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 the Garden
of Good and Evil with an investigative edge. Over eight bloody months
in the mid-1970s, a serial rapist and murderer terrorized Columbus,
Georgia, killing seven affluent, elderly white women--almost all members
of the Big Eddy social club for the town's elite. Carlton Gary, an
African American man currently on death row for what came to be known as
the stocking stranglings, came within four hours of being executed in
December 2009.
The Big Eddy Club connects Gary's late-twentieth-century trial with
racially charged trials in Columbus of a previous era, to explore the
broad topic of racial justice in the American South. This paperback
edition includes an all-new afterword detailing the recent discovery of
potentially exonerating evidence, which led to Gary's last-minute stay
of execution and will likely result in a new trial.