I loved this. I grew up hearing the Leon Turner story but never knew the details, not even which part of the county it happened in. Maybe the greatest value for me was helping me see what Attala County was like 60 years ago. It's the rare book written today about Mississippi that's not a civil rights-era story. It's set in 1950. This is the time when my parents were young adolescents, and so I read it imagining them going about their 11- and 12-year-old lives, knowing that murderers were loose nearby. The rural life seems awfully unsettling from this perspective, where you were left to your own mercies if an intruder entered your home, and you had no phone, no car, no nearby neighbors, and you couldn't reach your gun.
I also read somewhere that it was the first case of a white man being convicted for the murder of black victims in the state of Mississippi. People sometimes lose sight of the fact that the jury deliberated a long time and (I think) toyed with acquittal. And that a black man so convicted would have been assured the death penalty. It predates all the famous civil rights cases by at least a few years, and I don't think it's properly considered one itself, though people sometimes refer to it that way. Positioned halfway through the 20th century, it hints at changes to come in only a few years. One of the two or three most important stories of the last century in Attala County history.