A fleeting figure dressed in a white party dress roams the streets of southwest Chicago. A long-dead Iowa college student treads the staircase in an old building. A ghostly, plaid-shirted workman plays peek-a-boo with a ticket seller in a Minnesota theater. A phantom wolf prowls Ohio's Jackson and Pike Counties.
For decades, journalist Michael Norman has been tracking down spine-tingling tales that seem to arise from authentic incidents in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, and Wisconsin. In Haunted Heartland he offers more than eighty entertaining, eerie stories. Are they true in the world that we know, or only in a dark vale of twilight?
A fleeting figure dressed in a white party dress roams the streets of southwest Chicago. A long-dead Iowa college student treads the staircase in an old building. A ghostly, plaid-shirted workman plays peek-a-boo with a ticket seller in a Minnesota theater. A phantom wolf prowls Ohio's Jackson and Pike Counties.
For decades, journalist Michael Norman has been tracking down spine-tingling tales that seem to arise from authentic incidents in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, and Wisconsin. In Haunted Heartland he offers more than eighty entertaining, eerie stories. Are they true in the world that we know, or only in a dark vale of twilight?
Michael Norman is an emeritus professor of journalism at the University of WisconsinRiver Falls. His many books include six other collections of American supernatural stories, including Haunted Wisconsin, also published by the University of Wisconsin Press.
An intriguing, engaging collection that is a real pleasure to read.
This edition combines old favorites with new discoveries of strange
tales. The author's extensive research into Midwestern ghost story
traditions makes this well-loved book a valuable resource for
folklorists."" - Elizabeth Tucker, author of Haunted Halls
""Haunted Heartland does not endorse ghosts or examine their
reality. Instead, it reports belief. It collects our stories, our
American folklore."" - Jay Rath, author of The W-Files
""Excellent [and] easy to read."" - School Library Journal
""There is a cumulative chilling effect in the simple telling of
these unexplained events. [The authors] have steadfastly researched
and preserved dozens of amazing tales that might otherwise have
been lost."" - Chicago Magazine
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |