So, I picked this book up because according to one blurb I read, Harper Lee, author of To Kill A Mockingbird, who was actually at the trial of the man who killed Willie Maxwell, a preacher who was accused of murdering five of his family, and court-wise got away with it.
This book tells the story of both the Reverend Willie Maxwell and his accused of crimes, the fact that both he and the man that murdered him both got away with their murders in court (and with the same attorney for both men, bonkers), and the book that Harper Lee wanted to write about the story called ‘The Reverend’.
It’s just sort of… it blew my mind a little. The levels of True Crime and such that are in this book. It’s like a rubix cube of stories that have been put together by the author, Cep. Such an interesting read.
You may like this book If you Liked: Mockingbird by Charles J. Shields, In Cold Blood by Truman Capote, or Rising Road by Sharon L. Davies
Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, and the Last Trial of Harper Lee by Casey Cep
In 1978, Harper Lee started taking notes for a true-crime book about the trial of Robert Burns, who was accused of shooting the Rev. Willie Maxwell to death in a crowded funeral home -- after the funeral of Maxwell’s third wife’s adopted daughter, whom he was widely believed to have killed (along with several other people) for insurance money. But the book was never written -- or if it was, Lee hid the manuscript so well it’s never turned up. New Yorker writer Casey Cep tells the whole tangled story in Furious Hours -- and you can find our critic Ilana Masad’s review here.
Journalist Casey Cep's fascinating book picks up a true-crime story that the "To Kill a Mockingbird" author left unfinished, upending cliches about her in the process.
In the late 1970s, Harper Lee’s neighbors reported hearing her typewriter at all hours. She’d recently finished a nine-month stay in rural Alabama, where she was reporting on a string of grisly murders, and it seemed possible that, years after To Kill a Mockingbird, the beloved writer would publish once again.
She never finished that book, though. She dropped the project, entitled The Reverend, after a decade of work. Save for Go Set a Watchmen — a novel drafted half-a-century before it was published in 2015, and clouded by considerable questions about authorial agency — Lee remained largely absent from public life.
This was the murky territory that the journalist Casey Cep entered when she decided to pick up the threads of the case that Lee had left behind. “Unfinishedness,” Cep writes in her new book about both Lee and the case, “is an emotional category as much as a chronological and aesthetic one.”
Several complex stories lie at the heart of Cep’s Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, and the Last Trial of Harper Lee, which Cep handles by dividing the book into three parts; the first two of which deal with the crime that Lee was reporting on for The Reverend. Part one is about Willie Maxwell, a black minister in Alabama in the 1970s, who was accused of murdering five of his family members for insurance money. (Although a jury was never able to indict him, he was shot by a vigilante at the funeral of his stepdaughter.) Part two takes up the story of Tom Radney, an Atticus Finch-like figure who defended both Maxwell and the vigilante. And part three treats Lee as a character, exploring both the demons that stymied her writing and the side of her that we’re less familiar with — the lively, obsessive reporter who contributed massive (and largely unrecognized) research to her friend Truman Capote’s masterpiece, In Cold Blood.
Furious Hours, a work braced equally by lyricism and meticulous research, doesn’t attempt to solve the Maxwell case, but over the course of 275 pages, it deftly touches on race, crime, journalism, and what it means to try to tell the truth. Cep has two upcoming readings in the Triangle, one at Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh (where she briefly spent time doing parish work) on August 12 and another at Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill on August 15. The INDY caught up with her by phone as she was coming in from gardening at her home on the Eastern Shore of Maryland.
Click link for interview.
Casey Cep
Monday, Aug. 12, 7 p.m., free
Quail Ridge Books, Raleigh
Thursday, Aug. 15, 7 p.m., free
Flyleaf Books, Chapel Hill
Love Harper Lee? Author Casey Cep’s well researched book FURIOUS HOURS is a fascinating combination of true crime, Southern courtroom drama and an neat overview of Lee’s life. You may want to read IN COLD BLOOD and Harper Lee’s novels afterward for total immersion.
+ Author : Casey Cep (Author), Hillary Huber (Narrator)
+ Format : MP3 ( without DRM – You can listen on many Other Devices )
+ You will get link download from Dropbox when Completed Purchase !
+ Listening Length : 11 hours and 16 minutes
+ Language : English
The stunning story of an Alabama serial killer and the true-crime book that Harper Lee worked on obsessively in the years after To Kill a Mockingbird.
“A triumph on every level…. Casey Cep has excavated this mesmerizing story and tells it with grace and insight and a fierce fidelity to the truth.” (David Grann, best-selling author of Killers of the Flower Moon)
Reverend Willie Maxwell was a rural preacher accused of murdering five of his family members for insurance money in the 1970s. With the help of a savvy lawyer, he escaped justice for years until a relative shot him dead at the funeral of his last victim. Despite hundreds of witnesses, Maxwell’s murderer was acquitted – thanks to the same attorney who had previously defended the reverend.
Sitting in the audience during the vigilante’s trial was Harper Lee, who had traveled from New York City to her native Alabama with the idea of writing her own In Cold Blood, the true-crime classic she had helped her friend Truman Capote research 17 years earlier. Lee spent a year in town reporting and many more years working on her own version of the case.
Now, Casey Cep brings this story to life, from the shocking murders to the courtroom drama to the racial politics of the Deep South. At the same time, she offers a deeply moving portrait of one of the country’s most beloved writers and her struggle with fame, success, and the mystery of artistic creativity.