Novels by Author
Alice Adams
A Southern Exposure. New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 1995.
At the end of the Great Depression, Harry and Cynthia Baird
and their 11-year-old daughter move from Connecticut to Pinehill, N.C.,
a fictional town probably based on Chapel Hill. Hoping to escape debt,
drinking problems, and past mistakes, the family is plunged into small
town southern culture. The novel traces their attempts to fit in to a
tightly woven community.
After the War. New York: Knopf, 2000.
This novel, Adams's last, continues the story of the Baird family begun
in A Southern Exposure . The story is set in the period during
and immediately after World War II in the fictional Piedmont town of Pinehill.
In tracing a number of crises, large and small, Adams portrays a large and
diverse cast of characters and give special attention to the details of
domestic life in North Carolina in the 1940s.

Sheila Kay Adams
My Old True Love. Chapel Hill: Algonquin, 2004.
Narrator Arty Norton looks back on her rough life in the North Carolina
mountains in the mid nineteenth-century. Set in the fictional mountain
town of Sodom, N.C., Arty focuses on the years leading up to the Civil
War, when her brother Hackley and their orphaned cousin Larkin are growing
up. The two boys fall in love with the same girl, but romance is quickly
pushed aside when the war begins. Adams, a successful folk singer, accentuates
the story with passages from old mountain ballads.
Daphne Athas
Entering Ephesus. New York: Viking, 1971.
The Bishop family has fallen on hard times. Forced to leave their large
and comfortable house in Connecticut, they move to the small, provincial
town of Ephesus, a fictional Piedmont town based on Chapel Hill. In the
midst of the chaos of relocating and adjusting to life in the south, the
lively Bishop daughters -- Irene, Urie, and Loco Poco -- are just entering
adolescence. Their thoughts and observations enliven the novel, which
is set amidst depression and war in the 1930s and 1940s. There is a small
community named Ephesus in Davie County, but this novel is clearly set
in a Piedmont college town. Entering Ephesus won the Sir Walter Raleigh
Award for the best work of fiction by a North Carolinian in 1972.
Ellyn Bache.
Activist's Daughter. Duluth, Minn.:
Spinsters Ink, 1997.
In this novel set amidst the Civil Rights protests of the early 1960s, Beryl
Rosinsky has graduated from high school and is anxious to get away from
her activist mother and her hometown of Washington, D.C. She enrolls at
the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where she finds a different
world -- conservative, Southern, and with long-standing campus cliques
firmly established. Beryl is gradually drawn into local Civil Rights protests,
which are based on actual demonstrations by UNC students against segregated
businesses in Chapel Hill. As a result of her own political awakening,
Beryl ends up with a deeper understanding and appreciation of her mother.
Riggs Park. New York: Harlequin Next, 2005.
When Barbara is diagnosed with cancer, she calls on her lifelong best
friend Marilyn for support. Marilyn has problems of her own, but pushes
these aside rushes to Washington, D.C. Together the two women explore
their friendship and their past, uncovering along the way secrets from
their childhood together in the Washington suburb of Riggs Park. Although
most of the novel is set in the Washington area, it begins and ends at
Marilyn’s home in Wrightsville Beach.

Mignon F. Ballard
Angel Whispered Danger: An Augusta Goodnight Mystery. New
York: St. Martin's, 2003.
Kate McBride expected to spend her family reunion in the fictional mountain
town of Bishop's Bridge, N.C. dodging prying questions about her conspicuously
absent husband and the state of their marriage. But the family is quickly
distracted when the host's housekeeper falls into a ravine and whispers
just before she dies that she was pushed. Kate sets out to find the killer,
helped by two unlikely accomplices: the friendly ghost Augusta Goodnight
and her trainee angel Penelope. Their investigation leads them into the
mysterious past of Kate's uncle Ernest's quirky estate, Bramblewood.

Nancy Bartholomew
Stand By Your Man. New York: New York: HarperCollins, 2001.
Maggie Reid, a country music singer based in Greensboro,
is questioned by the police when her former husband, the "Satellite
Dish and Mobile Home King," disappears. In order to clear herself,
Maggie pursues the mystery on her own, becoming involved in the seedy
underside of life in Greensboro, where she finds, among other strange
personalities, a mysterious group called "The Redneck Mafia."

Doris Betts
The River to Pickle Beach. New York: Harper & Row,
1972.
In the turbulent summer of 1968, Jack and Bebe Sellars take over the
management of Pickerel Beach on the North Carolina coast. Hoping for
a peaceful, easy summer, their plans are disrupted by the arrival of
several difficult people, including a violent, racist former Army buddy
of Jack's. The story, though written in third-person, is told from the
alternating viewpoints of Bebe and Jack, with the events of the summer
triggering memories of their past together. Throughout the novel, the
racial violence and volatile national political struggles never seem
far from the surface.
Souls Raised From the Dead. New York: Knopf, 1994.
The novel looks into the troubled relationship between
Mary Grace Thompson, the teenage daughter of state trooper Frank Thompson,
and her estranged mother, Christine. Mary Grace has a life-threatening
kidney disease and the story takes us through the emotions and spiritual
questioning a family faces during a tragedy. The novel is set in Carrboro,
Hillsborough, Durham, Jacksonville, and Chapel Hill at the UNC hospital.

Sally Bissell
A Darker Justice. New York: Random House, 2002.
Mary Crow, an Atlanta prosecutor of Cherokee ancestry,
is called into action when a violent killer who appears to be targeting
federal judges turns his sights on one of her friends. Mary's investigation
takes her back to her hometown, the fictional mountain town Little Jump
Off, N.C., where she discovers not just a single suspect but an entire
group, a right-wing paramilitary organization planning violent attacks
on the government. In search of clues, Mary probes the caverns and other
hiding places in the rugged wilderness.
Legacy of Masks. New York: Bantam, 2005.
Mary Crow, a tough prosecutor from Atlanta, has just returned home to
North Carolina. After an unsuccessful bid for sheriff of Pisgah County,
Crow opens her own practice and sets her thoughts toward a possible romance
with an old flame. Her first case comes quickly. Crow is hired to defend
a wealthy local man against charges that he killed a young girl. But
the deeper she gets into the case, she becomes worried that the true
killer might be the very man she was hired to protect.

Michele Andrea Bowen
Holy Ghost Corner. New York: Warner, 2006.
Theresa Hopson is the proprietress of Miss Thang's Holy Ghost Corner and Church Women's Boutique
in Durham. When a developer threatens to turn the property containing Theresa's store into expensive
condominiums, she enlists the help of her friends and church members to save their neighborhood.
Sandra Brown
Chill Factor. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2005.
Lily Burton was just looking for a relaxing break when she left for her
cabin near remote Cleary, N.C., a fictional mountain town. But rough weather
hits and she ends up snowed in, stranded in the cabin with a man named
Ben Tierney, a former acquaintance to whom she offered shelter when she
found him hiking nearby. Lily's husband Dutch makes it as far as the town
of Cleary, but can't get through the blizzard to the cabin. His search
becomes even more desperate when he learns that Ben is a suspect in several
recent murders.
Wanda Canada
Cape Fear Murders. Wilmington, N.C.: Coastal Carolina Press, 2003.
Carroll Davenport, a local developer who has an unlucky habit of getting drawn into murder investigations, is back on the case when she finds North Carolina State Senator William Burriss III murdered alongside his mistress. The killers may or may not have ties to Carroll's mafioso late husband. With the help of Ben Satterwhite, an FBI agent and possible love interest, Carroll chases criminals all over Wilmington and Wrightsville Beach in this sequel to Canada's 2001 novel Island Murders.
Island Murders. Wilmington, N.C.: Coastal Carolina Press, 2001.
Figure Eight Island, the exclusive resort community near Wilmington, seems an unlikely place for a crime wave, but dead bodies are showing up all over the island. The first suspect is Carroll Davenport, a local developer who has had a few too many friends and relatives who died violent deaths. But Carroll is soon cleared and decides to pursue the case on her own. In the course of investigating the increasingly complicated case, Carroll covers a lot of ground, visiting many sites in the Wilmington area that will be familiar to locals. 
Elisa L. Carbone
Storm Warriors. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2001.
Nathan Williams and his grandfather live on Pea Island,
on North Carolina's Outer Banks, in 1895. Nathan is fascinated by the "surfmen," the
African American rescue crew at the United States Life-Saving Station.
Nathan dreams of joining them and spends all of his free time observing
the surfmen and studying their books. Over the course of the novel, Nathan
experiences the harsh injustice of racism, participates in a daring rescue,
and begins to learn that there may be a better life for him beyond the
island. Although written for a younger audience, this novel gives a wealth
of detail about the surfmen based on research on the real-life rescue
crew.

Jimmy Carter
The Hornet's Nest: A Novel of the Revolutionary War.
New York: Simon & Schuster, 2003.
Former President Jimmy Carter's first novel (and the first
novel to be published by an ex-President) follows Ethan Pratt and his
family through the Southern colonies during the American Revolution.
When things turn bad in Georgia, Pratt migrates to North Carolina in
search of cheap land and opportunity. Carter's thorough research is evident
in his descriptions of the Regulator movement in Orange County and the
battle of King's Mountain.

Diane Chamberlain
Her Mother's Shadow. Don Mills, Ont.: Mira Books, 2004.
Lacey O'Neill grew up in a small community on the Outer Banks, trying
to live up to the memory of her mother, who was murdered when Lacey was
thirteen. Now in her mid-twenties, Lacey is suddenly thrust into a mother's
role, when she agrees to become the guardian of Mackenzie, the daughter
of Lacey's best friend who was killed tragically in a car accident. As
the two struggle to overcome the tragedy and get to know each other, Lacey
finds herself with feelings for both a local man who may be Mackenzie's
father, and the lawyer who has just arrived in town to work on a case.
The novel is set in the fictional coastal town of Kiss River.

Fred Chappell
I Am One of You Forever. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University
Press, 1987.
Set in the North Carolina mountains in the 1940s, this novel-in-stories
follows a boy named Jess through his daily life and encounters with his
quirky family and neighbors. The book is a series of short pieces about
the memorable characters Jess and his family encounter, and the land on
which they live. Chappell is an award-winning poet and is noted for the
lyricism he brings to his prose.

Martin Clark
The Many Aspects of Mobile Home Living. New York:
Knopf, 2000.
When Judge Martin Wheeler agrees to help the no-good brother of a friend who's
up on a drug charge, he is quickly sucked into the lives of a group of oddball
characters on a mission to recover a bounty of stolen cash. Set in the fictional
Piedmont town of Norton, N.C., near Winston-Salem, the novel follows Wheeler
and his strange new friends through the seedy underside of contemporary southern
life.

Patricial Cornwell
Hornet's Nest. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1996.
Best-selling novelist Patricia Cornwell sets this mystery in Charlotte, "a city of amibition and change." During an especially hot summer in the Queen City, a number of tourists are gruesomely murdered, and all are left with the same mark of an hourglass on their bodies. A serial killer is clearly at work. Police chief Judy Hammer and her deputy Virginia West battle city politics while they work with young Charlotte Observer reporter Andy Brazil to uncover the facts of the case. As the police procedural unfolds, Cornwell describes the physical and cultural landscape of North Carolina's largest city. 
Kurt Corriher
Someone to Kill. New York: St. Martin's, 2002.
When John Pavlak's wife is murdered, he isn't satisfied to just sit back and let somebody else handle the investigation. Especially when he becomes a suspect himself. Pavlak is a decorated veteran of the Vietnam conflict, and the athletic director at a small college that sounds a lot like Davidson. He races to keep just ahead of the police, following the investigation to Berlin when it looks like his wife's work as an investigative journalist may have led to the discovery of sensitive Cold War secrets. In the end, the trail leads him right back to North Carolina.

Blake Crouch
Locked Doors. New York: St. Martin's, 2005.
Andrew Thomas is hiding out in Alaska, framed for a crime he didn't commit.
But he can't lay low forever. When people close to him start disappearing
and there is a killing spree in his home town of Davidson, N.C., Thomas
is forced out of hiding, certain that one of his old enemies is on the
loose. Thomas returns to North Carolina and chases the bad guys all the
way to a dramatic showdown on Ocracoke Island.
Jeffery Deaver
The Empty Chair. New York:
Simon & Schuster,
2000. Lincoln Rhyme, a quadriplegic forensic investigator (and protagonist
of Deaver's 1997 novel The Bone Collector ), is in fictional
Paquenoke County, N.C., where he is to undergo an experimental operation
that may restore his mobility. Rhyme's plans quickly change when a local
sherriff comes to ask for his help on a series of murders involving a
creepy teenager known as the "Insect Boy." Paquenoke County
is near the Great Dismal Swamp and is the location of Tanner's Corner,
known mysteriously as the "town without children."  Virginia DeBerry and Donna
Grant
Far From the Tree. New York: St. Martin's, 2001.
Sisters Celeste English and Ronnie Frazier are surprised
to learn, after their father's death, that they have inherited an old
house in fictional Prosper, N.C. They had no idea that the house even
belonged to the family, and decide to check it out for themselves before
they sell it. The house turns out to have important connections to the
family, and as Celeste and Ronnie explore the house and Prosper, they
uncover old family secrets, and learn a great deal about their mother's
troubled past.

Mark de Castrique
Final Undertaking. Scottsdale, AZ: Poisoned Pen Press,
2007.
Barry Clayton, the infamous former cop turned funeral director
in the fictional mountain town of Gainesboro, N.C. returns from de Castrique’s
Foolish Undertaking. The quiet, peaceful town needs Clayton to embark on
an undercover investigation after an elderly man from Florida goes on a shooting
spree in the middle of town, killing townspeople and severely injuring the sheriff.
Foolish Undertaking. Scottsdale, Ariz.: Poisoned
Pen Press, 2006.
Barry Clayton, a funeral director in fictional Gainesboro, N.C., is back after appearing in de
Castrique's earlier novel, Foolish Undertaking. Clayton's business is thrust into the national
spotlight when the body of a Montagnard man reknowned for helping American soldiers in Vietnam is
stolen. Clayton must deal with the grieving family, angry Vietnam veterans, and powerful politicians
while he pursues the case.
Dangerous Undertaking. Scottsdale, Ariz.: Poisoned
Pen Press, 2003.
Barry Clayton wasn't thrilled about leaving the Charlotte, N.C. police
force to take over the family funeral home back in Gainesboro, a fictional
town in the North Carolina mountains. But at least, he thought, he was
leaving the dangers of big-city police work behind him. He was wrong.
At the graveside service for a beloved local woman, her young grandson
roars onto the scene with his rifle blasting, killing two mourners and
wounding Barry. The shooter flees for the hills and local cops, assisted
by Barry, get on the case, which boils down to a hot dispute between family
members over the deceased woman's estate.

Peter T. Deutermann
Spider Mountainl. New York: St. Martin’s Press,
2007.
In the sequel to Deutermann’s Cat Dancers, the
fictional Manceford County, N.C. provides the setting for yet another crime
mystery in the Appalachian Mountains. When a female ranger is found dead in
Smoky Mountain National Park, Cam Richter, the local private investigator, suspects
a conspiracy related to the Creigh family’s involvement in methamphetamine
sales. Richter is determined to put a stop to whatever it is that is going on
in his otherwise safe community.
Cat Dancers. New York: St. Martin's, 2005.
When two murderers are released on a technicality, the citizens of fictional
Manceford County, N.C. are irate. Some of them are so mad that they're
taking justice into their own hands. A gruesome video surfaces, showing
the execution of one of the killers, and officer Cam Richter has to find
the vigilantes before they kill again. Richter tracks them into the mountains
of western North Carolina, home of the elusive eastern mountain lion.
Jude Deveraux
Wild Orchids. New York: Atria Books, 2003.
Ford Newcombe, a successful mystery writer, has moved to
the fictional mountain town of Cole Creek, North Carolina to investigate
a series of mysterious deaths. He enlists the help of Jackie Maxwell,
whose premonitions prove to be key to the case. As they dig deeper into
the stories and myths, Ford and Jackie find that the devil himself may
be behind the crimes.
First Impressions. New York: Atria, 2005.
After her daughter's wedding, Eden Palmer begins to think about making changes in her own life.
She leaves New York for Arundel, N.C., a fictional town in eastern North Carolina, to take over a charming old
house she has inherited. Eden begins spending time with two different men -- a local lawyer who is one of the
town's most eligible bachelors and a rugged, mysterious man who is also a newcomer to the town. Eden finds
that it's difficult to start over, especially when events from her past keep coming back to haunt her.

Julia Nunnally Duncan
Drops of the Night. Boone, N.C.: Parkway Publishers, 2006.
Drops of the Night, a North Carolina novel set in 1988, is the story
of Nora Lynch, a childless farmer's wife who faces her husband's jealous
rages and intentions to sell the family farm - a plan that threatens
the only lifestyle Nora has known. She also confronts a growing
attachment to a stranger who enters her life through her husband's
gambling. Drops of the Night is set in fictional Milton, based on
Marion in McDowell County (not to be confused with the real Milton, N.C., which is
in Caswell County).
Pamela Duncan
The Big Beautiful. New York: Dial Press, 2007.
The saga from Duncan’s Moon Women continues when
Cassandra Moon skips out on her wedding, leaving her future husband, family
and her hometown behind as she embarks on an journey to the North Carolina coast.
Realizing that she must start her life anew, Cassandra ends up in the beach
town of Salter Path, N.C. where she may have found the love of her life.
Moon Women. New York: Delacorte Press, 2001.
The "Moon women" are three generations of women
of the Moon family in western North Carolina. Ruth Ann Moon's life changes
suddenly when her mother and her daughter move in with her. Her mother,
the family matriarch Marvelle Moon, is beginning to show the frailties
of her age, while her daughter Ashley is three months pregnant, unmarried,
and just out of rehab. The novel unfolds over the course of Ashley's
pregnancy as each of the women adjusts to life together, and to their
changing roles in the family.
Plant Life. New York: Delacorte Press, 2003.
This novel is largely the story of a group of women who
work in the textile mill in the fictional Piedmont town of Russell, N.C.
The town and its residents are seen through the fresh perspective of
newly divorced Laurel Granger, who has returned to Russell after fifteen
years in Las Vegas. As Laurel struggles to cope with her aging mother
and begins to find romance again, she is comforted by the friendship
and understanding of the women she works alongside at the mill. Plant
Life won the 2003 Sir Walter Raleigh award for the best work of
fiction by a North Carolina author.

Tony Earley
Jim the Boy. Boston: Little, Brown, 2000.
Jim is a ten-year-old boy who lives with his mother and
her brothers and is just beginning to come to grips with the adult world.
The story is set in the fictional southwestern North Carolina town of
Aliceville in the 1930s and follows Jim through everyday events as he
struggles to understand his family, friends, and through their stories,
himself. Aliceville is probably based on Rutherfordton, N.C.

Clyde Edgerton
Lunch at the Piccadilly. Chapel Hill: Algonquin,
2003.
At the heart of this book is the relationship between Carl
Turnage, a middle-aged bachelor, and his Aunt Lil, but much of the novel
is given to a lively group portrait of Lil and her friends at the Rosehaven
Convalescence Center, a nursing home in the fictional eastern North Carolina
town of Listre. Listre has been the setting of several of Edgerton's
books.
Raney. Chapel Hill: Algonquin Books, 1985.
Raney Bell discovers, a little too late, that she didn't know her fiancé Charles
Shepherd as well as she thought. This novel is a chronicle of the first
two years of their marriage as the innocent and cheerful Raney and the
moderately worldly Charles quarrel about religion, race, sex, and family
as they adjust to life together. Raney has a funny, distinctive, and
unapologetically Southern narrative voice. The novel is set in the fictional
eastern North Carolina town of Listre.
Where Trouble Sleeps. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin, 1997.
Jack Umstead is a professional con man and a fugitive from the law.
When he first shows up here, he has just arrived in the small town of
Listre, N.C., where he's working on an elaborate scheme, but first, he
must earn the trust of the residents. The story is told by a number of
narrators, including Umstead himself and some of the people he has taken
in. The result is a full and comic portrait of Listre, a fictional town
in eastern North Carolina, which is the setting for several of Edgerton's
novels. 
Jonathan Farlow
Brouhaha. Boone, N.C.: Parkway Publishers,
2005.
The mayoral election in the fictional Piedmont town of Ashewood Falls
has the whole town astir. Everything was proceeding smoothly in the
decidedly quirky town until a bowling alley argument led to the entry
of a new candidate in the race. Incumbent Johnston "Birddog" Farley
is faced with an unexpected challenge from Purdie Mae Pearce, the "fried
chicken queen." As befits as modern election, this one is filled
with scandal. There are allegations of adultery, suspicions of electoral
fraud, and a bevy of special interest groups clamoring for attention.

Anderson Ferrell
Have You Heard. New York: Bloomsbury, 2004.
As Have You Heard opens, Jerry Chiffon is dressed in woman's
clothing and pointing a gun at a well-known conservative North Carolina
senator. The story of Chiffon's life unfolds as several narrators, all
residents of the fictional Eastern North Carolina town of Branch Creek,
struggle to understand what has happened. Chiffon felt uncomfortable as
a gay man in a small, conservative community and left for New York as
soon as he could. He has just returned home to recover from the death
of a lover when he makes his attempt on the life of the senator. Ferrell
is from Black Creek, in Wilson County.
Annie Flannigan
Love and a Bad Hair Day. New York: HarperCollins, 2003.
The Hadleys and the O'Malleys had been feuding for years in Verbena,
N.C., a small, fictional town in the mountains. Things look like they're
beginning to thaw when Ryman O'Malley moves back to town to take over
the family business, the South Winds Trav'O'Tel, famed for its all-day
breakfast buffet. Jolene Hadley Corbett, whose beauty parlor is located
just across the street, is determined at first to continue the feud,
especially when she learns of Ryman's plans to demolish the Trav'O'Tel,
a local landmark But as she gets to know him better, her feelings turn
in quite a different direction.

Elizabeth Flock
Me & Emma. Mira Books, 2005. Carrie Parker, the eight-year-old narrator of this novel, does not have an easy life. She and her sister Emma live in a poor family in Toast, N.C. Their father has recently passed away and their new stepfather is abusive to both girls, becoming especially violent when drunk. Carrie's mother sees the problems, but can't afford to leave, and the girls are left with seemingly nowhere else to turn.

Gwynne Forster
Blues from Down Deep. New York: Kensington, 2004.
Regina Pearson never really felt at home in Hawaii, especially after
her father passed away and she had no family left in the islands. When
she learns about relatives in New Bern, N.C., she heads off to find them,
excited about meeting the extended family she's never known. Although
she meets many colorful characters, Regina finds a group of people with
troubles of their own, hardly the warm embrace she'd expected. It isn't
until she gets to know a retired soldier named Justin Duval that she decides
she might have a reason for staying.
Charles Frazier
Cold Mountain. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press,
1997.
Cold Mountain is the story of Inman, a deserter from the Confederate
Army, and his long journey home to the mountains of North Carolina during
the last year of the Civil War. The novel alternates between Inman's struggles
and those of Ada, who is at home near Cold Mountain and is able to get
by only with the help of Ruby, a mountain woman unafraid to fend for herself.
Cold Mountain has been praised for its accuracy in portraying
geographical and horticultural details, as well as the particulars of
nineteenth-century life in the North Carolina mountains.
Thirteen Moons. New York: Random House, 2006.
Loosely based on the life of frontiersman William Holland Thomas, narrator
Will Cooper provides a detailed picture of life in western North Carolin in the
early nineteenth-century. After working
as a "bound boy" at a "trade post at the edge of the Nation," Will is adopted by a Cherokee elder,
Bear. Will eventually leads the clan as a white Indian chief
and then as a Colonel for the Confederacy. Still haunted by the memory of his one true love, Claire, Will
escapes solitude through his travels.

Diana Gabaldon
Drums of Autumn. New York: Delacorte, 1997.
The Fiery Cross. New York: Delacorte, 2001.
A Breath of Snow and Ashes. New York: Delacorte, 2005.
The second trilogy in the popular Outlander series picks up the story of 20th-century time-traveler
Claire Randall and her 18th-century Scottish husband Jamie Fraser as they continue their adventures in the
American colonies. Largely set in the colony of North Carolina in the 1760s and 1770s, Claire and Jamie must
navigate through the political tensions leading up to the American Revolution with the added twist that they
know the outcome of the coming war. Rich in historical description, humor, and romance, these books add three
more tales to the saga of the Frasers.

Philip Gerard
Cape Fear Rising. Winston-Salem: John F. Blair,
1994.
When Sam Jenks and his wife Gray Ellen move from Chicago to Wilmington,
N.C. in August 1898, they find a city in turmoil. Amidst a vicious, racist
political campaign, a group of white citizens begin to mobilize against
the city's large African American population. Based on the actual events
of the November 1898 Wilmington riot that led to the murder of many African
Americans and the violent overthrow of the city's government, Gerard
dramatizes one of the most significant periods in North Carolina history. 
Kaye Gibbons
A Virtuous Woman. Chapel Hill: Algonquin , 1989.
Ruby Pitt Woodrow and Blinking Jack Stokes tell, in alternating
chapters, the stories of their lives. Ruby's chapters are told from her
perspective as she is dying of cancer at age 45, while Jack's reminiscences
are set during the period just after Ruby's death. These stories are
set largely on tobacco farms in eastern North Carolina and describe a
fondly remembered marriage, which stands in contrast to the characters'
otherwise difficult lives.
Divining Women. New York: Putnam, 2004.
Mary Oliver travels from Washington, D.C. to her hometown,
Elm City, N.C., to spend time with her aunt Maureen in
the fall of 1918 with the nation at war and a deadly flu pandemic sweeping
the country. Maureen's troubles, it turns out, are much more immediate.
Her cold and cruel husband has reduced her to a quiet and cowering existence
and Mary takes it upon herself to save her aunt. Drawing from the example
of strong women in the family's history, and with the help of caring
relatives, Mary and Maureen plan their escape.
The Life All Around Me By Ellen Foster.
New York: Harcourt, 2005.
Ellen Foster, returning eight years after the acclaimed
novel in which she first appeared, is now fifteen and driven to succeed.
She is an excellent student, a budding poet, and is applying for early
admission to Harvard. Perhaps more important for readers, she is still
a lively and distinctive narrator. This sequel finds Ellen returning to
North Carolina and attending the State Fair in Raleigh.

Marianne Gingher
Bobby Rex’s Greatest Hit. New York: Ballantine,
1986.
Everyone in the small town of Orfax, N.C. is astir when
local rock-and-roller Bobby Rex hits the big time with his song “Pally
Thompson.” The only one who isn’t thrilled about it is Pally
Thompson, who insists that she didn’t go nearly as far with Bobby
Rex as the song would suggest. Set in the late 1950s and early 1960s,
the novel follows Pally’s attempts to redeem her reputation, but
is in effect a rich portrait of adolescent small town life in the postwar
South. Fictional Orfax is about twenty miles from Greensboro, the author’s
hometown. Bobby Rex's Greatest Hit won the 1987 Sir Walter Raleigh award
for the best work of fiction by a North Carolinian.
Gail Godwin
Evensong. New York: Ballantine, 1999.
Evensong , a sequel to the 1991 novel Father
Melancholy's Daughter , continues the story of Margaret Gower,
an Episcopal rector in High Balsam, N.C., a fictional community in
the Blue Ridge Mountains, not far from Mountain City, based on Asheville,
where Godwin grew up. Set over a four-week period in 1999, Evensong chronicles
a difficult time in Gower's life as she questions both her marriage
and her faith.

Judy Goldman
The Slow Way Back. New York: William Morrow, 1999.
Thea McKee is a woman with a successful radio call-in show
in Charlotte, N.C., when she receives in the mail a packet of letters
written by her grandmother more than 60 years ago. As she seeks help
understanding the letters -- they are written in Yiddish -- Thea reflects
upon three generations of her Southern Jewish family. The letters ultimately
reveal family secrets that allow Thea to resolve long unanswered questions
about her childhood. The Slow Way Back won the 2000 Sir Walter
Raleigh Award for the best work of fiction by a North Carolina writer.
Early Leaving. New York: HarperCollins, 2004.
The night he graduates from a prestigious private high
school in Charlotte, N.C., valedictorian Early Smallwood shoots and kills
an African American teenager. This novel follows Early's mother Kathryne
as she tries to understand the events of that night and reflects on Early's
childhood, wondering if there was something she could have done in order
to prevent the tragedy.

Allan Gurganus
The Practical Heart.
New York: Knopf, 2001.
Three of the four novellas in this collection are set in North Carolina.
"He's One, Too" is set in fictional Falls, N.C., which is probably based on
the author's hometown of Rocky Mount. The Practical Heart won the 2002
Sir Walter Raleigh Award for the best work of fiction by a North Carolinian.
Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All.
New York: Knopf, 1989.
Ninety-nine year old Lucy Marsden spins an epic tale that covers the
Civil War, slavery, marriage, and death. With an energetic and humorous
style, she tells the story of her remarkable life. Married at fifteen
to a Confederate veteran thirty-five years her senior, Lucy has survived
long enough to be the oldest living Confederate widow. The novel alternates
between past and present, telling the story of Captain Marsden's experiences
in the war, Lucy's childhood, her close friendship with a former slave,
and her life at present, where she is living in a nursing home in fictional
Falls, N.C., a town in the eastern part of the state probably based on
the author's hometown of Rocky Mount.

James W. Hall
Forests of the Night. New York: St. Martin's,
2005
Miami detective Charlotte Monroe takes off for the mountains of western
North Carolina in pursuit of her daughter, who has run off with the
man at number eight on the FBI's most wanted list. Charlotte and her
husband quickly become entangled in a mystery that has its roots in
the history of the region, and seems to be tied to the fate of the
Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.

John Hart
The King of Lies. New York: St. Martin's,
2006
When Ezra Pickens is found murdered, there is no shortage of suspects in
Salisbury, N.C. The unpopular lawyer made a lot of enemies over his long career and it's
left to his son and partner, Jackson, to unravel the mystery.

Homer Hickham
The Keeper's Son. New York: Thomas Dunne Books,
2003.
The tiny, fictional island of Killakeet, on North Carolina's
outer banks, is shaken when German U-Boats appear off the coast in 1941.
Coast Guard Lt. Josh Thurlow, the son of the keeper of the lighthouse,
takes it upon himself to protect his home. Leading an ill-equipped bunch
of locals, Thurlow takes to the sea. The novel follows the emotional
struggles of Thurlow and his father and also gives detailed descriptions
of submarine warfare during World War II.

Lynne Hinton
The Last Odd Day. New York: Harper, 2004.
In the opening section of The Last Odd Day , Jean
Witherspoon is struggling to cope with the death of her husband. The
novel alternates between Jean's past and present. When she learns a surprising
secret about her husband, Jean delves into her own history, recalling
her stillborn daughter, the deaths of her siblings when she was young,
and her traumatic upbringing in a poor Appalachian family.
The Arms of God. New York: St. Martins, 2005.
Olivia Jacobs's life takes a dramatic turn when her mother, who had
abandoned her as a toddler decades before, shows up at her front door. There isn't
much time for catching up, as Olivia's mother dies only a few weeks later. The sudden
reunion has rekindled Olivia's memories of her childhood in the poor, fictional
community of Smoketown, N.C., outside of Greensboro.

Deborah Homsher
The Rising Shore -- Roanoke. Blue Hull Press, 2007.
The Rising Shore -- Roanoke, a historical novel, tells
the story of the Lost Colony through the voices of two pioneering women. Elenor
Dare is daughter of the expedition's leader and mother of the first English
child born in North America. Margaret Lawrence is her servant. As members of
the earliest English venture to colonize the North America
(1587), they sail from London, cross the Atlantic, and settle on Roanoke Island.
Elenor longs to explore and paint pictures of Virginia, as her father has done.
Margaret blazes her own path to independence. Both women are sometimes frustrated
by circumstance and tradition, but they move boldly, angling against one another,
to discover and accomplish their dreams.
Kay Hooper
Hunting Fear. New York: Bantam Books, 2004.
Lucas Jordan is a successful profiler for the FBI, using
his psychic abilities to track down missing people. When a string of
grisly murders hit Golden, N.C., a fictional mountain town, Lucas is
called to the case. The psychopathic killer keeps Lucas guessing throughout
the book, and raises the stakes when he turns his sights on people close
to the detective.

Terry Hoover
Double Dead. Waterville, ME: Five Star, 2007.
Double Dead is the first in an anticipated mystery series
from Charlotte native, Terry Hoover. Former reporter Steve Harlan has been hired
by a defense attorney to work as a private investigator on the murder of a bank
executive’s mistress. Set in Charlotte in the early 1960s, the story is
rich with references to local culture and landmarks.

Joyce Moyer Hostetter
Blue. Honesdale, Penn.: Boyds Mills Press, 2006.
In this book for younger readers, thirteen year old narrator Ann Fay Honeycutt
describes life in Hickory during World War II. When she is stricken with polio,
Honeycutt is hospitalized and becomes close friends with another patient, an African
American girl her age. The novel is based on the true story of a hospital for
polio patients in Hickory in the 1940s.

Josephine Humphreys
Nowhere Else on Earth. New York: Viking,
2000.
Set in Robeson County in the final days of the Civil War, sixteen-year-old
Rhoda Lawson tells the story of the last desperate struggle to resist
the Union Army. General William Tecumseh Sherman's army was on its way,
and the local Home Guard was rounding up everyone they could for the
fight. The local Lumbee Indians, however, wanted no part in a war whose
aims they had opposed. When Henry Berry Lowrie comes to help Rhoda's
brothers hide from the Home Guard, she falls in love with him, and leaves
to live with the outlaws. Lowrie is an actual historical figure, and
the events of this novel are based in part on his life. 
Robert Inman
Captain Saturday. Boston: Little, Brown, 2002.
Captain Saturday is the story of Will Baggett,
a popular television weatherman in Raleigh, whose life begins to crumble
when in a short span of time he loses his job, his wife leaves him, and
he's arrested for a crime he didn't commit. Baggett escapes from his
sophisticated life in the Triangle to visit family in rural Brunswick
County where he begins his recovery by delving into his past. The book
provides an excellent portrait of life in contemporary Raleigh, commenting
on the city's struggles with development and the often contentious relationship
between new arrivals and the denizens of "old Raleigh."

Roberta Isleib
Fairway to Heaven. New York: Penguin, 2005.
Pro golfer Cassie Burdette has a lot to do when she arrives in Pinehurst,
N.C., site of both her best friend's wedding and a prestigious golf tournament.
Her on-again off-again boyfriend Mike Callahan is in town, too, and it
looks like she'll be seeing plenty of him as he's a member of the wedding
party and her partner in the tournament. As if that wasn't enough to worry
about, there are a series of murders in town, which may be linked to
the mysterious disappearance of the father of the bride. Burdette is quickly
on the case.
Michael Grant Jaffe
Whirlwind. New York: Norton, 2004.
Lucas Proudy is a weatherman in the fictional coastal town
of Bentleyville. His career is going nowhere, and his only romantic prospect
-- the bartender at a local strip club -- shows no sign of returning
his affections. Then Hurricane Isabel hits the state. Lucas's beachfront
coverage is shown nationwide and his apparent death is captured on film.
But Lucas survives, emerging from a wrecked building several days later
to find himself an instant celebrity.

Jan Karon
At Home in Mitford. New York: Penguin, 1994.
A Light in the Window. New York: Penguin, 1995.
In These High, Green Hills. New York: Viking, 1996.
Out to Canaan. New York: Viking 1997.
A New Song. New York: Viking, 1999.
A Common Life. New York: Penguin, 2002.
In This Mountain. New York: Viking, 2002.
Light from Heaven. New York: Viking, 2005.
The small village of Mitford, N.C., a fictional town based on Blowing
Rock, is the setting for these popular novels. Father Tim Kavanagh, the
village rector and aging protagonist of the books, encounters in each
novel the quirky residents of the town in all of their glory. Although
Father Tim is off on a different adventure in each book, the underlying
theme of all is a heartfelt appreciation for the simple pleasures of
small town life.

Terry Kay
The Valley of Light. New York: Simon & Schuster,
2003.
In the years after World War II, Noah Locke wandered from
town to town, fishing, doing occasional work, and reflecting on the horrors
he had seen throughout the war, especially when his unit liberated the
concentration camp at Dachau. When Noah arrived in the fictional town
of Bowersville, N.C. (based on the area around Hayesville), in an area
known as the "Valley of Light," he was taken by the slow small-town pace
and friendly residents. Noah begins to date a young widow and enters
a local fishing contest with the goal of landing a mythical, elusive
bass that has captivated the town for years.

Susan S. Kelly
Even Now. New York: Warner Books, 2001.
Hannah Marsh is excited by her family's move from Durham
to fictional Rural Ridge, N.C., near Asheville. Her husband has taken
a less stressful job, the scenery is beautiful, and she's looking forward
to spending her free time in the garden. Hannah is surprised to find
that Daintry O'Connor, a close friend from childhood is also living in
the area. Hannah and Daintry had a complicated relationship growing up,
and these complications only continue in adulthood as Hannah finds herself
increasingly attracted to Daintry's husband.
The Last of Something. New York: Pegasus, 2006.
Twenty years after they met in college, three women gather for a reunion
in the fictional coastal town of Dune Ridge. While they wait for their husbands to arrive,
and keep their eye on an approaching hurricane, they tell old stories and discuss their lives.

Toni L.P. Kelner
Down Home Murder. New York: Kensington, 1993.
Dead Ringer. New York: Kensington, 1994.
Trouble Looking for a Place to Happen. New York:
Kensington, 1995.
Country Comes to Town. New York: Kensington, 1996.
Tight as a Tick. New York: Kensington, 1998.
Death of a Damn Yankee. New York: Kensington,
1999.
Mad as the Dickens. New York: Kensington, 2001.
Wed and Buried. New York: Kensington, 2003.
Laura Fleming is a computer programmer living in Boston
with her husband, a Shakespeare professor at a local college. In nearly
all of these novels (with the exception of Country Comes to Town )
Laura travels to her hometown of Byerly, N.C., a fictional town in the
western part of the state, and when she does, trouble breaks out. Time
after time Laura's amateur detective skills are called into play as she
gets to the bottom of a murder. In between chasing criminals, Laura introduces
her husband to the South. Kelner describes Byerly as "based on my
memories and knowledge of Southern mill towns like Granite Falls, Conover,
and Dudley Shoals. If it were real, it would be near Hickory, NC, with
its own exit off Highway 321."

Randall Kenan
A Visitation of Spirits. New York: Grove, 1989.
Kenan's acclaimed first novel is the story of an African American family
in the fictional town of Tims Creek in rural eastern North Carolina. Horace
Cross, the sixteen-year-old protagonist of the book, is haunted by what may
be actual demons, while at the same time trying to come to terms with his
homosexuality. He seeks advice and comfort from his older cousin James, a
schoolteacher and preacher, who fears that other family members will have a
hard time understanding. This richly written novel is told in several shifting
voices and styles.

Dewey Lambdin.
What Lies Buried: A Novel of Old Cape Fear.
Ithaca, N.Y.: McBooks Press, 2005.
This historical novel, set in and around 18th-century Wilmington,
traces the events around the murder of political leader Harry Tresmayne.

Catherine Landis
Some Days There's Pie. New York: St. Martins,
2002.
When Ruth Ritchie's marriage falls apart, she flees Tennessee
and ends up in the fictional eastern North Carolina town of Lawsonville.
(There is a real Lawsonville in Stokes County near the Virginia border,
but this is clearly not the one that Landis describes). Ruth, who has
just turned twenty, is having a hard time getting by until she meets eighty-year-old
Rose. Rose helps Ruth get a job at the local paper and the two become
fast friends. Although Rose is facing lung cancer she is still feisty,
and sees something of her younger self in Ruth. The two women throw themselves
into the Lawsonville scene, engaging the oddball local characters and
living life to the fullest.

Vicki Lane
Signs in the Blood. New York: Dell, 2005.
Elizabeth Goodweather runs a small herb and flower farm in the fictional
mountain town of Ridley Branch, N.C. Recently widowed, and with both of
her children moved away, Elizabeth is feeling a little lonely and bored,
but that quickly changes when she's dragged into a local mystery. When
a neighbor's son is found dead, the police determine it was an accident,
but the boy's mother isn't convinced. As Elizabeth pursues the case, she
digs up evidence of a long ago crime that is suspiciously similar to the
current mysterious death.
Art's Blood. New York: Dell, 2006.
Elizabeth Goodweather, who first appeared in Lane's Signs
in the Blood, is back in another mountain mystery. Elizabeth pursues the case of a murdered local
artist in a story that takes place among the arts community in and around Asheville.

Walt Larimore
Bryson City Tales. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2002.
Bryson City Seasons. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2004.
Bryson City Secrets. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2006.
Based on the experiences of the author as a young physician, these
stories describe the humor, heartache, and warmth shared in a rural medical
practice in Bryson City, N.C. The characters in these stories do not hesitate
to share their learned country wisdom, teaching the young doctor the kinds of
lessons that were not taught in medical school.

Joyce Lavene and Jim Lavene
Last Dance. New York: Avalon Books, 1999.
One Last Goodbye. New York: Avalon Books, 2000.
The Last to Remember. New York: Avalon Books, 2001.
Until Our Last Embrace. New York: Avalon Books, 2001.
For the Last Time. New York: Avalon Books, 2002.
Dreams Don't Last. New York: Avalon Books, 2002.
Last Fires Burning. New York: Avalon Books, 2003.
Glory's Last Victim. New York: Avalon Books, 2004.
Last Rites. New York: Avalon Books, 2004.
Last One Down. New York: Avalon Books, 2004.
Sharyn Howard is the sheriff in fictional Diamond Springs, N.C., a picturesque
town in the Uwharrie Mountains. In each novel, Sharyn is on the case of
a local murder that bears an eerie resemblance to, and usually proves
to be connected to, a long-unsolved crime.
Pretty Poison. New York: Penguin, 2005.
Peggy Lee, a botanist and owner of a garden shop in Charlotte, N.C.,
comes to work one day to find one of the richest men in town sprawled
across her plants with his head bashed in. The police nab a homeless man
for the crime, but Peggy doesn't think he did it. The problem is, if she
finds evidence to free the current suspect, then the next most likely
killer is one of Peggy's employees, whom she's sure had nothing to do
with the murder. Peggy dives into the investigation, digging through the
dead man's past in search of a possible killer. As she combs through the
evidence, she's assisted by a younger man who may prove to be more than
a friend.

Fred
Leebron
Six Figures. New York: Knopf, 2000.
Warner Lutz and his young family have just moved to booming, affluent
Charlotte, N.C., but they have yet to benefit from the largesse around
them. Walter's job is unsatistying and he often takes out his frustrations
on his family. When his wife is attacked by an unidentified assailant,
Walter becomes a suspect in the crime. Six Figures is a compelling
portrait of twenty-first century isolation and evidence that even in a
bustling New South city, not everyone is thriving.

Sally MacLeod
Passing Strange. New York: Random House, 2002.
Claudia Isham, concerned about her appearance her whole
life, is presented with a chance to start over when she and her husband
move to the fictional town of Beasley, N.C. Claudia has plastic surgery
and arrives in Beasley with a new face to match her new life. Life in
the South proves to be a difficult adjustment for the Ishams. They encounter
casual racism in their acquaintances, which is manifested when the town
discovers that Claudia has been having an affair with her African American
gardener. There is a dramatic twist when Claudia's husband is found murdered
and her lover is accused of the crime.

Michael Malone
Uncivil Seasons. New York: Delacorte Press, 1983.
Time's Witness. Boston: Little, Brown, 1989.
First Lady. Naperville, Ill.: Sourcebooks, 2001.
Justin Savile V and Cuddy Mangum and police officers in the fictional
town of Hillston, N.C., a small college town described as "A Bright
Star in the Flag of the New South." All of these novels are filled
with funny observations about Hillston and its citizens and provide an
honest look at the continuing clash between contemporary southerners and
the traditions and ideals of the Old South.

Doug Marlette
The Bridge. New York: HarperCollins, 2001.
Pick Cantrell, a successful but controversial editorial
cartoonist, has just moved from New York to his hometown in North Carolina.
In the course of adjusting to his new life, Cantrell learns about his
family's connections to area's rich textile history, most notably his
grandmother Lucy's involvement in a mill workers' strike in the 1930s.
The novel is set in the fictional town of Eno, North Carolina, most
likely based on Hillsborough, and includes scenes in Chapel Hill.

Margaret Maron
Last Lessons of Summer. New York: Mysterious
Press, 2003.
After her grandmother is murdered, Amy Steadman returns
from New York to her family's farm, located southeast of Raleigh, to
help sort through her grandmother's belongings. As Amy digs through
her family history she tries to understand not just her grandmother's
mysterious death, but the death of her mother, who committed suicide
when Amy was three. The relationships among the members of this large
family are at the heart of the story, especially as Amy begins to believe
that her grandmother's murderer may be a relative.
Bootlegger's Daughter. New York: Mysterious
Press, 1992.
Southern Discomfort. New York: Mysterious Pres,
1993.
Shooting at Loons. New York: Mysterious Press,
1994.
Up Jumps the Devil. New York: Mysterious Press,
1996.
Home Fires. New York: Mysterious Press, 1998.
Storm Track. New York: Mysterious Press, 2000.
Uncommon Clay. New York: Warner Books, 2001.
Slow Dollar. New York: Mysterious Press, 2002.
High Country Fall. New York: Warner Books, 2004.
Rituals of the Season. New York: Warner Books,
2005.
Winter's Child. New York : Warner Books, 2006.
These popular mysteries feature Deborah Knott, a District
Court Judge in fictional Colleton County, N.C., which is located "a
few miles southeast of Raleigh." In each novel Judge Knott is
forced to step out from behind the bench to pursue a local mystery
on her own. The setting is especially important in these books. Colleton
County still has working tobacco farms, and yet is bordered by the
sprawling, increasingly urban Research Triangle. Deborah Knott, her
large family, and the residents of the county are often caught in the
clash between North Carolina's high-tech future and its traditional,
agrarian past.

Eric Martin
Luck. New York: Norton, 2000.
Mike Olive and several classmates from Duke spend the summer in fictional
Cottesville, N.C. alongside Mexican migrant workers on a tobacco farm.
The students are working on a project to document the living and working
conditions of the workers, and find that conditions are even worse
than they imagined. As they began to protest the abuses they see, the
locals are none too happy, especially Harvey Dickerson, Mike's childhood
friend. To make things even more complicated, Mike has fallen for the
daughter of one of the Mexican workers. As the end of the summer approaches,
Mike finds that there are now several people out to get him. 
Jill McCorkle
Carolina Moon. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin
Books of Chapel Hill, 1996.
Set in fictional Fulton, N.C. (a town "halfway between
the river and the ocean"), this novel is populated by eccentric
characters including a controversial local disk jockey and the memorable
Quee Purdy, proprietress of a center to help people stop smoking. The
novel is told from several perspectives and contains overlapping plots
of romance and murder.
July 7. Chapel Hill: Algonquin, 1984.
On July 7, in the fictional eastern North Carolina town of Marshboro,
multiple generations gather to celebrate the 83rd birthday of Granner
Weeks. In another part of town, the proprietor of the Quik Pik is found
murdered in his store. Meanwhile, young writer Sam Swet, disillusioned
but desperate for experience, has just arrived in town. This novel, set
in a single day, features a wide and diverse cast of characters whose
stories often overlap and result in a compelling portrait of a contemporary
Southern town.

Sharyn McCrumb
Ghost Rider. New York: Dutton, 2003.
Set primarily in the North Carolina mountains, Ghost
Riders tells three distinct stories. The interwoven tales involve
Rattler, a current-day recluse and eccentric who socializes with
Civil War re-enactors; Zebulon Vance, the Governor of North Carolina
during the Civil War; and Malinda and Keith Blaylock, a married couple
who join the Confederate army under Vance. Mixing past and present,
McCrumb examines the Civil War and its legacy in the mountains of
North Carolina.
The Songcatcher. New York: Dutton, 2001.
In presenting the story of a simple English ballad, McCrumb
traces the history of an American family. Lark McCoury, a popular country
singer in Tennessee, is searching for a traditional song to record
for her new album. The ballad, "The Rowan Stave," came to
the country with her ancestor Malcolm McCoury, an 18th-century Scottish
immigrant who fought in the Revolutionary War and then settled in the
North Carolina mountains. The story of Lark's search for the origins
of the ballad is interwoven with scenes from the past, as the song
passes from one generation to the next before finally reaching her.
St. Dale. New York: Kensington, 2005.
This funny, touching novel is a modern-day retelling of the Canterbury Tales ,
following a group of unlikely friends on the Dale Earnhardt Memorial Pilgrimage.
The "Number Three Pilgrims" travel to several of the sites of prominent
victories of the late NASCAR legend and North Carolina native. In the course of
their journey they visit Piedmont North Carolina, "the land of textile mills and
furniture factories, of tobacco fields and hog farms -- and race tracks." At stops at the
Richard Petty museum in Randolph County, the North Carolina Motor Speedway in Rockingham, and the Lowe's Motor Speedway in Concord, the pilgrims find solace and inspiration in the life and legacy of Earnhardt.

Tim McLaurin
Another Son of Man. Asheboro, N.C.: Down Home
Press, 2004.
When Nate dies of cancer in Chapel Hill, a small group
of his friends carry out his final wish by bringing his ashes to his
favorite spot on the North Carolina coast. They run into trouble when
they travel unawares into a coming hurricane. The travelers are saved
by a mysterious man known only as "Son." The novel combines
action, as the would-be pilgrims battle the elements; mystery, as they
try to understand the enigmatic Son; and tragedy, as they remember
the final days of their friend. Another Son of Man was published
posthumously, two years after McLaurin's death in 2002.

Joan A. Medlicott
The Ladies of Covington Send Their Love. New
York: St. Martins Press, 2000.
The Gardens of Covington. New York: St. Martins
Press, 2001.
From the Heart of Covington. New York: St. Martins
Press, 2002.
The Spirit of Covington. New York: Atria,
2003.
At Home in Covington. New York: Atria, 2004.
A Covington Christmas. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2005.
Two Days After the Wedding. New York : Pocket Books, 2006.
Grace Singleton, Hannah Parrish, and Amelia Declose,
described as women "of a certain age," were finding life
a little listless in the Pennsylvania boardinghouse where they lived.
When one of them inherited a run-down farmhouse in Covington, N.C.,
the three women jumped at the chance for change and adventure. In each
of the novels the women explore the lively town of Covington while
they battle illness, welcome their children and other visitors, and
meet the challenges of caring for a rambling old house. Covington is
a fictional town in the North Carolina mountains, not far from Mars
Hill.

Robert Morgan
Gap Creek. Chapel Hill: Algonquin, 2000.
Gap Creek follows a newlywed couple in Appalachian North and South Carolina in the early 1900s. Julie Harmon Richards, an independent hard-working woman, narrates the story of the difficulties she and her husband face just trying to get by. Battling fierce weather, personal tragedies, and thieves, this novel details the difficulties of mountain life. Morgan gives careful attention to the details of farm work, with a particularly memorable description of the butchering of a hog. Gap Creek was a selection of the Oprah Book Club in January 2000. This Rock. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2002.
Set in the North Carolina mountains in the 1920s, This
Rock continues to explore the themes and setting used by Morgan
in his popular 2000 novel Gap Creek . The story follows
the young brothers Muir and Moody Powell. Muir is earnestly committed
to becoming a preacher, but finds his attempts at spreading the word
frustrated by his older brother, who is much more interesting in
running moonshine and gambling. As Muir struggles to understand his
faith, the boys' mother fights to keep the family together in the
still raw wilderness in which they live.

B.J. Mountford
Bloodlines of Shackleford Banks. Winston-Salem: John F. Blair, 2004.
Wild ponies have run wild for centuries on the Outer Banks island of Shackleford Banks. But modern development and diseases have taken their toll, and each year volunteers gather to roundup the ponies for a checkup. This year, however, things don't go quite as usual. One of the horses is missing, and there are signs of foul play. The stakes quickly escalate when one of the volunteers is murdered. Park Service worker Roberta "Bert" Lenehan pursues the case, in the course of which she encounters greedy developers and environmental activists, and studies the long lineage of the horses. Sea-Born Women. Winston-Salem, N.C.: John F.
Blair, 2002.
Wanting to start her life anew in a quiet, out-of-the-way
place, Roberta ("Bert") Lenehan takes a job in the coastal
town of Portsmouth, N.C. But peace and quiet never come as she is disturbed
by mysterious noises in the night. When Bert becomes romantically involved
with a younger man, she learns from him about the legend of the "Sea-Born
Woman," whose ghost is supposed to aid sailors but, as many are
beginning to fear, may be involved in recent unsolved murders.

Bill Morris
Saltwater Cowboys. Wilmington: Coastal Carolina Press, 2004.
The residents of a small maritime community in Down East Carteret County are surprised when sea turtles began showing up in places as odd as a hotel jacuzzi and the mayor's truck. Dodge Lawson, who operates a sort of marine salvage service when he's not fishing, has the job of hauling the turtles back out to sea. Dodge becomes embroiled in the turtle mystery, which seems to be the work of environmental activists. Much of this funny novel is given to the story of the honest and genuine Down Easters who are simply trying to save their community from an onslaught of agressive developers and inconsiderate recreational fishermen, while being harrassed by a documentary filmmaker who pokes his nose into everything, and the never-ending parade of university researchers studying the local dialect. 
Katy Munger
Legwork. New York: Avon, 1997.
Out of Time. New York: Avon, 1998.
Money to Burn. New York: Avon, 1999.
Bad to the Bone. New York: Avon, 2000.
Better off Dead. New York: Avon, 2001.
Casey Jones is a sassy, irreverent Durham-based detective.
Due to a previous record she can't get a private investigator's license,
so Jones operates with forged credentials, careful to keep just ahead
of the law. All of the novels are set in North Carolina's Research
Triangle (Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill), and Jones frequents many
familiar places in Durham. In her description of the series, Munger
promises that the novels all feature elements of classic hardboiled
detective stories: "cussing, chasing, rescues, gun fights, drinking
and sex."

Laurence Naumoff
Silk Hope, N.C. New York: Harcourt Brace,
1994.
The old farmhouse outside of the small Piedmont community of Silk
Hope has passed down through generations from mother to daughter. The
original occupants stipulated that only women could inherit the house.
The current owners, Frannie and Natalie Vaughan, have just inherited
the house and are faced with a tough decision. The sisters couldn't
be more different -- Frannie is a rebel, the wild one in the family,
while practical Natalie comes up with the idea to sell the house and
land. As they struggle to decide what to do with the house, the sisters
have to consider their own roles in the family's history, and determine
whether or not, in the modern South, women still need a sanctuary all
their own.
A Southern Tragedy, in Crimson and Yellow. Winston-Salem: Zuckerman Cannon, 2005.
In this work of "docufiction," Naumoff explores the tragic 1991 fire at a chicken plant in Hamlet, N.C. in which many workers died when they were locked into the building, unable to escape from the flames. Naumoff engages many of the broader themes of the tragedy, looking at the struggles of the small town in a changing economy, and examining the complicated relationships between the employers and employees.

Barbara Neely
Blanche Passes Go. New York:
Viking, 2000.
Blanche White is on her way back to her hometown, the fictional Farleigh,
N.C., located near Durham. Blanche is going to spend the summer working
for a friend's catering company, and is sure to be busy with the months-long
celebration of Farleigh's bicentennial. But coming home is not easy.
Blanche is confronted by painful memories from her past, and, finding
that her detective skills have preceded her, she's hired to invesigate
a prominent local family. Viewing her hometown as an African American
with a strong feminist perspective, Blanche provides a refreshingly different
look at the New South.

Scott Nicholson
The Red Church. New York: Kensington, 2002.
The old red church in Whispering Pines, N.C., a fictional
town in the Appalachian mountains, has stood empty for twenty years,
said to be haunted by the ghost of the preacher who was hung from its
rafters by his own angry congregation. Now that the church has been
purchased by a minister whose fiery fundamentalism echoes that of his
long-ago predecessor, strange things are starting to happen in town.
The story is told through the eyes of thirteen-year-old Ronnie Day,
who finds life complicated enough without a haunted church, and Sherriff
Frank Littlefield, who must figure out what people or forces are terrorizing
his town.

Howard Owen
Rock of Ages. Sag Harbor, NY: The Permanent Press, 2006.
The story of Littlejohn McCain continues in this sequel to Owen's Littlejohn (1992).
Georgia, Littlejohn's granddaughter, returns from New Jersey to her hometown in the fictional town
of East Geddie, North Carolina. East Geddie, "where strawberries had grown and no tobacco was ever
planted," located in the sand hills of Scots County (Scotland County), greets Georgia with
flashbacks from her past life on the farm, a family murder mystery to solve, and the prospect
of true love.

Michael Parker
Hello Down There. New York: Scribners, 1993.
Edwin Keene has become something of a recluse after a tragic car accident
in which one of the passengers was killed. The aristocratic Keene,
son of a prominent local family, eases the pain of his own injuries
with too-frequent doses of morphine. As his life appears to be slipping
away, there is a sudden hope for redemption when Keene falls for Eureka
Spaight, a local high-school girl whose working-class family is very
different from his own. The novel is set in the early 1950s in the
fictional eastern North Carolina town of Trent.
Virginia Lovers. Harrison, N.Y.: Delphinium, 2004.
The rural community of Trent, N.C., a fictional town between Fayetteville
and Wilmington, is shaken when a local gay teenager is found murdered
after a high school party. Thomas Edgecombe, owner of the town's weekly
newspaper, begins to report on the case and is horrified to learn that
his two sons may be suspects. The Edgecombe boys do not help their case
when they disappear, running away to Washington, D.C. The novel follows
the three Edgecombes as they struggle to understand the crime, its consequences,
and each other.
If You Want Me to Stay. Chapel Hill: Algonquin Books, 2005.
With his mother gone, having abandoned the family, and his father ravaged
by mental illness, fourteen-year-old Joel Junior is forced into adulthood.
When their father becomes violent, Joel takes his two younger brothers
and leaves in search of some way to save the family. The novel takes place
in the 1970s in and around Trent, the same fictional eastern North Carolina
town in which two of Parker's previous novels were set. Joel narrates
the story in a vivid first person, his worries interspersed with the music
of the day running through his head.

David Payne
Early from the Dance. New York: Doubleday, 2003.
Adam Jenrette, a successful artist in New York, has just suffered a breakdown and returned home to Killdeer, N.C., a fictional town on the Outer Banks. Things there don't exactly get any easier. Adam runs into Jane McRae, with whom he had spent a memorable summer when they were both eighteen. Adam and Jane find that they are still emotional about the suicide of a common friend from Killdeer. Together they reminisce about that long-ago summer and reflect on how choices they made then have echoed throughout their lives.
Gravesend Light. New York: Doubleday, 2000. Joe Madden is a professor at Duke who has come to the Outer Banks
to study the inhabitants of a small fishing village. Joe moves into
his family's home on the fictional island of Little Roanoke, and soon
after begins an affair with Day Shaughnessy, a doctor at the local
hospital. The narrative alternates between Joe's voice and Day's, describing
the evolution of their relationship, and Joe's research. The citizens
of Little Roanoke play a prominent role in the novel as Joe tries to
understand the unique way of life on the Outer Banks.

T.R. Pearson
A Short History of a Small Place. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1985.
The suicide of Miss Myra Angelique Pettigrew -- an aristotratic woman
who had lived alone for years with her pet monkey, Mr. Britches -- is
the story that begins this novel, but is by no means the only one told.
Narrated by young Louis Benfield in a rambling, funny voice that has been
compared to the narrative style of William Faulkner, this novel portrays
the people of Neely, N.C., a fictional Piedmont town that may be based
on Reidsville.
Glad News of the Natural World. New York: Simon & Schuster,
2005.
Pearson's widely-acclaimed first novel, A Short History of a Small
Place, was the story of young Louis Benfield of Neely, N.C. Now,
twenty years later, Pearson returns to Neely and picks up the story of
34-year-old Louis. Tired of his listless life at home and his dead-end
job, Louis moves to New York city, but things don't get a whole lot better.
He bounces from one odd job to another and makes several desperate stabs
at romance that are only doomed to fail. It is only when tragedy strikes
his family that Louis is forced to make responsible decisions and, in
a way, finally grows up.

Marisha Pessl
Special Topics in Calamity Physics. New York: Viking, 2006.
Teenage narrator Blue Van Meer, daughter of an academic who has bounced from school to school, is spending her senior year of high school in the fictional mountain town of Stockton , N.C. Blue quickly falls in with a group of intelligent classmates with whom she investigates the mysterious drowning of a girl from their school.

Michael Phillips
Angels Watching Over Me. Minneapolis: Bethany House, 2003.
A Day to Pick Your Own Cotton. Minneapolis: Bethany House,
2003.
The Color of Your Skin Ain't the Color of Your Heart. Minneapolis:
Bethany House, 2004.
Together Is All We Need. Minneapolis: Bethany House, 2004.
Two young women from very different backgrounds must rely on each
other in order to survive in the turbulent times following the Civil
War in fictional Shenandoah County, N.C. Mayme Jukes is a former slave
whose family members were killed by Confederate soldiers. Katie Clairborne
is the last person left on the once majestic Rosewood plantation. In
these novels, the girls usually face danger and emerge with a deeper
understanding of race, friendship, and their Christian faith. 
Charles Price
The Cock's Spur. Winston-Salem: John F. Blair, 2002.
In the mountains of western North Carolina in the 1880s, moonshining and cockfighting are a regular part of the rough-and-tumble life. Webb Darling, the self-proclaimed king of the moonshiners, rules the region from his hilltop cabin. In contrast to the cruel and conniving Darling is a former slave named Hamby McFee who dreams of making enough money to escape from his life in the mountains, where he still farms the same land he worked as a slave. Unfortunately, the only chance Hamby has at making enough money to leave may be to win it from Darling.
Freedom's
Altar. Winston-Salem: John F. Blair, 1999.
Set in the violent, lawless days just after the Civil War, this novel
explores the deeply complicated questions about how the South would recover
and adjust to new ideas about race and class. Daniel McFee, a former
slave who had fought for the Union, has returned home to western North
Carolina to become a sharecropper on land owned by his old master, Madison
Curtis. Despite good intentions, both Curtis and McFee have trouble adjusting
to this new relationship. It's especially hard to make any meaningful
progress when the whole region is overrun with violent vigilantes all
too willing to take matters into their own hands. The novel is based
in part on the author's family history. Freedom's Altar won
the 1999 Sir Walter Raleigh Award for the best novel by a North Carolinian.
Where the Water-Dogs Laughed: The Story of the Great Bear.
Boone, N.C.: High Country Publishers, 2003.
This is the fourth novel in a series of loosely-tied books based in the North
Carolina mountains. Set in the early twentieth century, Where the Water-Dogs Laughed follows
George Weatherby, a northern logging executive who has moved to North Carolina to exploit the
state's rich timber resources. Weatherby hires and befriends Absalom Middleton, a local man,
and charges himself with reforming the rough-hewn Middleton. One of the key characters of the
book is Yan-e'gwa, a large bear which is the subject of Cherokee legend.

Reynolds Price
A Long and Happy Life New York:
Atheneum, 1962.
Price's widely acclaimed first novel is the story of Rosacoke Mustian
and her unshakable adoration for the rakish Wesley Beavers. Rosacoke's
patient and unselfish love appears wasted on Wesley, a motorcycle-riding
skirt-chasing Navy veteran who simply seems too impatient to settle down.
The setting in rural eastern North Carolina is carefully and lyrically
described.
The Good Priest’s Son. New York:
Scribner, 2005.
On September 11, 2001, Mabry Kincaid is flying home from a relaxing vacation
in Italy when the terrorist attacks hit. Unable to return to his apartment
in New York, he travels instead to his father’s house in the fictional
town of Wells in eastern North Carolina. In the time he spends back at
home, Mabry tries to reconcile his relationship with his ailing father
and come to terms with his own past in North Carolina, which he thought
he had escaped by moving to New York. In the midst of personal crises,
and set against the chaos and tragedy in New York, there is also the compelling
mystery of a painting which Mabry, an art dealer, has recently acquired
and suspects to be a Van Gogh.
Ron Rash
The World Made Straight New York:
Holt, 2006.
Past and present are entertwined in this novel when 17-year-old Travis Shelton begins
to investigate his ancestors' role in the 1863 Civil War massacre at Shelton Laurel. Travis
has just dropped out of high school and spends most of his time hanging out and reading history
with a former teacher in Madison County, N.C. The teacher has turned to selling pot to make a
living and needs Travis's help when he gets in over his head with nearby drug dealers.
Kathy Reichs Deja Dead. New York: Scribner, 1997.
Death du Jour. New York : Scribner, 1999.
Deadly Decisions. New York: Scribner, 2000.
Fatal Voyage. New York: Scribner, 2001.
Grave Secrets. New York: Scribner, 2002.
Bare Bones. New York: Scribner, 2003.
Monday Mourning. New York: Scribner, 2004.
Dr. Temperance Brennan is a forensic anthropologist who
divides her time between Charlotte, N.C. and Quebec. In each of these
novels her job calls her to the scene of a mysterious murder and she
has to rely on both her technical expertise and old-fashioned detective
work to unravel the usually complicated story behind the crime. Reichs
writes with authority -- she is a professor of anthropology at the University
of North Carolina at Charlotte and appears regularly as an expert witness
in criminal trials. Most of these novels include scenes set in Charlotte,
which Dr. Brennan describes as "a poster child for multiple personality
disorder, the Sybil of cities."

J.D. Rhoades
A Good Day in Hell. New
York: St. Martin's, 2006.
Fayetteville-based bounty hunter Jack Keller returns in this sequel to
The Devil's Right Hand. Teamed up with his new girlfriend, a local sheriff's
deputy, Keller pursues a couple of murderers across the state.

The Devil's Right Hand. New
York: St. Martin's, 2005. Jack Keller is a bail bondsman and a veteran of the first Gulf War.
Still scarred by memories of battle, his life doesn't get any easier
when he's caught in the middle of a violent struggle in Fayetteville.
Jack is on the trail of an elusive bail-jumper who has just murdered
a local Lumbee man whose vengeful sons compete with Jack to see who
can catch the fleeing killer first. To make things even more complicated,
the Fayetteville police department seems to have it in for Jack, so
that while he pursues his quarry he's forced to stay one step ahead
of the law.

Patricia Rice
Small Town Girl. New York: Ivy Books, 2006.
Flynn "Flint" Clinton returns home to the fictional
Piedmont town of North Fork, North Carolina after leaving his music career and
fast lifestyle behind in Nashville. Looking to start a new life, he finds himself
captivated by Joella Sanderson, a waitress at the restaurant he owns. Joella
brings music and love back into Flint's life, yet he is still not without his
share of troubles.
Sweet Home Carolina. New York: Ballantine Books, 2007.
When the textile mill in the fictional Piedmont town of North
Fork, North Carolina goes bankrupt, Amy Warren is determined to reopen the mill
and reinstate jobs for the people in her town. But Zack St. Etienne, a successful
European buinessman, arrives in Norfolk with other plans for the mill. Upset
by the obstruction of her goal, Amy must also come to terms with the romance
that develops with Zack.

Jack Riggs
When the Finch Rises. New York: Ballantine,
2003.
The narrator of this novel, twelve-year-old Raybert Williams
Jr., lives in Ellenton, a fictional North Carolina mill town in 1968.
Raybert's mother and father, each with deep problems of their own,
teeter between responsible parenting and neglect, while Raybert's best
friend Palmer faces an even tougher lot with an abusive stepfather
and a potential sexual predator in the family. Raybert and Palmer find
comfort in each other's company, and in their shared fantasies of growing
up and escaping Ellenton.

Karen Robards
Beachcomber. New York, Atria Books, 2003.
Christy Petrino sought a simple vacation at Ocracoke
Island after breaking up with her mobster boyfriend. But when somebody
makes an attempt on her life, she must figure out whether the New Jersey
mob or an Outer Banks serial killer (nicknamed "The Beachcomber")
is out to get her. This romantic suspense novel teams Christy with
FBI agent Luke Rand. Those familiar with Ocracoke may raise an eyebrow
at Robards's description of "cliffs on the island, tall rocky
cliffs leaning out over the ocean . . . ."

Karen Rose
Have You Seen Her? New York: Warner Books, 2004.
Special Agent Steven Thatcher is on the trail of a serial
killer who is targeting cheerleaders in the fictional Raleigh suburb
of Pineville. In between chasing criminals, Thatcher, a widower, finds
time to care for his three sons. Worried about his eldest son, he meets
with the boy's teacher, Jenna Marshall, and the sparks fly. Their romantic
involvement becomes especially complicated when it turns out that the
killer may be eyeing Jenna as his next victim.

Ann B. Ross
Miss Julia Speaks Her Mind. New York: William
Morrow, 1999.
Miss Julia Takes Over. New York: Viking, 2001.
Miss Julia Throws a Wedding. New York: Viking,
2002.
Miss Julia Hits the Road. New York: Viking,
2003.
Miss Julia Meets Her Match. New York: Viking,
2004.
Miss Julia's School of Beauty. New York: Viking, 2005.
Miss Julia Stands Her Ground. New York: Viking, 2006.
Miss Julia Strikes Back. New York: Viking, 2007.
"Miss Julia" is
Mrs. Wesley Lloyd Springer of Abbotsville, N.C., a fictional small
town probably based on Hendersonville. Miss Julia is a proper Southern
lady with a fierce independent streak who does not hesitate to speak
her mind. Each book finds Miss Julia embroiled in some new scandal
or adventure and reveals, in the interactions between her and the colorful
residents of the town, the warm-hearted kindness underneath Miss Julia's
feisty exterior.

JoAnn Ross
Out of the Mist. New York: Pocket Books, 2003.
Lily Stewart is the organizer of the Highland Games, the traditional Scottish
festival in western North Carolina. When filmmaker Ian McKenzie arrives in town, Lily believes
that he's there to make a documentary, but he may have his sights set instead on a piece of
famous antique jewelry that Lily has in her possession. Amidst the excitement of the games
and the budding romance between Ian and Lily, several members of the wacky Stewart family arrive
on the scene and the story takes off in unusual directions.

David Schulman
The Past is Never Dead: A Gritz
Goldberg Mystery.
Winston-Salem: John F. Blair, 2004. Gritz Goldberg is a psychiatrist in his hometown of Asheville, N.C.,
and is working in the same mental hospital where he once spent time
as a child. Gritz becomes involved in a decades-old murder case when
a local man with a heavy conscience confesses to him that the wrong
man was convicted for the 1939 killing of a young woman at the Battery
Park Hotel. As Gritz delves into Asheville's past, he uncovers interesting
-- and sometimes disturbing -- facts about some of the city's prominent
citizens. Many of Schulman's characters are based on actual historical
figures, including the colorful U.S. Senator Robert Rice Reynolds and
the prominent anti-semite William Dudley Pelley. In the course of chasing
the down the facts of the case, Gritz learns a great deal about Asheville's
Jewish community in the 1930s.

Joanna Catherine Scott
The Road from Chapel Hill.
New York: Penguin, 2006. This Civil War novel follows the
intertwining stories of a young woman from an elite Wilmington family,
a runaway slave, and a dirt-farmer's son.

Sarah Shaber
Simon Said. New York: St. Martin's, 1997.
Snipe Hunt. New York: St. Martin's, 2000.
The Fugitive King. New York: St. Martin's, 2002.
The Bug Funeral. New York: St. Martin's, 2004.
Shell Game. New York: St. Martin’s, 2007.
Simon Shaw is a professor of history at historic (but
fictional) Kenan College in downtown Raleigh. Dr. Shaw's specialty
is historical anthropology, and this leads to his being called into
action in each novel to investigate a long-unsolved crime. Although
Simon lives and works in contemporary Raleigh, his adventures often
take him to other parts of the state. In Snipe Hunt Simon
digs into North Carolina's maritime history while on vacation at the
Outer Banks, while in The Fugitive King he looks into a crime
in his hometown of Boone.

Steven Sherrill
Visits from the Drowned Girl. New York: Random
House, 2004.
Despite the impressive panoramic view from the radio
towers atop which Benny Poteat works, he doesn't usually see much.
But one day, as he watches silently, too far away to help, he sees
a young woman walk into a river and calmly drown herself. Instead of
reporting the suicide to the police, Benny examines the materials left
at the scene, learns the identity of the girl, locates her family,
and becomes romantically involved with her sister. The story is set
in the fictional Piedmont town of Buffalo Shoals, which is populated
by strangely intriguing and uniquely Southern residents.

Louise Shivers
Here to Get My Baby Out of Jail. Winston-Salem:
John F. Blair, 2003.
Roxy Walston is a young wife and mother on a Tarborough, N.C. tobacco
farm in 1937. Farmlife is simple and tough, and Roxy feels restless,
especially when Jack Ruffin is hired to help with the harvest. Roxy
feels an instant attraction to Jack and is soon faced with choices
that could change her forever. When Here to Get My Baby Out of
Jail was first published in 1983, it was praised for its tender
evocation of life on a tobacco farm and was named the best first novel
of the year by "USA Today."

Bland Simpson
The Mystery of Beautiful Nell Cropsey. Chapel
Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1993.
As far as anyone knew, the last person to see Nell Cropsey alive was
her boyfriend Jim Wilcox, who left her crying on her front porch in November
1901 after he ended their relationship. The people of Elizabeth City,
N.C. looked desperately for the young woman, relying on bloodhounds and
even psychics in a search that brought national attention to the small
town. Nell's body was finally found floating in the Pasquotank River,
a few weeks after she disappeared. Jim Wilcox was accused of the murder,
even thought the evidence against him was only circumstantial and he hotly
proclaimed his innocence. In this "nonfiction novel," Simpson
dramatizes the t |