s Elbow Road in Broken Whistle, Oklahoma. Nonetheless, the man still screened her phone calls so the scorned lady/thing can now be seen, dressed like a bunny, wandering in a perfect 120 mile radius within South Jersey. She hits one Wawa store in each Township at alarmingly regular intervals. Nowadays, if you listen close enough you can hear the tossed Melon children singing along to frightening Neil Diamond songs as gaseous red balls dance around near the removed Union Pacific tracks down by the river bed. These multi-colored balls seem to emanate from a tree whose roots resemble a skull and/or the cloven hooves of the Devil himself! According to early colonists in Northern California, the Native Americans of the region used to call it the “cracker tree,” and as you’re straining to look for it (as well as the blood-red water), your car will suddenly defy gravity and roll up hill (did I mention the wooden bridge slopes?). If you put baby powder on the hood, little melon-brat handprints will appear on the bumper! The melon kid apparitions are pulling your car up towards the hilltop where Creole-Hessian Jackson Whites have built an albino midget village – complete with a 2-liter soda bottle Stonehenge – dedicated to the New Testament! Freaked out, we started the engine and drove off, picking up some non-Melon Head hitch-hiking chick in a hoop skirt on the way. Charming at first, she became noticeably frigid as the conversation turned towards March Madness. Then she suddenly disappeared from the back seat as we passed the pet cemetery. Definitely the creepiest place in central Florida – don’t drink the water.” M. Grogan

My favorite quote from one of the authors was:

“…is it possible that there really is a strange subhuman beast lurking in the backwoods of Arkansas?”

Having lived there for a while, I’ll withhold commentary.
Profile Image for Josh.
32 reviews136 followers
September 18, 2007
Reading some of the fantastical and bizarre stories in this book, you might ask “Whoa, really?”

Well, no. Not really.

This coffee table book is an extension of the website www.weridus.com that documents local myths and urban legends throughout the states, including first, second or third-hand accounts submitted to them on the site. The authors fully admit that the work is apocryphal, and that no story, regardless of how suspect, would be discounted as long as it’s a good story. If you remind yourself that these stories are intended to be nothing more than that (and you do need to remind yourself, due to the authors' lack of an objective voice, and since many of the submissions swear up and down to be 100% true), they can be a fun read.

So how could that be a problem in urban legends, which are already inherently misinformational? By the inclusion of fakelore: stories that claim to be real oral history lore, but are in fact fabricated and perpetuated – usually by an individual over the internet. Perhaps the best example being Maryland’s Crybaby Bridge which is devoted a good deal of attention by the book.

The inclusion of “any-old-story-goes” aside, a great many of these tales are just not the “good stories” they claim to be. There’s only so much obviously made-up hokum that begins with “there used to be a nearby insane asylum” or “there’s this local Satanist cult” one can read before it all melts together into one labored campfire tale.

There are some good examples of classic American folklore like The Jersey Devil and La Llorona, questionably weird stories like The Beast of Bay Road and The Mothman, quirky real-life places like Gravity Hill or Coral Castle, but even these articles are let-down by intentionally vague writing that leaves the stories feeling incomplete.

I like a good spooky story as much as the next guy, but in an age where blogs pass editorial off as news and wikis create “common knowledge” out of misinformation, Weird US seems just to be another symptom of the information age’s increasingly blurred line between fact and fantasy.
Profile Image for GoldenjoyBazyll.
414 reviews24 followers
December 10, 2009
NOW... if you really want to go down roads less traveled.... here are some sugggestions for you.

I bought the game and on Thanksgiving I played it with my friends. We didn't have the book and didn't know alot about WEIRD US so we started looking up the places on the web. OMG... what a riot!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I ended up purchasing the book and as I read through it I realized... I have visited many of the places. Ok- so what does that say about me??? Maybe I enjoy the weird... the odd and offbeat a little more than I had realized???? HUMMMMM well.... I embrace my love for the extra ordinary (look at my friends - only kidding sort of guys!!!!!! :)

I was surprised that I knew some odd-spots not listed.... Ringing Rocks Park in Bucks County PA (Look it up it is sooooo cool and I went this past Sept.) A visit with the San Francisco BUSHMAN on Fisherman's Wharf (Check this character out on UTUBE- gutta love him???

Worldwide I have- on instinct- sought these types of experiences out.... if there is a crop circle I'll visit, whirlygig park- I am there, Tarot Card sculpture houses.... well how can I not be interested... I cannot miss it next time I am in Eroupe. If there are long tail monkeys living wild in a mountain in the jungle of Thailand I will find the monk who knows them and I did.

I applaud mark and Mark for thier brilliant thought of creating books to lead the masses not to miss out in experiencing WEIRD US... people, places and legends.

So... next stop on my weird experiences...... the land of India (who knows who and what I will discover! ;)
Profile Image for Laura.
1,936 reviews27 followers
July 19, 2011
You would think by now that I'd know better than to read ghost stories too late at night or too close to bedtime. Think again!

I brought Weird US on my trip to Washington, DC. Some of the stories I'd heard before. Some of the stories had some really awful drawings with them. Most of the stories are anecdotal along with a few historical facts.

It's kind of fun to read the different takes on the same legend. I like reading the background of the various legends. I didn't always understand how the stories were divided in the book; some, I think, were placed in the wrong section.

But I was always entertained.
Profile Image for Bryan Whitehead.
587 reviews7 followers
April 27, 2020
This book pursues a recent, unwelcome trend: take the content of a website, dump it onto paper, stuff it between covers and see if people will buy it. The result here is even more mixed than other efforts in similar vein. The overall goal of documenting some of the stranger spots in the American landscape is a worthwhile cause. But using entries from so many different (sometimes even anonymous) contributors produces results that are – predictably – mixed. Some of the writing is good stuff, particularly the passages by the book’s main authors and some other folk who appear to be regular contributors. Other spots are silly, poorly-written or both. At its best this is great stuff, but you have to sift through a lot of nonsense to get to it (especially in the section on ghosts).
Profile Image for Ace McGee.
552 reviews2 followers
July 31, 2017
I originally picked up this book from the library and thought I'd just pick through and read an article here and there. First I read the articles about events and mysteries taking place in my home state. That led to noticing interesting places and pictures from across America. I turned out reading the whole thing cover to cover! This book is a lot of fun and I found a couple of places I will visit, (no scary ones though). A Good study in urban legends and how similar tales pop up hundreds of miles apart. Warning: a few chapters are a bit "unsettling" and do not, as I did, read before drifting off to sleep for the night!
Profile Image for Abigail Katz.
13 reviews
February 26, 2019
I finished reading this book about 2 weeks ago. This is a very good book full of supposibly supernatural places in the US. Each location has a clearly explained myth or story behind it, and each tale is unique and interesting. I could not put this book down! Now I even want to visit some of these places!

If you are into ghost hunting or just like myths and the supernatural, then this book is for you. The places cover a range of subjects, such as ghosts, aliens, science, mysteries, and just plain weird. Actual visitors of these odd places wrote about their experiences, which I think is really awesome.
Profile Image for This is V!.
527 reviews1 follower
June 9, 2018
An incredible guide to all the strange things that go down in the American land . This book contains so many weird stories that have been told and it makes you think about going to all these places to find out for yourself what’s going on . I have actually been to so many of the locations listed in the book but never seen these things because I did not know about it , but now I do and will gladly go back to check them out !
Profile Image for Zachary Shelton.
32 reviews
March 16, 2020
I went into this book wanting to know about some weird and interesting things in US and I came out of it pretty disappointed. A lot of the book didn’t interest me all that much with topics I didn’t care about like gateways to hell and cemeteries and horror folklore
Profile Image for Christine McCloud.
170 reviews
January 18, 2018
I couldn't even get through this book. It was like reading one National Inquirer story after another. The only redeeming thing was a factual article about the abandoned Danvers State Hospital.
31 reviews
August 17, 2018
A great travel guide to the weird and terrifying. It's like a travel guide/collection of horror stories.
Profile Image for Tia.
18 reviews
January 7, 2022
Not really a travel guide so much as a collection of weird American stories and places.
5 reviews
May 30, 2017
If you think you know a lot about our great country, think again! Weird U.S. provides readers with interesting legend stories and hair raising horror stories. Every section kept me reading and horrified. I am a big fan of spooky stories and this book was perfect for me. My favorite section of the book had to be The Gates of Hell. This section felt most real to me and even had me thinking and dreaming about it days after I read it. It even had me scared of the woods for quite some time. Also, if you are a traveler and love to explore fascinating places then this book can also serve as a travel guide. I know for sure that I would like to visit some of the places soon. What you read in this book may be hard to believe and extremely surprising, but it will definitely entertain you and make you want to travel across the country and experiences things for yourself. I recommend this book to anyone who wants to know more about this intriguing country.
7 reviews1 follower
Read
June 28, 2016
The book Weird U.S. by Mark Moran and Mark Sceurman features selected short stories from all over the world. A review on the book states, “This book is loaded with weird facts, legends, lore, people, photographs, ghost stories, haunted places, supernatural figures, terrifying ruins and tunnels and forests and abandoned buildings, tall tales, odd museums, and answerless mysteries.” The stories were pretty interesting, so it was not too boring but they were kind of long at times. The short stories were about hauntings and amusements in different places around the world. One story was called the Devil’s Tree and it is about a tree in New Jersey that is believed to have had supernatural powers. The tree sits in a field all by itself with a fence around it. The story states that there are dead souls all around the tree. Many people in history were killed on or by this tree. Anyone who cuts down the tree gets cursed. It is also told that snow will not fall or stay on the tree or the ground around it. This is just one example, of the many many stories found in this book. These stories are supposed to be real. To hear the rest of the stories, you should read the book. The author’s style changed between the stories sometimes the stories are shorter and easy to understand sometimes they are longer and more detailed. The characters, settings, and plots in each story were different too so it kept the book entertaining. I recommend this book because it has really cool ghost stories it’s a interesting book if you take the time to read it.
1 review
Read
May 24, 2016
I recommend the book Weird U.S. by Mark Moran and Mark Sceurman have elected short stories all over the world. The stories were pretty interesting, so it wasnt to boring but they were kind of long. The short stories were about hauntings and amusements and other stuff.
One story called the Devil’s Tree is a great example of some of these stories. It is about a tree in NJ that is believed to have super natural powers. It sits in a field all by itself. There is now fence all around it. The tale is that dead souls are all around the tree. Many people in history were killed on or by this tree. Any time anyone who cuts down the tree gets cursed. It is also told that snow will not fall or stay on the tree or the ground around it.

This is just one example, of the many many stories found in this book. These stories are supposed to be real. The authors researched some but not all the stories. You can research some of these stories too. I have gone on the internet and gotten more information and you can too.
1 review
June 16, 2016
I recommend Weird USA by Mark Moran and Mark Sceurman. The authors use short stories to explore towns around the US.

This book was interesting because it all happened in real life. Most towns have haunted houses and buildings. I think it's really cool that a lot of different towns have different stories to tell. Most of the stories told have alot of horror.

One of the stories is from Fairfax, VA and talks about an evil killer clown that dresses in a fuzzy rabbit costume. He's called Bunnyman. They said this bunny rabbit as killed about 15 people and he has is own bridge. There was some college kids making a documentary and one of the kids went missing that night and was found dead hanging from the bridge.

We don't know if these stories are true or not but there all very interesting and you can visit these places all around the world.

Take a different general reason from above and get more specific. Use a specific example from the book.
State how you feel about the book one more time but use different words.
19 reviews
August 24, 2007
The writing can drive you a little nuts (mostly because most of it is in the form of letters from people who have written to the authors, and therefore good grammar is not required), and despite the many promises to look at the material objectively, the authors' REALLY tend to favor supernatural explanations. But overall this book was just fun. I'm no believer in ghosts. At the same time I can't resist a good haunted house tale (even if I don't believe). There are chapters about everything from abandoned houses to regional monster tales to tombstones. Despite my many frustrations with aspects of American politics and ideology, I cannot help but love this country, and this book manages to convey what a mixed bag American is -- the superstition, religion, science, and history of the land. I think that's what I fell in love with in this book, the representation of our country, the old gods and the new.
Profile Image for Steve Johnson.
Author 31 books6 followers
December 29, 2012
A nice survey of strange places, ghost stories, tall tales, urban legends, local flavor, roadside attractions, and other all-American weirdness. A lot of the material will be familiar to Fortean-leaning readers, but there's enough obscure stuff to make it worth a read. Some people might complain about the fact that the authors almost gleefully refuse to engage in any real fact-checking or verifying. A lot of the stories were submitted by website readers, which means that in some cases there are multiple conflicting accounts about the same subject, and a few tales that have been debunked or explained are presented as if the debunking or explanation never happened or is in dispute. However, it should be noted that the authors state right up front that they're more interested in collecting the stories themselves than worrying about whether or not the stories are true. I can't decide whether that's admirable or lazy, but still found the book enjoyable.
Profile Image for Lauren.
26 reviews
March 6, 2015
One of the most addicting books I've ever read - and I almost never read it at all!

My dad is good at finding gifts online that you wouldn't think of yourself, but as soon as he gives it to you it's like "this is awesome!". In this case 'Weird US' was a Christmas gift for my mother, who said something along the lines of 'oh, that's interesting' and put it aside. A few days later, having read every book I'd gotten, I started reading 'Weird US' and was hooked, adopting it into my own personal library. Some of the stories, while obviously just urban legends and campfire stories, were good enough - and accompanied by delightfully creepy Photoshopped pictures - to send shivers down my spine. Others were funny, strange, or 'wtf?'. After finding out this was only one in a series of great books, I started snapping up copies of other 'Weird' books and I love them to this day.

Read with a bit of skepticism, but enjoy!
Profile Image for Jennifer.
778 reviews45 followers
March 13, 2015
This book of U.S. folklore, ostensibly a travel guide to weird sites (though many of the ones listed are essentially off-limits unless the traveler is into trespassing), is a mixed bag. Some of it is fascinating, some of it dull and repetitive. As I guidebook, I don't think it's particularly useful; you'd have to supplement it with maps and a guidebook that actually told you things. As a collection of folklore, it has some shivery moments--especially with some of the eyewitness accounts gleaned from the authors' website--but there's also an element of sameness to many of them. (It's like teenagers all over the country get kind of buzzed and hang out at creepy locales in the middle of the night with their friends and . . . BOOM! Vague bad feelings and creepy shadows abound!) I've read stuff that was funnier, stuff that was scarier, and for all that it claims to be a 'U.S.' guidebook, there are wide swathes of the country that don't get much attention.
1 review
May 24, 2016

I recommend Weird U.S to everyone. The author’s Mark Moran and Mark Sceurman have collected short stories from all around the world and published them into this book.

The author uses some scary stories with ghosts, others with unexplained phenomena and haunted places. Some of the stories are just interesting like local legends or personalized property. What's really cool is that the stories are all true from all around the U.S.

This book is very interesting, it has amazing stories to tell. The authors choice to take stories from around the country are fascinating because there's gotta be one in every town. Just like my town, there's an abandoned building by the elementary school called the Brigham academy. I think a lot of towns have these stories. If you're the type of person that likes gossip or rumors then you'll love this book.
Profile Image for TJ.
355 reviews12 followers
December 16, 2016
A collection of the some the strangest, most unexplained, haunted, and fabled places in the United States. Authors Mark Moran and Mark Sceurman have personally visited many of the places that they write about in "Weird US", but also included are stories from "locals" who have inside knowledge or experience with these strange sites and places. Much of the book is centered in the states of New Jersey, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Indiana, Illinois, and Pennsylvania, so people from those states will really enjoy the book and will possible relate more to it. For others who just like to read about some of the more unique places in our country, "Weird US" is for you. Plenty of pictures support the stories along with a solid index for referencing later.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 76 reviews

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