Swamp kings The story of the Murdaugh family of South Carolina and a century of backwoods power

Jason Ryan

Large print - 2024

"The stranger-than-fiction story of the now-notorious Lowcountry clan, in all its Southern Gothic intensity--by an author with unparalleled access to and knowledge of the players, the history, and the place. The most famous man in South Carolina lives in prison. He stands convicted of a staggering amount of wrongdoing--more than 100 crimes and counting. Once a high-flying, smooth-talking, pedigreed Southern lawyer, Alex Murdaugh is now disbarred and disgraced. For more than a decade, prosecutors asserted that Alex was secretly a fraud, a thief, a drug trafficker, and an all-around phony. On the night of June 7, 2021, they claimed, he also became a killer, shooting dead his wife and son in a desperate bid to escape accountability. The m...any crimes of Alex Murdaugh, exposed piecemeal over the last two years, have appalled the general public. Yet his implosion--the spectacular manner in which he has turned his vaunted family name to mud--has also proved mesmerizing. With every revelation, Alex Murdaugh has been shown to be a man without bottom, though he insists he never harmed his family. Remarkably, all of his misdeeds have precedent. In Swamp Kings, Jason Ryan reveals Alex's evil actions are only the tip of the iceberg. When it comes to the Murdaugh family of Hampton County, history has a way of repeating itself. For every alleged, headline-grabbing crime associated with Alex Murdaugh, mirror-image incidents have played out within his family's past, including parallel instances of fraud, theft, illicit trafficking of babies and booze, calamitous boat crashes, and even alleged murder. There were some crimes committed by Alex's kin that even he would not dare mimic. Covering a century of depravity in an impoverished and isolated stretch of the Deep South, Swamp Kings weaves together the jaw-dropping narratives of generations of Murdaughs before culminating in the telling of a murder trial for the ages. Page after page the family's legacy is laid bare as a spotlight is finally trained on the Murdaugh men who have long lorded over the South Carolina Lowcountry. "--

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Subjects
Genres
Large print books
True crime stories
Published
[Waterville, Maine] : Thorndike Press, a part of Gale, a Cengage Company 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Jason Ryan (author)
Edition
Large print edition
Item Description
"The text of this Large Print edition is unabridged. Other aspects of the book may vary from the original edition ... Published in 2024 by arrangement with Pegasus Books LLC"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
731 pages (large print), 16 unnumbered leaves of unnumbered plates : illustrations, map ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 659-723).
ISBN
9781420515213
  • The Lowcountry Of South Carolina Map
  • Dramatis Personae
  • 1. In the Spotlight
  • 2. At Home in the Swamp
  • 3. Secrets and Sins
  • 4. Buster's Law
  • 5. Predator and Prey
  • 6. Fixed Outcomes
  • 7. End of the Line
  • 8. The Trial
  • Coda
  • Works Cited
  • Notes
  • A Note From The Author
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The tale of a Lowcountry crime dynasty operating with impunity under cover of the law. In 2023, high-profile lawyer Alex Murdaugh was charged with 99 crimes, including fraud, grand larceny, drug dealing, and the murders of his wife and son. As Charleston-based journalist Ryan, author of Jackpot and Race to Hawaii, shows, these crimes were a chain. Murdaugh became addicted to opioids, stole to fund his habit, and killed to hide his stealing. In doing so, writes the author in this sometimes slow-moving but grimly fascinating story, Murdaugh summed up a long familial legacy, with ancestors who made fortunes and reputations as kingpin lawyers in the swamp country near the Georgia line. They were effectively a law unto themselves, allied with secessionists, segregationists, moonshiners, and corrupt officials who lorded over their less fortunate neighbors, especially those of color. Occasionally, a Murdaugh would spend political capital on a progressive cause. In 1935, Randolph Murdaugh advocated for women to serve on juries because "their presence would have a good influence," even as he insisted that "the testimony of a single White witness…was preferable to the accounts of six Black men." Some of that early Murdaugh power was eventually diminished by federal inquiries and prosecutions, but by the time Alex came around, he was untouchable--almost, with the judge noting that Murdaugh, having sentenced plenty of people to death "probably for lesser conduct," was lucky not to be headed to the electric chair. Ryan's prose can wax purplish--"True dominion of this isolated swath of the South once belonged to someone as territorial and unyielding as the cottonmouth, as opportunistic and vicious as the alligator"--but his story unfolds with the care of a well-plotted procedural. A searing, disheartening true-crime study, indicting a legacy of crime stretching out over centuries. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.