Normal for a carb engine would be 6-8. I did run into one once that failed high. If I remember right is was about 12 or 15psi. There's no adjustment. We cured that one by replacement, which seems a little drastic so far. The danger is that high pressure would overwhelm the float needle and flood. That wouldn't be good, but is probably not happening as of yet. If the pressure remains high after shutdown it just means there are no leaks and the needle and seat are holding the pressure. Monitor and see if it keeps climbing over time. Come back tomorrow and look at it before starting and see if it's still high and if not, what pressure the boost pump throws.
Another possibility is that the fuel pressure sensor is getting flakey. We put a reference gauge on my buddy's plane to confirm before he sprung for a new pump.
Seems like in the hot months, most people are worrying about low pressure. ;-)
Ed