Blue, Illicit and Unspoken: Everything which is illegal isn't secret in East Texas
Crooks wore badges in Longview, Texas in 1972. In Blue, Illicit and Unspoken, a novel by Faith Chatham, Sheriff Wade Wallace is adept at exploiting peoples' emotional and economic vulnerabilities to draw them into the vortex of the multi-million dollar crime syndicate he operates out of the Court House (similar to one operated by Gregg County Sheriff Tom Welch in the late 1970s). People hear of, but prefer not to know about, the illicit activities of their local elected officials.
Faith Chatham creates fictitious characters to tell the story of how people in a small city are shaken when a popular sheriff's deputy, Sonny Williams, dies in the County Crime Lab, from ,what may or may not be , a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The characters and events in the book are fiction, however the author's description of the funeral and death of Sonny Williams, mirrors that of the death of Sheriff Tom Welch's Public Information Director, Deputy Wayne Gill, in the late 1970s. The author dedicates the novel to Wayne Gill.
This is a novel about how individuals respond when confronted with information, rumors, or suspicion. It's about how some work meticulously to distinguish innuendo from fact, and to move beyond hearsay, to the evidence which can be used in court. It's about how frightened people hide from what they see, hear, and know. It's about how people seek out friends whom they trust when things are murky and uncertain, and local elected officials and law enforcement cannot be trusted.
It is the story of people getting caught in webs others spin. It is the story about how those who care for them, work to help keep them alive and to free them. It is a story about how a teenage boy's obsession with his prized vintage motorcycle places him in the crosshair of a deadly dangerous corrupt Sheriff's department. The novel is set against a backdrop of crime and public corruption, similar to that which led to the 1979 conviction of the Gregg County Sheriff Tom Welch, a County Commission, a Justice of the Peace and two deputies, for public corruption and conspiracy to commit murder.
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Blue, Illicit and Unspoken: Everything which is illegal isn't secret in East Texas
Crooks wore badges in Longview, Texas in 1972. In Blue, Illicit and Unspoken, a novel by Faith Chatham, Sheriff Wade Wallace is adept at exploiting peoples' emotional and economic vulnerabilities to draw them into the vortex of the multi-million dollar crime syndicate he operates out of the Court House (similar to one operated by Gregg County Sheriff Tom Welch in the late 1970s). People hear of, but prefer not to know about, the illicit activities of their local elected officials.
Faith Chatham creates fictitious characters to tell the story of how people in a small city are shaken when a popular sheriff's deputy, Sonny Williams, dies in the County Crime Lab, from ,what may or may not be , a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The characters and events in the book are fiction, however the author's description of the funeral and death of Sonny Williams, mirrors that of the death of Sheriff Tom Welch's Public Information Director, Deputy Wayne Gill, in the late 1970s. The author dedicates the novel to Wayne Gill.
This is a novel about how individuals respond when confronted with information, rumors, or suspicion. It's about how some work meticulously to distinguish innuendo from fact, and to move beyond hearsay, to the evidence which can be used in court. It's about how frightened people hide from what they see, hear, and know. It's about how people seek out friends whom they trust when things are murky and uncertain, and local elected officials and law enforcement cannot be trusted.
It is the story of people getting caught in webs others spin. It is the story about how those who care for them, work to help keep them alive and to free them. It is a story about how a teenage boy's obsession with his prized vintage motorcycle places him in the crosshair of a deadly dangerous corrupt Sheriff's department. The novel is set against a backdrop of crime and public corruption, similar to that which led to the 1979 conviction of the Gregg County Sheriff Tom Welch, a County Commission, a Justice of the Peace and two deputies, for public corruption and conspiracy to commit murder.
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Blue, Illicit and Unspoken: Everything which is illegal isn't secret in East Texas

Blue, Illicit and Unspoken: Everything which is illegal isn't secret in East Texas

Blue, Illicit and Unspoken: Everything which is illegal isn't secret in East Texas

Blue, Illicit and Unspoken: Everything which is illegal isn't secret in East Texas

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Overview

Crooks wore badges in Longview, Texas in 1972. In Blue, Illicit and Unspoken, a novel by Faith Chatham, Sheriff Wade Wallace is adept at exploiting peoples' emotional and economic vulnerabilities to draw them into the vortex of the multi-million dollar crime syndicate he operates out of the Court House (similar to one operated by Gregg County Sheriff Tom Welch in the late 1970s). People hear of, but prefer not to know about, the illicit activities of their local elected officials.
Faith Chatham creates fictitious characters to tell the story of how people in a small city are shaken when a popular sheriff's deputy, Sonny Williams, dies in the County Crime Lab, from ,what may or may not be , a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The characters and events in the book are fiction, however the author's description of the funeral and death of Sonny Williams, mirrors that of the death of Sheriff Tom Welch's Public Information Director, Deputy Wayne Gill, in the late 1970s. The author dedicates the novel to Wayne Gill.
This is a novel about how individuals respond when confronted with information, rumors, or suspicion. It's about how some work meticulously to distinguish innuendo from fact, and to move beyond hearsay, to the evidence which can be used in court. It's about how frightened people hide from what they see, hear, and know. It's about how people seek out friends whom they trust when things are murky and uncertain, and local elected officials and law enforcement cannot be trusted.
It is the story of people getting caught in webs others spin. It is the story about how those who care for them, work to help keep them alive and to free them. It is a story about how a teenage boy's obsession with his prized vintage motorcycle places him in the crosshair of a deadly dangerous corrupt Sheriff's department. The novel is set against a backdrop of crime and public corruption, similar to that which led to the 1979 conviction of the Gregg County Sheriff Tom Welch, a County Commission, a Justice of the Peace and two deputies, for public corruption and conspiracy to commit murder.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781078711586
Publisher: Barnes & Noble Press
Publication date: 09/24/2019
Series: Graham Fergusson Adventure , #1
Pages: 232
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.56(d)

About the Author

The author, Faith Chatham, blends pine needle culture with public integrity and the fifth estate in her first novel, Blue, Illicit and Unspoken. By the time she was thirty, this sixth generation East Texan had worked in editorial and advertising for three national newspaper chains. Books, journalism and public policy blended with Texas and Revolutionary American History are her lifelong pursuits.
A prolific writer, she has published non-fiction articles on politics and policy for decades and appears as a regular guest on radio talk shows, usually commenting on Texas or National Politics. Her first job was during High School as teen reporter for for her hometown newspaper, The Marshall News Messenger. She has written and produced radio and television commercials, worked as a “voice over recording artist”, served as creative director of advertising agencies/ creative shops in East Texas and the DFW Metroplex and as a consultant for Fortune 500 companies and progressive political campaigns. Her copy and commentary has appeared in articles on websites, ads, speeches and brochures for business, non-profit and political organizations, and local, statewide, congressional and presidential political campaigns.
Faith is a professional artist who signs her work “jChatham”. Her paintings have sold to individual collectors in the US and Europe and to the US Government. Currently she is working on an exhibition of drawings honoring Texas women trendsetters, including Lady Bird Johnson, Barbara Jordon, Lupe Valdez, Molly Ivins, Ann Richards, Annise Parker, Wendy Davis, Donna Howard and others who have bucked the tide and emerged as changemakers of the Texas Resistance.
A graduate of Marshall High School, she attended East Texas State University and holds multiple degrees from the University of Texas at Arlington. Currently she resides in Austin, Texas.
Her first novel, Blue, Illicit and Unspoken, a crime novel about public corruption in East Texas in the 1970s, is scheduled for release this fall.
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