Chicago Haunted Handbook: 99 Ghostly Places You Can Visit In and Around the Windy City (America's Haunted Road Trip) by Jeff Morris


Chicago Haunted Handbook: 99 Ghostly Places You Can Visit In and Around the Windy City (America's Haunted Road Trip)
Title : Chicago Haunted Handbook: 99 Ghostly Places You Can Visit In and Around the Windy City (America's Haunted Road Trip)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 157860527X
ISBN-10 : 9781578605279
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 256
Publication : First published January 1, 2013

Gangsters, Gaslights, and Ghastly Murders―Join in Chicago’s Grandest Ghost Hunt Chicago Haunted Handbook, part of the popular America's Haunted Road Trip series, is written with the ghost enthusiast in mind. All 100 chapters contain information on the history and the haunting surrounding each location, as well as detailed directions on how to locate each site. Many of the chapters also contain insider information that only a local would know, making it easier for ghost hunters to investigate. Ghost hunters Jeff Morris and Vincent Sheilds explore all the best haunted locales Chicago has to offer, including Resurrection Cemetery, Bachelor's Grove Cemetery, Murder Castle, the St. Valentine's Day Massacre Site, and even Wrigley Field. Each two-page entry includes directions from downtown, a historical overview of the haunted place, the story of ghostly doings in that place, and advice on visiting yourself―if you dare.


Chicago Haunted Handbook: 99 Ghostly Places You Can Visit In and Around the Windy City (America's Haunted Road Trip) Reviews


  • Michael Kleen

    You would be wrong if you thought nothing more could be written about Chicago ghostlore. In fact, several books were released in 2013 that featured more of your favorite haunts from the Windy City. Chicago Haunted Handbook: 99 Ghostly Places You Can Visit In and Around the Windy City by Jeff Morris and Vince Sheilds, was one of them.

    Published by Clerisy Press, Chicago Haunted Handbook is part of the “America’s Haunted Road Trip” series. At 226 pages and with a retail price of $15.95, this book invites you to, “Join in Chicago’s Grandest Ghost Hunt.” It features 99 haunted places, along with four “places that didn’t quite make the book.” The locations are divided into five sections: Cemeteries; Bars and Restaurants; Roads and Bridges; Parks; and Museums, Theaters, Hotels, and other Buildings.

    The authors are an unlikely pair. Jeff Morris, from Cincinnati, Ohio, is an experienced author with several titles under his belt. Vince Sheilds was born in Elgin in 1984 and moved to Chicago in 2006, where he formed the Chicago Paranormal Investigators.

    I’ve read just about every book on Illinois ghostlore, so I look at them with a very discerning eye. Chicago Haunted Handbook has several good qualities that make it worth owning. First, it features several locations seldom covered by other books. The old Huntley Grease Factory is my favorite, but the Polish Museum of America, Joliet Potter’s Field, Tyrell Road Cemetery, and The Drinkingbird, are all relatively new.

    Second, the book contains an appendix of day tripping “mini tours.” Each features a couple of different stops (or days), with a different location for each stop. There is even a haunted pub crawl and a gangster tour. I enjoy extras like this, especially since it allows you to explore these places at your own pace (as opposed to going on a bus tour).

    Finally, there is a clear criteria for including each location in the book. This is highlighted by the “places that didn’t quite make the book.” Specifically, each location had to be somewhere you could actually visit (no private homes) and the authors had to believe it was actually haunted.

    Of course, no book is without its problems, and Chicago Haunted Handbook has its fair share. To begin with a pet peeve of mine, the authors do not cite any sources, but we know they must have read other material in order to write this book. This book has four appendixes, but not even a bibliography or a “works cited” page. In their acknowledgments, the authors even talk about “our countless hours of research into this vast array of haunted locations.” So why not give credit where credit is due?

    Also, in his introduction, Vince Sheilds claims that “there is no other book that includes information such as visiting hours, exact directions, history, and the ghost story for each of these locations.” As someone who has written and published at least one book that does just that, I can say that this claim is completely untrue.

    There are other books that do as well. Richard Crowe’s Chicago’s Street Guide to the Supernatural comes to mind. In the proceeding paragraph, Sheilds even says “To be honest, I have read them all,” in reference to “haunted Chicago type” publications. Ok, so, again, let’s give credit where credit is due.

    My final criticism is relatively minor, but somewhat important. Chicago Haunted Handbook contains places that are located far from Chicago. Some of these include Tyrell Road Cemetery in Gilberts, IL; Axeman’s Bridge in Crete, IL; Blood’s Point Road in Cherry Valley, IL; The Gate in Waukegan; Antioch Downtown Theater in Antioch; Huntley Grease Factory in Huntley, IL; and Manteno State Hospital in Manteno, IL.

    For Pete’s sake, Cherry Valley is 63 miles west of O’Hair Airport! There’s nothing wrong with writing about these places, but if you are writing a book about “places you can visit in and around the Windy City,” I feel you should be a bit more geographically constrained.

    Overall, Chicago Haunted Handbook is definitely worth adding to your collection. Every book has flaws, but the new and interesting places Jeff Morris and Vince Sheilds include in this book more than make up for them. So get in your car and go explore the Windy City!

  • Jutta

    Lots of good site

    It's nice to see lots of new sites that aren't in all the other books. Plenty of new places to check out.

  • Mary

    Great book.

  • Fern

    I wish I read this book faster but I intentionally waited until the end of the summer to start reading, hence the start of Fall and the hauntings season!

    This is perhaps the most detailed and most helpful book I have read in terms of haunted areas in and around Chicago including all the surroundings suburbs. Written by paranormal specialist, Jeff Morris, it was a pleasure to know this book was written by a local expert in the field.

    From the famous Cuba road in Barrington and Bachelors Grove in Chicago to the more unknown areas of the greater Chicago area, the fact that this book sticks to the suburbs and the city of Chicago, really was a plus! Normally, most books I've read that revolve around Illinois, tend to have more areas further south, hours away so this is the perfect book if you live in the Chicago area or plan on visiting.

    Each chapter is a brief run-down of the haunted area. There are general directions on how to get to each place specifically, hours of operation (such as parks that close at midnight or businesses that are closed after a certain time). They do not advocate breaking in if there are imposed hours or if there are gates but there are also places that are free to roam that have no restrictions of operating hours or places that you can park on a side street and walk to. There are a few brief paragraphs on the history of these locations, what makes them haunted and what people of today currently report and have reported.

    Overall, this is an awesome and perhaps best book if you don't want to travel far away from Chicago. With 99 places to choose from, I also enjoyed that the book is set up so that all the haunted locations are close to one another, rather than jumping from the northside to southside, etc. Each chapter is by suburb/region. If you're curious on picking up this book, I would do so. It's part of my book collection now! :)