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The Big Eddy Club
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Called a "dazzlingly reported, supremely elegant" work by The Observer, The Big Eddy Club is an award-winning journalist's exposé of race, injustice, and serial murder in the Deep South—Midnight in...
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05 April 2011

Over eight bloody months in the mid-1970s, a serial rapist and murderer terrorized Columbus, Georgia, killing seven affluent, elderly white women by strangling them in their beds. In 1986, eight years after the last murder, an African American, Carlton Gary, was convicted for these crimes and sentenced to death. Though to this day many in the city doubt his guilt, he remains on death row.
Award-winning reporter David Rose has followed this case for a decade, in an investigation that led him to, among other places, The Big Eddy Club—an all-white, private, members-only club in Columbus, frequented by the town's most prominent judges and lawyers…as well as most of the seven murdered women. In this setting, Rose brings to light the city's bloodstained history of racism, lynching, and unsolved, politically motivated murder.
Framed by the tale of two lynchings—one illegally carried out at the start of the last century, and the other carried out with legal due process at the end of it, The Big Eddy Club is a gripping, revealing drama, full of evocatively drawn characters, insidious institutions, and the extraordinary connections that bind past and present. The book is also a compelling, accessible, and timely exploration of race and criminal justice, not only in the context of the South, but in the whole of the United States, as it addresses the widespread corruption of due process as a tool of racial oppression.
Award-winning reporter David Rose has followed this case for a decade, in an investigation that led him to, among other places, The Big Eddy Club—an all-white, private, members-only club in Columbus, frequented by the town's most prominent judges and lawyers…as well as most of the seven murdered women. In this setting, Rose brings to light the city's bloodstained history of racism, lynching, and unsolved, politically motivated murder.
Framed by the tale of two lynchings—one illegally carried out at the start of the last century, and the other carried out with legal due process at the end of it, The Big Eddy Club is a gripping, revealing drama, full of evocatively drawn characters, insidious institutions, and the extraordinary connections that bind past and present. The book is also a compelling, accessible, and timely exploration of race and criminal justice, not only in the context of the South, but in the whole of the United States, as it addresses the widespread corruption of due process as a tool of racial oppression.
Price: $17.95
Pages: 368
Publisher: The New Press
Imprint: The New Press
Publication Date:
05 April 2011
ISBN: 9781595586872
Format: eBook
Just as it has been for nearly twenty years, this case is provoking question and controversy. And so will this book.
—The Columbus Ledger-Enquirer
[D]eeply fascinating . . .a damning, shameful saga.
—Cleveland Plain Dealer
A compelling legal drama and exposé of racism in the justice system.
—Atlanta Journal-Constitution
About as good a piece of investigative reporting as you're ever likely to get.
—Sunday Times (UK)
[An] engrossing blend of true crime, legal drama and acute exposé of racial antagonism.
—Publishers Weekly
I have never heard a book talked about this much in all my years with the company.
—Donna Sommer, Books-A-Million, Columbus, Georgia
—The Columbus Ledger-Enquirer
[D]eeply fascinating . . .a damning, shameful saga.
—Cleveland Plain Dealer
A compelling legal drama and exposé of racism in the justice system.
—Atlanta Journal-Constitution
About as good a piece of investigative reporting as you're ever likely to get.
—Sunday Times (UK)
[An] engrossing blend of true crime, legal drama and acute exposé of racial antagonism.
—Publishers Weekly
I have never heard a book talked about this much in all my years with the company.
—Donna Sommer, Books-A-Million, Columbus, Georgia
David Rose is a contributing editor at Vanity Fair and has worked for the Guardian, the Observer, and the BBC. He is the author of five previous books, including Guantánamo (The New Press).