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Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, and the Last Trial of Harper Lee
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Group Reads archive > Initial Impressions: Furious Hours, by Casey Cep, August 2019

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message 1: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new) - rated it 4 stars

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
Comments on this board should be written with the assumption that not all readers have finished the book. Please avoid revealing any spoilers.


message 2: by Sara (new) - rated it 1 star

Sara (phantomswife) | 1493 comments I'm waiting for this one at the library--expected back on August 15th, so I will be reading this second half of the month.


Josh (georgiareader) So far so good. I had never heard of this story so it is quite interesting through the first 100 pages. Hope it stays that way


message 4: by Sara (new) - rated it 1 star

Sara (phantomswife) | 1493 comments Glad to hear you are liking it Josh. I also have never heard of it--so going in blind.


message 5: by Laura, "The Tall Woman" (new) - rated it 3 stars

Laura | 2848 comments Mod
I’m liking some chapters but it seems disorganized at times. Are they supposed to be connected?


message 6: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new) - rated it 4 stars

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
I am hoping to get the audio from the library in the next couple weeks. Wish me luck.


message 7: by Laura, "The Tall Woman" (new) - rated it 3 stars

Laura | 2848 comments Mod
First time I remember her name Nelle was after her aunt Ellen, spelled backwards. Some of this is repeated in other books I’ve read. Not much new material on Lee.


message 8: by Lawyer, "Moderator Emeritus" (new) - rated it 4 stars

Lawyer (goodreadscommm_sullivan) | 2668 comments Mod
This one's a winner. Cep covers Alabama politics in the mid 20th century to a "T." The nation wide problem of life insurance fraud. And the portrait of an extraordinary trial lawyer, Tom Radney. Finally, Cep sheds light on Lee's relationship with Truman Capote and the decline of their friendship and her struggle to write "The Reverend." Lee still remains an enigma withdrawing into herself, amidst a life of loneliness, alcohol, and depression.


Gem  | 32 comments I ordered this through the library and picked it up today, I can't wait to start reading it.


Libby | 199 comments I’m enjoying Cep’s narrative style, something along the lines of an investigative journalist. The way insurance came into existence is interesting. At first I wondered why she was going into so much depth about life insurance policies, but it was soon evident.


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