Nonfiction
Non-fiction
Haunted Wisconsin, Third Edition, Fall 2011
Now available in a third edition with updates and several new accounts, Haunted Wisconsin remains a favorite collection of unexplained midwestern tales, enjoyed by readers of all ages.
The Nearly Departed: Minnesota Ghost Stories and Legends
"Mike Norman has a proven gift for scaring up spooky stories. These hair-raising Minnesota hauntings range from theaters to farm fields to B-and-Bs. Mike reports. You decide. And keep the lights on just in case!" Stan Turner, veteran broadcast journalist
"An entertaining and frightening journey through the darkened neighborhoods of Minnesota." Dave Schrader, host of Darkness Radio
"Skeptic Michael Norman makes authentic paranormal events more meaningful. It's great to have Minnesota on the paranormal map!" Phylis Galde, editor-in-chief, Fate Magazine.
The dozens of stories in THE NEARLY DEPARTED: MINNESOTA GHOST STORIES & LEGENDS take place all across the state of Minnesota, from a haunted depot in Duluth to a fusty old farmhouse hard by the Iowa border; from Pipestone’s ghostly history museum to a Victorian mansion in Hastings that may be the most haunted house in Minnesota!
You’ll meet a college administrator who saw a ghost in St. Paul’s famous Fitzgerald Theatre, discover Minnesota’s most haunted college campus, and be amazed to read about a man who saw a ghost lingering at a busy Rochester, Minn., highway interchange.
In Minneapolis, an art museum may be haunted by people once associated with the antique furniture in the museum's "period rooms;" the old hotel frequented by novelist Sinclair Lewis hosts the ghosts of a tee shirt-clad young man and a little boy; hear about the St. Paul family that had a ghostly nanny show up late one night, and wonder if it might have been a poltergeist at work in a south suburban farm field.
Trade Paperback, Fall 2009
ISBN 13:978-0-87351-717-1
Price: $16.95
Minnesota Historical Society Press
345 Kellogg Blvd. W.
St. Paul, Minnesota 55102-1906
www.mnhs.org/mhspress
REVIEW, Minneapolis Observer, Spring 2010
"They say everyone loves a good ghost story, but that's just another way of saying, 'You go to the dark beyond and I'll wait here for you to tell me about it.' At least, that's my preference after wading into Michael Norman's fine collection of ghoulish tales.
"This is the sixth collection of hauntings from Norman, a retired University of Wisconsin - River Falls journalism professor, and he brings both a reporter's skepticism and a slightly morbid fascination with apparitions to his work. He covers a lot of geographic territory, interviewing eye witnesses to ghostly altercations from Pipestone and Winona to Moorhead and Crosby. Here in the Twin Cities, there are plenty of great stories, as well, and Norman dutifully reports on the usual suspects (the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, the Fitzgerald Theater, Forepaugh's Restaurant, and the Wabasha Caves) while adding a few more hauntings to our local legends.
"There's the nanny, for instance, who makes regular appearances at a house in St. Paul's Summit Hill neighborhood, and the apparition who likes to rock in the rocking chair in Mrs. Moriarity's old house on Goodrich Avenue. Norman also investigates the hauntings at City Hall in Minneapolis and at the State Capitol.
"Norman is careful to leave room for doubters, but it's hard to read these stories without coming away with a new appreciation for the murkiness of the afterlife -- which is precisely what a good ghost story is supposed to do." CC
HAUNTED HOMELAND
HAUNTED HOMELAND continues the HAUNTED AMERICA series exploring the supernatural in the United States. It is a comprehensive collection of ghostly tales from America's haunted landscape.
Non-Fiction Horror
Haunted Heritage
A definitive collection of North American ghost stories, the latest in the Haunted America series
Non-fiction, ghost stories
Non-fiction, Educational