Haunted America by Michael Norman and the late Beth Scott is a collection of ghost stories and legends from America's fifty states and Canada's provinces. The other books in this collection are Haunted Heartland and Haunted Wisconsin, all exceedingly better (not saying much) than this one. This book has a lot of dry stories, but the ones that keep me coming back are the Hell House in Louisiana and the music room in Illinois.
Hell House was about a slave owner, Madame Lalaurie, who really wasn't human. She looked human, but with what she did to her slaves, she was anything but. There would be experiments, torture on them. Her crimes probably would have continued if there wasn't a fire started by a slave to her home. She, sadly, got away in the end, but the whole background if you were to do research on your own is disturbing. I described this Hell House at length to differentiate between the home in Louisiana supposedly owned by Satan's lover. That particular tale was a bit of an eyeroll.
I wanted to get that spine tingling sensation cover to cover reading Haunted America, but other than the two aforementioned, I didn't get that at all. The authors are objective for the most part in their rehashings, not saying whether or not they believe in the supernatural and leaving it up the reader ultimately. I don't believe in spirits myself, but I love myself some wonderful tales, growing up on Alvin Schwartz's Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark trilogy which I still unabashedly read as an adult. Unfortunately, those books left me with more fear of the dark, questioning my belief in the afterlife than Haunted America will. It's so very dry and a lot of the stories are boring. I'm not undermining the affected people's experiences, but Norman and Scott didn't do that stellar of a job with retelling some of them.
Their length of research shows with their extensive bibliography, so they definitely did their homework. They just couldn't tell them that well.