Soon after reading The Exchange, I picked up Timothy Egan’s A Fever in the Heartland and experienced the opposite: a nonfiction book filled with twists, turns, and surprises.
I had heard Egan speak and read at last year’s Southern Festival of Books in Nashville and had been amazed and appalled to learn about the subject of his book, which is expressed in its subtitle: The Ku Klux Klan’s Plot to Take Over America, and the Woman Who Stopped Them.
It seems that in the 1920s, a reborn and reimagined Klan controlled the state of Indiana and had near-control of several other Midwestern and Western states, including Ohio and Oregon. The Klan’s vision of a conquered America was finally stopped by a lawsuit on behalf of a seemingly powerless woman, Madge Oberholtzer, against Indiana Grand Dragon D. C. Stephenson.
The final surprise: When Oberholtzer brought Stephenson to his knees, she was already dead from injuries she had suffered at his hands. Her testimony was given in the form of a sworn statement on her deathbed.
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