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Cargando... Decent Peoplepor De'Shawn Charles Winslow
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Decent People written by De' Shawn Charles Winslow is a excellent mystery filled with richly developed characters whom you’ll love or love to hate. Winslow who is gay uses his southern background and sexuality as a backdrop for the triple murder brilliantly. ( ) Jo tries to figure who killed her fiancée's half-siblings before he finds himself in prison. Lymp knows he didn't do it, but he cannot think of anyone who would have had a grudge against them. Secrets come out. Arguments are seen in a different light. But no one believes those who argued with the Harmon siblings could kill them. So, who did it? I enjoyed this story. The murder was only part of the story. I have to admit, I never saw this one. Good thing I don't make my living as a detective! The town of West Mills, North Carolina, is very much the focus of the story. You get the history of the town through the eyes of the people who live on the east side of town--how things were, how things are now. You learn of the people of the town. Some come and go a lot. Some stay. Some go and come back to stay regardless of what may happen to them by coming back. The town is as much a character as any of the people. I have a sense that the town is telling the story of this group of people at this time. Next time, the town will tell a story of a different group of people. Things happen and people come and go but the town goes on and will continue to exist and watch the people who reside there for a time. Now I want to read the first book set in this town, IN WEST MILLS. Ah, we are happily back in West Mills, NC again, and this time (1976), we ride back and forth across the bumpy contrast that is the right and wrong side of the tracks. Jo Wright, born in the small town and pulled to NYC by her mother at twelve, has returned to retire and to marry her old friend and neighbor Lymp (Olympus) Seymore. However, upon her arrival, Lymp's three half-siblings, with whom he does not get along, are all found shot to death in their home. Lymp is an immediate suspect, and Jo need reassurance that he is not the perpetrator and that his rarely seen but fearsome temper did not flare up into brutal violence. Every tongue in this town, Black or white, is wagging about the three victims, who were both mysterious and widely disliked. Drug dealers? Relatives? Racists? The local white police chief has no interest in either dead or live Black people, and Jo takes it on herself to try and clear Lymp. One of the victims, a pediatrician, seemed to have her sister and brother on a tight leash and Jo finds out that she tried to convert a young gay man into being straight by having two teenage boys beat the gay out of him. The incredible gossip line is vividly portrayed, as is the era when being an out gay man was tantamount to being suicidal in a tiny town. Jo's beloved brother in NYC is actually dealing with the same fears, so it's not just the South, it was the times (and still is in many places, and getting worse). The author's fondness for the comfort of a tiny cocoon, along with his deep knowledge of the harm perpetrated by its lack of privacy, make this brilliant sociological mystery sophomore effort almost as fine as his debut novel, In West Mills. It’s 1976 in the still-segregated town of West Mills N Carolina, and two sisters and a brother are found shot to death in their home. Their half-brother Olympus (Lymp) is the main suspect having been heard just days before threatening to kill them. He is taken into police custody but, without enough evidence, he is released but many in the town still think he’s the culprit. His fiance, Josephine Wright isn’t altogether sure of his innocence herself but is determined to find out the truth and there are plenty of others who were seen having heated words with the sisters just prior to the murders. Decent People is the second book by De’Shawn Charles Winslow but it works quite well as a standalone. It is at once a compelling mystery and an interesting portrait of race, class, and family in the ‘70s American south. The story is divided between various povs but it is easy to keep them separate. A well-written, well-plotted tale that grabbed me from the first page and kept my interest throughout. Thanks to Netgalley and the publishers for the opportunity to read this book in exchange for an honest review sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
When three siblings are found shot to death in the still-segregated town of West Mills, North Carolina, in 1976, and the white authorities show no interest in solving the case, Josephine Wright sets out to prove the innocence of her childhood sweetheart,Olympus "Lymp" Seymore, the murder victims' half-brother and the leading suspect in the case. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.6000Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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