Praise for Mississippi Blue 42
“Eli Cranor, who made his bones writing crime fiction about Arkansas, takes aim at the folks next door in this romp of a book, set in Waffle Houses and college bars, on football fields and lonely blacktops. If you’ve followed the volleyball stadium funding scandal in Mississippi, or the political career of a certain former football coach in Alabama, you’ll recognize some of the plot lines that Cranor sets in motion to tell a story of sports payola in the years before NIL money began to flow, a novel that reads as funny as it does true.”
—Garden & Gun
“With a sure hand and a knowing smirk, Eli Cranor guides us through a world that is like a religion for some while never losing sight that college football—despite all the money, fame, and power which orbits that world—is still a game. A game played by young men who put everything on the line for a chance to lift themselves and their families out of the perdition of poverty and play under the bright lights on the biggest stage. Mississippi Blue 42 is an amazing achievement by a powerful voice in crime fiction.”
—S. A. Cosby, New York Times bestselling author of All the Sinners Bleed
“Former college quarterback Eli Cranor scores big with Mississippi Blue 42, a fun, provocative crime novel that takes aim at the heart of the American game.”
—Michael Koryta, New York Times bestselling author of An Honest Man
“Filled with humor, heart, and an insider’s knowledge of the American South and its favorite sport, Mississippi Blue 42 is the kind of read that keeps a smile on your face as you compulsively turn the pages. If you haven’t read Eli Cranor yet, now’s the time.”
—Alafair Burke, New York Times bestselling author of The Note
“Eli Cranor has written a brilliant opera buffa for the Deep South, set in red zones and blues bars and Waffle Houses. Borrowing plot lines from Tommy Tuberville and Robert Johnson, pulling characters from William Faulkner and Robert Penn Warren, his gonzo writing delivers big laughs and bigger questions about our beloved game day rites and rituals.”
—John T. Edge, host of SEC Network’s TrueSouth, author of House of Smoke: A Southerner Goes Searching for Home
“Cranor’s new novel channels Elmore Leonard through the world of dark money college football, as a newly minted FBI agent is assigned to track down a shadowy cabal in central Mississippi pouring dirty money into a football-obsessed community. Cranor’s prose has never been sharper and he knows this world inside and out. This is quite likely the most fun you’ll have with a crime book all year.”
—Dwyer Murphy, author of The Stolen Coast
“Former professional quarterback and Edgar-winning author Eli Cranor delivers four quarters of full-contact action—and the clock never seems to stop. Cranor’s colorful characters—and their peculiar Mississippi blend of unsportsmanlike conduct—will keep readers turning the page. Race, gambling, murder, blackmail, corruption, politics, and football . . . this book has it all.”
—Neil White, author of The Mississippi Football Book
“Mississippi Blue 42 is a captivating read by a writer delivering a sure enough win. The characters are sharply observed, the story unfolding with cold-eyed precision.”
—Gary Phillips, author of Ash Dark as Night
“The phrases ‘ex-college quarterback’ and ‘current Edgar-winner’ don’t often collide in the same sentence—unless you’re talking about author Eli Cranor. In the case of his new novel, Mississippi Blue 42, Cranor blends his lifetime in pigskin with his gift for prose into a book that is a rare treat: a clever work of crime fiction that longtime Elmore Leonard readers and die-hard football fans will both love.”
—Jon Finkel, author of Macho Man and Books & Biceps founder
“A powerful case for the proposition that ‘college football wasn’t a game at all; it was a business.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Quirky characters, playful humor, and insider’s view of the college football landscape ensure that this makes it all way to the end zone.”
—Publishers Weekly
Praise for Eli Cranor
“Southern noir at its finest, a cauldron of terrible choices and even more terrible outcomes . . . There is a raw ferocity to Cranor’s prose, perfectly in keeping with the novel’s examination of curdling masculinity.”
—Sarah Weinman, The New York Times Book Review
“Readers may think they know what happened, but Cranor has some twists in store—in a plot that calls to mind Megan Abbott’s depictions of claustrophobic competitive cultures. A former quarterback who coached for five years at an Arkansas high school, Cranor brings an insider’s understanding of the game, the region and human nature.”
—Paula Woods, Los Angeles Times
“Brilliant . . . A major work from a bright, young talent.”
—USA Today, **** out of **** stars
“At once a crime novel packed with violence and desperation, a modern Southern Gothic tale drenched in darkness, and a touching, brutally honest take on football as religion.”
—Gabino Iglesias, Southwest Review
“A searing and stunningly poignant study in what makes us and what breaks us and ultimately what brings us to a place of peace. Eli Cranor is that rare writer who can make you gasp, cry and cheer often in the same paragraph.”
—S.A. Cosby, New York Times best selling author of Razorblade Tears