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Guilty Creatures: Sex, God, and Murder in Tallahassee, Florida

Guilty Creatures: Sex, God, and Murder in Tallahassee, Florida

by Mikita Brottman

Atria/One Signal Publishers ·2024 ·288 pages
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14/99
Maybe Someday

26/99

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About This Book

From the critically acclaimed author of the "enthralling" ( San Francisco Book Review ) An Unexplained Death , a breathless true crime tale of sex, religion, and murder in the deep South. On the face of it, Denise Williams and Brian Winchester had the perfect, quintessentially Southern lives. The two were hardworking devout Baptists and together, with their respective spouses, formed a tight-knit friendship that seemed unbreakable. That is, until December 16, 2000, when Denise's husband Mike disappeared while duck hunting on Lake Seminole on the border of Georgia and Florida. After no body was found, it was assumed that he had drowned and was consumed by alligators in a tragic accident. But things took an unexpected turn when Brian divorced his wife and married Denise. Their surprising marriage was far from happy and in 2018, he confessed to police he killed Mike with Denise's help nearly two decades earlier. Now, the full, shocking story is revealed by Mikita Brottman, acclaimed true crime writer and "one of today's finest practitioners of nonfiction" ( The New York Times Book Review ). With tenacious investigating and clear-eyed prose, she exposes the dark underbelly of far-right conservative Christianity and how it led Brian to choose murder over adultery. A fascinating and in-depth page-turner, Guilty Creatures is destined to become an instant classic in the true crime genre.


Reviews

"she has the ability to make sense of seemingly inexplicable behavior by zeroing in on the banal desires that lead to it."

Chris Hewitt· The Minneapolis Star Tribune Read review ↗ Near the Top

"It never becomes clear why she is drawn to this particular crime, or what larger story she wants to tell."

Kelly McMasters· The New York Times Read review ↗ Near the Top

"An atmospheric tale that unwraps the wholesome, God-fearing exterior of two lovers to show the rot underneath."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

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