The Drifter's Wheel: A Fever Devilin Novel

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St. Martin's Publishing Group, Jun 24, 2008 - Fiction - 288 pages

"DePoy, a folklorist, excels at providing local color and creating complex characters. The story unfolds slowly and lyrically, giving readers a sense of small-town Appalachian atmosphere." –Booklist on A Minister's Ghost

"By far DePoy's best, with top-notch plotting, full-blown characters, and a bit of Shakespeare thrown in." – Kirkus Reviews (starred) on A Minister's Ghost

Fever Devilin, born and raised amongst the hill country folk of the Georgia Appalachians, left home a long time ago and pursued an education, then a career, in the wider outside world. A folklorist by inclination and profession, he left the strange world of academia behind to return to his family-home in the if-anything-stranger mountain town he grew up in. But oddness follows Fever wherever he goes and Blue Mountain, Georgia is no different.

When a man shows up at his house, claiming to be over a hundred years old even though he looks like he's in his 30's, Fever is pretty sure his guest is not right. When the man starts to wave a gun around, then falls suddenly asleep immediately afterward, Fever thinks he's both "not right" and "dangerous" and slips out to call the sheriff. The sheriff, Fever's childhood friend, has been hearing reports of this particular vagrant all day but before he can get out there, the man disappears.

In the early morning, the body of man that fits the description of the mysterious vagrant is found by the side of the road, shot to death. But, although the body is wearing the same clothes that the vagrant was, it isn't the same person.

 

Contents

Section 1
1
Section 2
13
Section 3
22
Section 4
30
Section 5
43
Section 6
58
Section 7
103
Section 8
123
Section 14
175
Section 15
183
Section 16
188
Section 17
194
Section 18
203
Section 19
207
Section 20
212
Section 21
218

Section 9
140
Section 10
145
Section 11
152
Section 12
160
Section 13
165
Section 22
231
Section 23
235
Section 24
241
Section 25
250
Section 26
273

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About the author (2008)

Phillip DePoy is the author of eight previous mysteries, including the Shamus Award finalist Easy. He has published short fiction, poetry, and criticism in Story, The Southern Poetry Review, Xanadu, and Yankee, among other magazines. As a folklorist, he has worked with Joseph Campbell and John Burrison. Depoy is currently the director of the theatre program at Clayton State University. He lives in Decatur, Georgia.

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