From the Bookshelf of On the Southern Literary Trail

Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter
by
Start date
July 1, 2025
Finish date
July 31, 2025
Discussion
Now Reading: Post-1990
Why we're reading this
From Goodreads:

Tom Franklin's narrative power and flair for characterization have been compared to the li…more

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Group Discussions About This Book

* Initial Impressions: I am not Sidney Poitier, by Percival Everett – September 2025
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last updated Sep 08, 2025 03:07PM
* Final Impressions: I am not Sidney Poitier, by Percival Everett – September 2025
By Tom , "Big Daddy" · 1 post · 15 views
last updated Aug 29, 2025 01:13PM
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What Members Thought

Stephen
Gorgeous...

Gorgeous and dripping with emotion and ache...

This story OWNED ME from the opening page and LARRY OTT is among the most endearing, heart-wrenching characters I've come across in a long, long time. That I connected so well with both the story and its main character surprised me because, being born and raised in Vegas, my own life experience is so vastly different from both Larry and the town of Chabot, Mississippi, where the story takes place. I give heaping mounds of credit to author
...more
Kathleen
Oct 17, 2010 rated it it was amazing
Shelves: favorites
There are books that you read as you drift off to sleep, setting them aside and then coming back to them the next night. This is not that type of book. Based on my experience, this is the kind of book that you pick up at night and then read straight through, getting up several times to avoid sleep, in order to keep reading. From the first line, I was transfixed. While the book is well plotted and interesting, it was the characters that kept me turning the pages late last night. Larry Ott, town b ...more
Tony
Dec 11, 2012 rated it liked it
Shelves: u-s-lit
I hated the opening line: The Rutherford Girl had been missing for eight days when Larry Ott returned home and found a monster waiting in his house. In fact, I groaned and put it back about four times on the TBR pile before I was able to push through that.

But once I did, I read this in a day. This is a really good story, very well told. A quintessential page-turner. It's fun to read a book like this once in awhile.

Two things I will take away from this. First is the contraption Larry Ott made to
...more
Erika
The world enveloped me much the way Lonesome Dove did, completely and fully. I'm sure I will read this again because it was so heartrendingly beautiful. The most important thing I learned is to always, always, always listen to Gretchen when she recommends a book. ...more
Andy Weston
Dec 13, 2011 rated it really liked it
Certainly enjoyed the book very much overall.

It's the second decent US crime type novel I've read this year - both very different and well-written - and if you enjoyed this I'd recommend The Terror of Living (Urban Waite)

Why is the books title relevant? Probably I missed something!

What happened to the disappeared girl? I expect I'm supposed to guess as the police did.

My only criticism that takes 1 star away is that the last part was a bit ordinary - the way the book was written I was expectin
...more
Jeffrey
Jan 10, 2012 rated it it was amazing
Listened to about three quarters of Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter on a car trip this past weekend. When I got home, I couldn't wait for another listening opportunity so I grabbed the ebook and finished it off.

A well-written page-turner; a real treat.
...more
Book Concierge
Oct 21, 2011 rated it really liked it
In a small Mississippi town, two young boys, one white and the other black, hide their friendship. When they are in high school a young girl goes missing after a date with one of the boys. Her disappearance is never solved, but the town assumes he killed her and they persecute him. Meanwhile the other boy moves away and goes to college. Now, years later, Silas has returned to Chabot as a police constable. Larry is still ostracized and tormented by the local teens. When another young girl goes mi ...more
Bonnie
Aug 22, 2013 rated it liked it
The setting for this novel is Mississippi where children spell the name of their state by learning: M, I, crooked letter, crooked letter, I, crooked letter, crooked letter, I, humpback, humpback, I.
Silas, known as "32" for his baseball number, is the protagonist of a small, rural town where working as constable he gets such calls as a woman finding a rattlesnake in her mailbox. He remembers a friendship fostered by a common interest with Larry Ott, son of lower-middle-class white patents. The f
...more
Gail Strickland
Jun 25, 2011 rated it it was amazing
I was simply blown away by this one. Franklin could have been describing the area where I grew up with his descriptions of the rural South.
Julia
Jul 16, 2012 rated it really liked it
This was the 2012 Roswell Reads selection. The author was funny and engaging - quite unlike the book, but the book was beautifully written.
Beth
Dec 17, 2011 rated it liked it
I enjoyed this book. I did find it a little predictable, especially at the end but I was rooting for the characters so much I didn't care. ...more
George
Oct 10, 2010 rated it it was amazing
Shelves: sf, sa
John
Nov 14, 2010 rated it it was amazing
Ann
Nov 20, 2010 rated it really liked it
Greer
Nov 28, 2010 marked it as to-read
jenna Hudrlik
Dec 18, 2010 rated it liked it
Shelves: 2011-for-me
Amanda
May 27, 2011 rated it it was amazing
Erin
Jul 11, 2011 marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
Stephanie *Eff your feelings*
Jul 22, 2011 rated it really liked it
Shelves: mystery, 2011
Katy
Aug 06, 2011 rated it really liked it
Sharon
Oct 29, 2011 rated it liked it
Shelves: mississippi
Carmen Slaughter
Dec 31, 2011 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Gretchen Stone
May 31, 2012 rated it really liked it
Michelle
Jan 03, 2013 marked it as to-read
Lisa Angle
May 11, 2013 marked it as to-read
Kate
Jun 12, 2013 marked it as to-read
Carrie
Apr 23, 2014 marked it as to-read
Ann
Apr 26, 2014 marked it as to-read
Shelves: audio
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