J. G. Ragsdale Book Award in Arkansas History, Arkansas History Association, 2013.
Essential reading for all scholars with an interest in the history of Arkansas, the Ozarks and Appalachia, and the South. --Arkansas Historical Quarterly
A solid read about how the press presents criminal events. . . . Will be of interest to true crime fans.--Library Journal
Blevins keeps the reader interested and entertained from the first page of his book to the last.--Arkansas Review
Brooks Blevins does an outstanding job of retelling the ins and outs of this fantastic and entertaining story--the sensationalism of the press, the charges of rape, peonage, and privilege, the dramatic trial, and even the reappearance of the murder victim.--Michael Pierce, associate editor, Arkansas Historical Quarterly
One of the most interesting books I have read in years--I started the first few pages and just couldn't quit. This thorough and sophisticated discussion will appeal to readers interested in the history of violence, cultural stereotypes, modernization, the Ozarks, legal history, and journalism. --Bruce E. Baker, author of This Mob Will Surely Take My Life: Lynchings in the Carolinas, 1871-1947
This is local history at its best--the description and analysis of a single localized event that sheds light on the larger place and time. Blevins writes with a knowledge based on exhaustive scholarly research and the understanding of one who was born and raised in the region. Serious scholars and casual readers alike will find Ghost of the Ozarks hard to put down.--The Journal of Southern History
This book is about far more than a trial. It is a deep and penetrating look at an isolated and poor mountain redoubt along Cajun Creek on the eastern edge of Stone County.--Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Brooks Blevins is an expert on Ozarks matters--the history, the land, the people--and in Ghost of the Ozarks he proves it again. Blevins provides a spellbinding account of a notorious and brutal crime involving murder, rape, and the resurrection of a corpse, with a bounty of mysterious elements and a haunting resolution.--Daniel Woodrell, author of Winter's Bone
[Blevins] burrows deep into the family lines, the social relationships, and the economy of the tiny community. . . . He dispels many of the myths about the alleged backwardness of the people of the Ozarks, and creates a fascinatingly complex work of historical sociology/ethnology.--Columbia Journalism Review
Provides valuable insights into journalism's part in creating or maintaining stereotypes of a region and its residents. . . . The book tells a compelling tale. --Jhistory
A fascinating account of one of the strangest criminal cases in Arkansas history and an excellent exploration of the social life and customs of a bygone backwoods era.--The Sentinel-Record
The masterful application of a fine historian's research and writing techniques provides important resources for folklorists researching interconnections between local history and folklore.--Journal of Folklore Research
This is local history at its best--the description and analysis of a single localized event that sheds light on the larger place and time. Blevins writes with a knowledge based on exhaustive scholarly research and the understanding of one who was born and raised in the region. Serious scholars and casual readers alike will find Ghost of the Ozarks hard to put down.--The Journal of Southern History
Brooks Blevins. . . . shows that one can never quite sift out all of the cultural biases and long-held prejudices and get down to the bare facts of a case. . . .Blevins has found more complexity than anyone could have imagined during an already complicated trial.--Missouri Historical Review
Blevins delivers a top-notch, well-documented social history of the White River hills, one in which he debunks the notion of exceptionalism in the upland South and concludes that life in the Ozarks on the eve of the Great Depression was much more complex and interesting than the yellow press made it out to be.--Journal of Appalachian Studies
This book is about far more than a trial. It is a deep and penetrating look at an isolated and poor mountain redoubt along Cajun Creek on the eastern edge of Stone County.--Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Brooks Blevins is an expert on Ozarks matters--the history, the land, the people--and in Ghost of the Ozarks he proves it again. Blevins provides a spellbinding account of a notorious and brutal crime involving murder, rape, and the resurrection of a corpse, with a bounty of mysterious elements and a haunting resolution.--Daniel Woodrell, author of Winter's Bone
One of the most interesting books I have read in years--I started the first few pages and just couldn't quit. This thorough and sophisticated discussion will appeal to readers interested in the history of violence, cultural stereotypes, modernization, the Ozarks, legal history, and journalism.--Bruce E. Baker, author of This Mob Will Surely Take My Life: Lynchings in the Carolinas, 1871-1947
Brooks Blevins does an outstanding job of retelling the ins and outs of this fantastic and entertaining story--the sensationalism of the press, the charges of rape, peonage, and privilege, the dramatic trial, and even the reappearance of the murder victim.--Michael Pierce, associate editor, Arkansas Historical Quarterly