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Percival Everett: The Trees (Paperback, 2021, Graywolf Press) 4 stars

Percival Everett’s The Trees is a page-turner that opens with a series of brutal murders …

Deadly funny and the book the US needs

5 stars

White "good Christians" get slaughtered and mutilated in Money, Mississippi, and every single time a dead Black person is also found. The Black corpse disappears, and police and FBI have no clue what's going on.

We get to see how this feels for relatives of the victims, who turn out to be not so good and not so Christian at all. All current victims were perpetrators of lynchings. We get to read pages of names of Black lynching victims, and pages of lists of places where they were lynched - and we learn how police "forgot" to investigate, often because they were directly involved and so on.

And still, the book is written in a very funny way. It's a page-turner by design, I guess: we need to read about the lynchings, we need to understand they are part of the US history. And best way is a book that makes every effort to be read. This is the book.

I find it important to remember this topic: lynchings, by white men, on no reason whatsoever, like with Emmitt Till, 14 years, who supposedly has said "Hi" to a white woman in Money, Mississippi, and was killed, slaughtered, mutilated, shot. His face was mutilated so much he wasn't recognizable anymore (s. Wikipedia for a picture of this by scrolling down to his funeral: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emmett_Till). The white woman later recanted her story, but did not suffer any consequences. Tills murders were acquitted by a white jury.