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A MINISTER'S GHOST is a whodunit with a southern accent and a Jungian subtext...By far DePoy's best [so far], with top-notch
plotting, full-blown characters (even that albino dwarf) and a bit of Shakespeare thrown in. from KIRKUS REVIEWS

THE DEVIL'S HEARTH is first in the Fever Devilin series. Dr. Devilin, recently resigned head of a university folklore program,
returns home in the mountains to find a dead body on his front porch. Using his knowledge of esoteric lore, and a painful
awareness of his hometown and family, Fever must find the killer before the killer calls again.

THE WITCH'S GRAVE is the best selling of the Devilin novels (so far). We meet Truevine Deveroe, the witch of Blue Mountain,
a hidden community of derelicts living in a graveyard, a devil dog, and a grisly discovery in the woods. The distillation
of everything about the last days of October, this book is haunted.

EASY is the first of the Flap Tucker novels. Noir-meets-Tao, Tucker is the subtlest loving parody of the Philip Marlowe genre
imaginable. In EASY we meet Loony Lenny, unravel the murders of two strippers and a drag queen, and Flap's other half, nightclub
owner Dalliance Oglethorpe. This novel was used as the basis for DePoy's Edgar Award winning play of the same name.

Shamus finalist TOO EASY finds Flap in Savannah, Georgia, on the trail of brothers Peachy and Maytag, a lost mermaid, and
dark revelations about mysterious towns in the heat and flat fields of Enigma

EASY AS ONE, TWO, THREE takes Flap and Dalliance to the hills in search of a lost girl, snake handling preachers, the ghost
of Lost Mountain, and an all too urban connection with Atlanta toughs Moose and Hat.

DANCING MADE EASY is the most intricately plotted of the Flap Tucker novels. We begin with a dead body hanging from a lamp
post by an apron string too early in the morning in Piedmont Park. Flap's search for the killer takes him through the seamy
world of internet pornography and more dancing bodies before he discovers the impossible truth of the murders.

DEAD EASY, the last of the Flap Tucker books (so far), begins with a severed hand, an ominous metaphor. Before the final pages,
Flap's relationship with Dalliance is similarly severed, and his search for the man who may be her husband leads him through
darkest possible night and a reinvention of everything he knows.
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