In this page-turning novel set in the Depression-era South, New York
Times bestselling author Mary Monroe transports readers to a small
Alabama town where home is not always a sanctuary, and two neighboring
families let pleasantries mask increasing resentment . . .
Bootlegging was Milton and Yvonne Hamilton's ticket out of poverty,
prison time, and plain bad luck. Now they've moved on to a bigger,
richer pool of clientele right in their own respectable, new
middle-class backyard. And their growing friendship with the seemingly
perfect couple Joyce and Odell Watson is proving golden in more ways
than one . . .
As Milton soon learns, Odell is hiding an outside family and dubious
business dealings. It's the perfect recipe for a blackmail scheme that
will help Milton hide his own dirty
secrets--even from Yvonne. Better yet, he can take ever more dangerous
risks to ace out his
liquor-smuggling rivals. And Yvonne, emboldened by her husband's new
gravy train, delights in tormenting Joyce about everything the snobbish
matron doesn't have, especially children.
But even a winning hand can be played too far. Pushed past their limits,
Odell and Joyce will play on Milton's careless boasting to get him and
Yvonne out of their lives for good . . .
Praise for One House Over
"Impossible to put down."
--Susan Holloway Scott, author of I, Eliza Hamilton
"Monroe reveals sympathetic aspects and complex motivations for each
character in this engrossing setting."
--Booklist