TELL ME SOMETHING GOOD
crime • thriller • family life • small town • gothic
The heart, hope, and pacing of Fredrik Backman's Beartown meets the Southern atmospheric storytelling of Flannery O'Connor in Court Stevens's adult debut novel centered around a decades-old murder that turns a small Southern town upside down.
The latest page-turning mystery from author Court Stevens!
PRAISE FOR TELL ME SOMETHING GOOD
“Tell Me Something Good is better than good. It’s fantastic! Court Stevens has crafted a beautifully written tale full of heart and rich characters who live on long after the last page. If you like a just-one-more-page mystery that will keep you up late into the night, this one’s for you. I absolutely loved it!”
—Lisa Patton, bestselling author of Whistlin' Dixie in a Nor’easter and Rush
“Court Stevens deftly weaves together all the strands of this novel into a complex, heart-wrenching whole. This is a writer that understands people down to the bones. Her characters are fallible and hopeful, flawed and loving, and so real they have stayed with me. Tell Me Something Good wraps wise meditations about love and justice around a propulsive tale of suspense; I can’t wait to share this one with my book club.”
—Joshilyn Jackson, New York Times bestselling author
“I sat down to read a few pages and got up hours later having finished the whole thing, feeling like I’d just binged the most thrilling new drama on TV. Wow!”
—Mary Laura Philpott, author of Bomb Shelter: Love, Time, and Other Explosives
“In her adult debut, Tell Me Something Good, Court Stevens delivers an unputdownable tale of murder, lies, and the extraordinary lengths we go to for the people we love. A haunting masterpiece.”
—Rea Frey, #1 bestselling author of Don’t Forget Me
COURT STEVENS
Courtney “Court” Stevens grew up in the knockabout town of Bandana, Kentucky. She is a former adjunct professor, youth minister, Olympic torchbearer, and bookseller at Parnassus Books in Nashville, TN. These days she writes coming-of-truth fiction and is the Executive Director of Warren County Public Library in Bowling Green, KY. She has a pet whale named Herman, a bandsaw named Rex, and a tiny fleet of novels with her name on the spine.