**This Edgar Award winner is "equal parts morality tale and
page-turning thriller" (Denver Post)--classic American storytelling
in its truest, darkest, and most affecting form, with echoes of William
Faulkner and Harper Lee.
**
Its 1933 in East Texas and the Depression lingers in the air like a slow
moving storm. When a young Harry Collins and his little sister stumble
across the body of a black woman who has been savagely mutilated and
left to die in the bottoms of the Sabine River, their small town is
instantly charged with tension. When a second body turns up, this time
of a white woman, there is little Harry can do from stopping his Klan
neighbors from lynching an innocent black man. Together with his younger
sister, Harry sets out to discover who the real killer is, and to do so
they will search for a truth that resides far deeper than any river or
skin color.