Outstanding LDS Fiction Award (2005) The Association of Mormon Letters
“The courthouse called first thing this morning,” Tanya tells me. “They’ve got an oddball on their hands.”
“Don’t we all,” I philosophize. I’m a public defender, and oddballs in my line of work are something rare and wonderful like golf balls on a driving range.
“No,” she says, “this is different. You hear about the murder the other night at Oquirrh Park?”
“As a matter of fact, I did.”
The morning after a softball game, one of the players was found dead between third base and home. Apparently, someone took batting practice on his forehead.
“Well, the guy turned himself in yesterday afternoon. He says God commanded him to do it.”
Welcome to Kimball County, a predominantly LDS corner of northern Utah where the prosecution is about to put God on trialat least that’s how the defendant, Tracy Parker, sees it. Scott Fernelius, the public defender, is supposed to give Parker the best defense possible, but Parker doesn’t want a defense. He confesses that he killed a man, but he insists he’s innocent. And so begins the strangest trial of the new millennium.
Reviews -
Best book I've read in 10 years. It didn't take long to get me hooked. The plot moves fast and takes twist that I never expected.
What Chaim Potok did with "The Chosen" for the Jews; Roger Terry did for the LDS community.
My favorite quote,"I felt like a lion in a den of Daniels."
GREAT BOOK!
- Bill Stewart, Utah
"I think God's Executioner is wonderful--the best read I've had in a long time. Roger Terry has surely written the most entertaining LDS courtroom-mystery-whodunit yet. God's Executioner is a gripping, laugh- aloud, page- turner of a book, which I guarantee you'll enjoy. Trust me!"
- Richard Cracroft, BYU Magazine