Synopses & Reviews
Twenty-four years ago, Louis Kincaid was born to a black mother and a white father. And for most of those twenty-four years, he's stayed as far away as he could from Black Pool, Mississippi, where racist attitudes have evolved little. But now Louis has come home to be with his dying mother. On leave from his job in Michigan, he has just started a temporary position with the Black Pool sheriff's department when a human skeleton is discovered--the victim of a lynching. And as Louis sets out to discover the victim's identity and the circumstances of his brutal death, he quickly rediscovers what it means to be a black man in a white man's town, and what it means to be a half-white cop when he seeks help from Black Pool's African-American community. Most of all, he finds that he's stumbled onto a case that will tear Black Pool apart and spill secrets too ugly to bear. There are those who have been waiting for years to tell the story of a long-ago night of terror--and others who will do anything to silence them.
Synopsis
The "New York Times" bestselling author and creator of the gripping Louis Kincaid series takes readers back to where it all began, as Kincaid investigates a murder in the hometown that always treated him as an outcast. Now available at a special price.