Not only does Wortham write exceptionally well, but he somehow manages
to infuse Unraveled with a Southern gothic feel that would make even
William Faulkner proud... A hidden gem of a book that reads like Craig
Johnson's Longmire mysteries on steroids. --The Providence Journal
Blending the racial topicality of the Sixties crime classic In the
Heat of the Night with the coming-of-age poignancy of To Kill a
Mockingbird, Unraveled presents a gripping investigation into the
extremes of human nature--both at its most repulsive and at its
redemptive best.
It's 1968; a time of race riots across America, the assassination of Dr.
Martin Luther King in Memphis, and polarizing demonstrations at the
Democratic National Convention in Chicago. In the rural Northeast Texas
community of Center Springs, a car lunges through the guard rails on
Highway 271's tightest curve and flings its two occupants down the new
Lake Lamar Dam. What stuns the town's residents isn't the tragic
accident but the identities of the two victims: Mayor Frank Clay, a
white man, and Maggie Mayfield, a black woman who worked in his office.
Each of them married to other people. What were they doing in Frank's
car together?
Living with his grandparents, Ned and Miss Becky, in a little farmhouse
near the Red River, fourteen-year-old Top Parker finds himself caught up
in another adult situation. The war escalating between the Clays and the
Mayfields is frightening in its intensity. More horrifying is a man
calling himself the Wraith, who moves through the region at will,
invading homes and watching the Parkers. The Wraith has his own deadly
agenda. And it soon becomes clear to Top that, for some reason, he is
part of it.