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The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter
  

The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter (Hardcover)

by Sharyn McCrumb (Author) "The road was dark ..." (more)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Revisiting some of the characters from If Ever I Return, Pretty Peggy-O, Edgar Award winner McCrumb weaves Appalachian folklore and death, in natural and unnatural forms, into a story that meanders like a mountain stream through the hills of east Tennessee before rushing to its turbulent conclusion. Wake County Sheriff Spencer Arrowood asks Laura Bruce, wife of the local Baptist minister, who is now an Army chaplain stationed overseas, to comfort the bereaved at the scene of a bloody murder. Ret. Maj. Paul Underhill, his wife and two of his four children are dead, shot apparently by one of the sons, who took his own life after killing the others. Laura serves as advocate for the surviving children, Maggie and Mark, who want to remain in the house so they can continue going to classes at the local high school. But when deputy Joe LeDonne discovers that the two have disinterred their father's body from its grave, he wants to know what really happened on the night of the shooting. Concurrently, 38-year-old Laura is told she is pregnant and local farmer Tavy Annis is diagnosed with cancer, brought on by a chemical spill in the Little Dove River. These plots twine around the knowledge of an old mountain seer whose gift adds to the haunting quality of the story and to its chilling suspense. Mystery Guild selection.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.


From Kirkus Reviews

Here, McCrumb turns serious as she explores death from many angles: the matter-of-factness of a backwoodswoman with the gift of Sight; the get-even attitude of two old friends, one dying from the willful contamination of the Little Dover River by the Titan Paper Company; the emotional trauma paralyzing a brother and sister (who were subjects of physical abuse and witnesses to a family bloodbath and suicide); and the despair of a three-year-old who loses his mother, and of a pregnant woman who loses her unborn child. The story unfolds through the vision of Nora Bonesteel, whose Sight sets her to sewing a funeral quilt with six graves on it, and the ministrations of Dark Hollow, Tennessee, preacher's wife Laura Bruce, who is trying to tend to her husband's flock while he's serving in the Gulf. Four of the tombstones are soon co-opted by the Underhills--mother/father/two sons--and while Sheriff Arrowood tries to understand why son Joshua killed his kin and himself, two old friends hold the paper company's CEO hostage for carcinogenic polluting (another grave), and a trailer fire (another tombstone) fills out the quilt, while Laura, grieving for her unborn child, completes the dying cycle. Compelling, in the manner of a folk tale, despite the rather limp prose. -- Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

28 Reviews
5 star:
 (11)
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (28 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2.0 out of 5 stars not her best, May 30 2004
By A Customer
McCrumb has a tendency to toss in one completely unrealistic plot device to keep her stories moving in the way she wants them to go. In The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter, it's the ridiculously non-existant guardianship of the Underhill teens. Can you say, "Ward of the state?"

Also, what was with the whole thing about the Judds? Particularly since all the facts were wrong. McCrumb has Martha tell Spencer that the liver is the one organ that doesn't get better, when reality is exactly the opposite. The liver is the ONLY regenerative organ in the body. Also, what's with the talk of the hepatitis coming from bad road food? If you don't want to go into the modes of transmission of hepatitis C, don't make it a subplot. As someone with a family member with hep C, the misinformation here really annoyed me. It's horribly nitpicky to say it affected my enjoyment of the rest of the book, but I kept thinking, what other facts has she gotten completely wrong? not her best effort at all.

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3.0 out of 5 stars It was alright..., April 30 2004
By Cass (Missouri) - See all my reviews
I started reading this book b/c of it the title. I love sort of off beat book titles and this was certainly different. It was depressing and didn't make a whole big bunch of sense. However I was intrigued with the writing and plot quality. I became enthralled with the SEER stuff and things of the supernatural. Being from the dark woods of the Ozarks I can totally respect those points of the book.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful!, May 13 2003
By "turtlechick" (Shawsville, VA United States) - See all my reviews
Nora Bonesteel, the wise woman of the Tennessee mountains is what her Celtic forebears would recognize as an "edge witch", one who patrols the boundaries between life and death, good and evil, the supernatural and the mundane. In this novel sorrow comes to the mountain community in the guise of an murder/suicide on a remote farm and via a polluted river that brings death into the valley. Nora Bonesteel, with her graveyard quilt and her herbal remedies does what she can do to protect the ordinary folk from tragedy. This is a wonderful novel to trace the continuance of Celtic heritage and folkways into America's Eastern mountains which were settled by Britain's Highlanders.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars A great find!
I read the first book in this series, Pretty Peggy-O and read this one right after. This book still seemed to have the author finding her way as a writer, but it was better than... Read more
Published on April 29 2003 by Theresa W

5.0 out of 5 stars Enthralling Murder-Mystery
I picked up this book reluctantly, because I have always found mysteries to be stale and boring. But this book has a way of pulling you in that you never want to get back out... Read more
Published on Nov 29 2002 by Madeline Marshall

3.0 out of 5 stars DEPRESSING
There are several books that I call my "Seasonal Affective Disorder" books. I reread them every year during the dark nights of January, and they lift me up out of the winter... Read more
Published on Aug 12 2002 by Kelly L. (www.FantasyLiteratur...

2.0 out of 5 stars Where's the mystery
I read this book expecting a mystery and wound up with a slew of Tennessee backwoods tales. None of the characters were that interesting and all were the product of things... Read more
Published on Mar 18 2002

2.0 out of 5 stars NOT A MYSTERY!!!!!!
I really don't see how this can be called a mystery. It started off well enough but then went down hill the rest of the way. Read more
Published on May 1 2001 by Mac Blair

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Book
I read this for a mystery book discussion group, and we all liked it very much. McCrumb does an excellent job of putting you in the Appalachians and of detailing the various... Read more
Published on April 24 2001 by Mark S. Winger

4.0 out of 5 stars Once Upon A Time-----
there was a tiny town named Hamelin in the Tennessee hills. Gather round while Sharyn McCrumb weaves another of her Ballads. Read more
Published on April 22 2001 by sweetmolly

3.0 out of 5 stars Odd
I found "The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter" to have too many subplots. I think Sharyn could have been more detailed if she had limited her focus to 1-2 storylines. Read more
Published on Dec 31 2000 by Susan Brown

4.0 out of 5 stars A Great Book
The novel the Hangman's Beautyful Daughter is a great book by Sharyn McCrumb. The Book is about the life of Laura Bruce and her visits to the families of the eastern Tennessee... Read more
Published on Dec 15 2000 by Jimmy Mullins

4.0 out of 5 stars my first Sharyn McCrumb experience will likely lead to more
I had no idea what to expect from this book. I ended up being very pleasantly surprised. McCrumb clearly knows the Tennessee/North Carolina landscape which graces The Hangman's... Read more
Published on Dec 7 2000 by Johnny Roulette

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