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Review
“Exposes the sinister complexity of American racism …King tells this … story with grace and sensitivity, and his narrative never flags. His mastery of the materials is complete.” —Jeffrey Toobin, New York Times Book Review“Riveting...King recounts this perplexing story with compassion and a vibrant sense of time and place…[a] sobering but expertly told saga.” —Washington Post“Chilling...Truth oftentimes beggars belief, and the 'true' in 'true crime' can be a promise that betrays as much as it entices. Not so with Gilbert King's scorching, compelling, and — unfortunately — still entirely relevant new work.”—NPR“A gripping tale of entrenched racism and complicity… King's reporting defies cliché with depth and specificity. He holds to verifiable facts and knows how to let a story and characters evolve… [Beneath a Ruthless Sun] haunts as an uncurtained stare into history.”—Minneapolis Star-Tribune “Remarkable… Beneath a Ruthless Sun is multiple books in one – a gripping true-crime narrative, a deeply wrenching story of American bigotry and corruption, and an inspiring tale of heroes fired by love and righteous fury… King reminds us of its not-so-distant history as a stronghold of Southern racism and bigotry, a state that produced both horrific violence and courageous protest.”—Christian Science Monitor “Timely and important.”—New York Times“Pulitzer Prize winner King returns with a new nonfiction story for those craving a Serial-esque fix… King provides a glimpse into the past that is equal parts enlightening, frustrating, and invariably un-put-downable.” —Harper's Bazaar“A true-crime masterwork.” —Men’s Journal“A first-rate crime thriller, built on shocking plot twists and vivid characters … This extraordinary book’s story might have begun more than half a century ago, but it isn’t history.” —Tampa Bay Times“Painstakingly reported… King excels at weaving in the larger social context of the Ruthless story.”—Dallas Morning News“Prepare to read Beneath a Ruthless Sun more than once — several stories are woven through this meticulously-researched nonfiction account of how justice cheated 19-year-old Jesse Daniels… [King’s] style is gentle but insistent. It’s laid out cleanly, with precision and without condemnation...And there lies the secret to the power behind King’s books: Truth. He speaks truth to a community that has kept its lips pursed together for the last 60 years, and we know it.” —Orlando Sentinel“Fascinating and shocking...King’s new book… reveals how twisted the ideology of white supremacy is and how injustice to one minority can easily justify injustice to all minorities.” —Wichita Eagle “A powerful page-turner.” —Garden & Gun“A book for true-crime aficionados as well as anyone interested in criminal justice reform.. .King delves into a complicated rape case that is rife with corruption, and in doing so, he shines a light on issues of sex, race, and class.” —Bustle“Pulitzer Prize winner Gilbert King continues his extraordinary historical autopsy of 1950s and ’60s Lake County, Florida, and its infamous racist sheriff Willis McCall… a fascinating look at the South and its people in an era many today fondly remember as when America was ‘great.’”—Florida Times-Union“Tense and stunning...[Beneath a Ruthless Sun's] taut focus on a single case also shines a light onto larger issues of racial profiling, police corruption and the condition of Florida’s mental institutions.” —Book Page“The perversions of justice under Jim Crow chart a devious path in this labyrinthine true crime saga… Packed with riveting characters and startling twists, King’s narrative unfolds like a Southern gothic noir probing the recesses of a poisoned society.” —Publisher's Weekly (starred)“A spellbinding true story of racism, privilege, and official corruption...By turns sobering, frightening, and thrilling, this meticulous account of the power and tenacity of officially sanctioned racism recalls a dark era that America is still struggling to leave behind.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred) “This book is every bit as gripping as the author’s Pulitzer-winning Devil in the Grove...Gripping history, vividly told.” —Booklist (starred)“Compelling, insightful and important, Gilbert King exposes the corruption of racial bigotry and animus that shadows a community, a state and a nation. A fascinating examination of an injustice story all too familiar and still largely ignored, an engaging and essential read.” —Bryan Stevenson, author of Just Mercy "In the tradition of Harper Lee, Gilbert King tells the story of a small southern town corrupted by racism, a perverse genteel honor, and utter disdain for poor “crackers.” Three women stand out in this gripping tale of a falsely accused man: an unrelenting reporter, a mother, and a victim doubly victimized as a pawn of others’ ambitions. In deftly unraveling a tragic mixture of lies, violence, and hatred, King powerfully reminds us how the unpalatable beliefs of 1957 haunt us still." —Nancy Isenberg, author of White Trash“Gilbert King’s stunning chronicle of race, sex and power in fatal combination yields so many truly tragic turns that it’s almost uncanny when goodness endures. With breakneck drama and cold clarity, Beneath a Ruthless Sun captures the sultry particulars of a uniquely charged place and time as well as a universal truth about how difficult it is for humans in the aggregate to do the right thing.” —Diane McWhorter, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama—the Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution Praise for Devil in the Grove:"Must read, cannot put down history." –The New York Times"A taut, intensely readable narrative." –Boston Globe"A powerful and well-told drama of Southern injustice." –The Chicago Tribune
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About the Author
Gilbert King is the author of Beneath a Ruthless Sun, published by Riverhead Books in 2018. He is also the author of the New York Times bestseller, Devil in the Grove, which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Nonfiction in 2013. The book was also the runner-up in nonfiction for the Dayton Literary Peace Prize, a finalist for both the Chautauqua Prize and the Edgar Award, and the gold medal winner in nonfiction for the Florida Book Awards. King has written about the race and criminal justice for the New York Times and the Washington Post, The Atlantic, and Smithsonian. He's also a featured contributor to The Marshall Project. King's previous book, The Execution of Willie Francis was published in 2008. He lives in Brooklyn, NY. For more information, please go to GilbertKing.com
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Product details
Hardcover: 432 pages
Publisher: Riverhead Books (April 24, 2018)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0399183388
ISBN-13: 978-0399183386
Product Dimensions:
6.3 x 1.4 x 9.3 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review:
4.9 out of 5 stars
63 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#43,498 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
Mable Norris Reese (Chesley) was my grandmother and I grew up with Jesse's story being a part of my family history. As a young girl, I met Jesse and "Aunt" Pearl when he was released from Chattahoochee and spent time with them before they moved to Green Cove Springs. Even with all that they had been through, they were the kindest, sweetest people I knew.After reading Gilbert's book, I'm horrified (but not surprised) at how much more there was to the story - I can certainly understand why my family would have censored so many things when talking to a young child. I still get chills thinking about how much my grandmother, grandfather, mom, Jesse, Aunt Pearl and Richard Graham went through to get Jesse's freedom.My grandmother would have been honored to have her story told by such a skilled and determined researcher and compelling storyteller as Gilbert King.
I read the entire book on the day it was published. Gilbert King did lengthy research and structured the story to keep the reader captivated. He made the scenes and people come alive ;it is a portrait of the worst in human nature and also the best.As a former southerner I remember the racism and prejudice which sickened me during those decades and therefore I can imagine the truth in this dark story.It’s a story with villains, heroes and innocents. I am glad that the author brought this story to light.I highly recommend this book.
There are a couple of important story threads in BENEATH A RUTHLESS SUN.However let's start at the beginning. Blanche Knowles, citrus baron Joe Knowles's wife, is raped in 1957, a Jim Crow year. She says it was a bushy-haired black manWillis McCall, the virulent racist sheriff of Lake County, Floridas rounds up every black man he can find. The two main suspects are Sam Wiley Odom, whose main crime seems to be his uppity attitude and Bubba Hawkins who happens to be related to Virgil W. Hawkins who had the audacity to apply to law school at the University of Florida.Then matters change. A white, mentally retarded man, Jesse Daniels, is arrested and promptly confesses, although he insists to his mother, his lawyers and everyone else he knows, he didn't do it. Now, why would a racist sheriff, who has gone so far as to murder black suspects, charge a white man with a crime the woman says a black man committed? She later changes her story, insisting it was so dark in the room she couldn't be sure who did it, but she identifies Jesse's voice. Remember the old saying, “Nothing is as it seems.â€Jesse avoids a trial by being found mentally incompetent to stand trial, and he is sent to Chattahoochee, the Florida insane asylum where he spends fourteen years, lumped in with violent criminals since he was charged with rape. Jesse's mother and just about everybody else he knows insists he wouldn't even know how to commit rape, nor would he hurt a fly.Pearl Daniels finds a confidant in Newspaperwoman, Mabel Norris Reese who spends the next fourteen years trying to get Jesse out of Chattahoochee. She has evidence he didn't do it, but McCall and his henchman, county attorney, Gordon G. Odom Jr. won't even let Blanche see her son.So . . . will Jesse ever get out? Will Willis McCall ever pay for his murderous behavior. I have to say I wanted to see him skinned alive, boiled in oil, and drawn and quartered. This is not a novel; this stuff actually happened. Willis McCall made Bull Conner look like Mary Poppins.Oh, yeah, there's one more ingredient in this mud hole. Joe Knowles was a known ladies man. How does that enter into the picture and why did Blanche insist a white man raped her when she knew that wasn't true? These questions will keep you turning pages.
If this book does not make you angry, nothing will. One really needs to go back and read the first book about this lawless lawman and the havoc he brought on anyone that got in his way. Murder In The Grove is the first book and I am still loaning it out to friends that have not read it yet. Beneath A Ruthless Sun picks up the story of how one corrupt sheriff ran an entire county and literally got away with murder. This book and the one before it provides an interesting look at what can happen when good people do nothing.
Fascinating book that kept me turning the pages. And the astonishing thing is that the story is true! The outrageous behavior of above-the-law Sheriff Willis McCall kept reminding me of the notorious (and recently pardoned) Sheriff Joe Arpaio. Arpaio doesn't seem to have been a multiple murderer, like McCall, but he was another example of the public official who thinks he isn't governed by the law. And (also like McCall) who keeps getting re-elected by racist voters. The twists and turns of the narrative will keep you up past your bedtime. And may give you nightmares.
Beneath a Ruthless Sun is incredibly well-written. King expertly exposes another dark secret about race driven corruption in Lake County, Florida, and our hearts reach out to those victimized by McCall and Oldham, among others.If happy endings are lacking in this story, we can take comfort in the knowledge that history is more accurately told, and so those who may have “gotten away with it†will now be remembered for their cruelty and wrong doings versus the hero’s they claimed to be thanks to King’s effort.I highly recommend this book to readers of both fiction and nonfiction of justice, race, Florida’s history, heroic journalism, history of mental institutions, and anyone seeking the truth about Florida’s corruption, and those who fought against it.
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