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Book Cover for: Dead Letters from Paradise, Ann McMan

Dead Letters from Paradise

Ann McMan

Finalist:Lambda Literary Award -LGTBQ+ Mystery (2023)

Two-time Lambda Literary Award-winning author Ann McMan introduces readers to a spinster postal investigator for the Winston-Salem Dead Letter Office who finds herself enmeshed in the mystery of solving who is sending undeliverable love letters to the town's 18th-century hortus medicus.

The year is 1960, and Gunsmoke is the most popular show on TV. Elvis Presley tops the Billboard charts, and a charismatic young senator named John F. Kennedy is running for president. And, in North Carolina, four young Black men sit down at a Woolworth's lunch counter and demand service.

Enter Esther Jane (EJ) Cloud, a forty-something spinster who manages the Dead Letter Office at the Winston-Salem post office. EJ leads a quiet life in her Old Salem ancestral home and spends her free time volunteering in the town's 18th-century medicinal garden.

One sunny Spring morning, EJ's world is turned upside down when she is handed a stack of handwritten letters that have all been addressed to a nonexistent person at the garden. This simple act sets in motion a chain of events that will lead EJ on a life-altering quest to uncover the identity of the mysterious letter writer--and into a surprising, head-on confrontation with the harsh realities of the racial injustice that is as deeply rooted in the life of her community as the ancient herbs cultivated in the Moravian garden.

When EJ is forced to read the letters to look for clues about the anonymous sender, what she discovers are lyrical tales of a forbidden passion that threaten to unravel the simple contours of her unexamined life. EJ's official quest soon morphs into a journey of self-discovery. Her surprising accomplice on this quest becomes a savvy, street-smart ten-year-old wielding an eye patch and a limitless supply of aphorisms. Together, the unlikely duo makes pilgrimages to a tiny town called Paradise to try and crack the case--while ultimately learning better ways to navigate the changing world around them.

Short-listed for the 2023 Lambda Literary Award for LGBTQ+ Mystery.

Included in Shelf Unbound's 100 Top Notable Indie Titles of 2022.

Included in Autostraddle's list of 92 of the Best Queer Books of 2022.

Included in Out in Print's Favorite Books of 2022.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Bywater Books
  • Publish Date: Jun 28th, 2022
  • Pages: 316
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.43in - 5.43in - 0.79in - 0.85lb
  • EAN: 9781612942353
  • Categories: SouthernRomance - LGBTQ+ - LesbianHumorous - General

About the Author

Ann McMan is the author of twelve novels and two short story collections. She is a two-time Lambda Literary Award recipient, a five-time Independent Publisher (IPPY) medalist, a Foreword Reviews INDIES medalist, and a laureate of the Alice B. Foundation for her outstanding body of work. She lives in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

Praise for this book

"If you only have time for one book for the rest of the summer, Dead Letters from Paradise by Ann McMan is the one to choose--you can't go wrong with this novel." --Queer Writers of Crime


"McMan drives her vibrant characters through a plot that runs as smooth as well-oiled clockwork." --Out in Print


"This mystery excels in all areas: tightly plotted; endearing and authentic characters; a rich and original setting." --Autostraddle


"McMan's style is reminiscent of Erle Stanley Gardner's writing: sparingly descriptive, liberal with dialogue, and sprinkled with dry humor." --Southern Review of Books


"Dead Letters from Paradise blends literary mystery, historical fiction, and romance with entirely delightful results. There are no dead bodies in this mystery and no overt sex in the romance. Yet here are two reasons--among many--to love this novel. First, the crisp, yet lyrical prose style, coupled with perfect plotting make it a breeze to read, one of those hard-to-put-down stories that keep you turning the pages. Second, the novel is filled with lovely truisms as forty-five-year-old EJ Cloud reexamines her life and her town, Winston-Salem, in April 1960." --Southern Literary Review