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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
31 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Incredibly accurate: I know, I lived it!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Mississippi Mud: Southern Justice and the Dixie Mafia (Mass Market Paperback)
On September 16th of 1987, the world as I knew it changed. My brother Eric called to inform me he had received a call from a woman in Biloxi who had heard on the news that our parents were dead. Nothing could have prepared me for the next ten years. I shared information with the author of this book from documentation, not imagination, in an effort to not allow the case to be as buried as were my parents... after all, at some point I will see them again. I could never look them in the eye and tell them I loved them and not have done everything possible to bring their killers to justice. I can assure you every tear I shed in reading this, attests to its accuracy in capturing both the event and the emotion.
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Life & Death on The Strip,
By
This review is from: Mississippi Mud: Southern Justice and the Dixie Mafia (Mass Market Paperback)
At the time I first read Hume's Mississippi Mud I worked in downtown Biloxi, and I found the book so powerfully evocative that each time I passed City Hall I caught myself shuddering.Superior to the more famous MIDNIGHT IN THE GARDEN OF GOOD AND EVIL, Humes' MISSISSIPPI MUD paints a portrait of an infamous lonelyhearts scam being run out of notorious Angola prison by a member of Mississippi's good-old-boy crime ring--a scam that ultimately involves a sitting Judge, Vincent Sherry, his mayorial candidate wife, Magaret, and a law partner who has political aspirations of his own, Pete Halat. And the involvement quickly spirals into a double murder that would haunt the city and the entire region for years to come. The story is extremely convoluted, but Humes tells it with disturbing clarity and in the process captures the atmosphere of a city with a long history of political corruption and social hypocrisy, where strip joints and churches and slums and great mansions co-exist cheek-to-cheek. In some respects the book does a disservice to the respectable citizens of the city, tarring them with the same brush as it does the criminal element, but there is no denying the power of this pitch-black story of life and death on the Biloxi strip, and Humes' book accurately follows the news updates on the case as they so slowly unfolded on the Mississippi gulf coast, as well as drawing material from those most intimately involved in the investigation. In the same league as Capote's IN COLD BLOOD and Alexander's NUTCRACKER, those who read Hume's MISSISSIPPI MUD will find themselves in for a well-documented, increasingly disturbing, chilling, and fascinating time.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A whole lotta sewerage,
By TundraVision (o/~ from the Land of Sky Blue Waters o/~) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Mississippi Mud: A True Story from a Corner of the Deep South (Hardcover)
After an Oprah-esque beginning focusing on the bereaved family, this is one of the best "true-crime" books that I've read - although the exposed failures of "the system" are truly frustrating. On September 14, 1987, someone brutally murdered mayor-wannabe Margaret Sherry and her husband, Vincent the Judge, in Biloxi, Mississippi. Through intention, incompetence, obstruction, or neglect, there were investigative blunders. But the persistence of the Sherry's daughter, Lynne Sposito, eventually focused suspicion on Judge Sherry's former law partner and mayor-wannabe Peter Halat, and a cabal of convicts over in Louisiana s Angola prison. Author Ed Humes steers this saga well - churning through the moral murkiness of Biloxi and far throughout the South - touching such folks as Senator Robert S. Kerr; Jim Garrsion; the Sherriff who walked tall - Buford Pusser; and the Bishop of Biloxi - who tried to intercede on behalf of one of those convicted in this mess. Reviewers have likened this story to a John Grisham novel. This is not a "Grisham-like" tale. Seems to me like this is a true tale from which Grisham created fiction. The scam at the fetid heart of the 1987 Sherry murder conspiracy, the "lonely hearts" bilking and extortion from gay men, is real similar to the scam in the center of Mississippi-native Grisham's later novel, "The Brethren." Usually in fiction, the Good Guys "get their man" or woman, or gang of bad folk. The Hardcover edition of Mississippi Mud is stuck with the "ending" that is no end. Why? Maybe because "Pete Halat had his supporters - a majority of voters had elected him mayor, after all. And apart from questions of his guilt or innocence, there was Biloxi's long history of wearing moral blinders. While shopping one day, a businesswoman she had known for years asked Lynne why she insisted on stirring up trouble, causing investigations and trials that hurt Biloxi's image. 'It's sewerage, honey, I know, but it's our sewerage,' the woman complained. 'If we want to swim in it, y'all ought to let us.'" (page 313-314) Hume's book illuminates the cesspool. (Stay tuned for Updates contained in the Paperback.)
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