The family man Blood and betrayal in the house of Murdaugh

James Lasdun

Book - 2026

"In March of 2023, Alex Murdaugh was found guilty of murdering his wife Maggie and their younger son Paul at Moselle, their home in South Carolina's Lowcountry. By then the story had become headline news across the country, with its revelations of corruption in high places, massive fraud, opioid abuse, fake suicides, suspicious accidents, and the generational recklessness of the wealthy legal dynasty at its center. Featuring a cast of villains ranging from supposedly respectable bankers and lawyers to violent street gang members, the story has, not surprisingly, been the subject of several books and TV shows already. But few have focused on the enigma of Alex Murdaugh himself as brilliantly as James Lasdun's The Family Man. H...aving covered the case for the New Yorker, where his article became the magazine's most read story of 2023, the acclaimed novelist brings his long-standing interest in the darker drives of the human psyche to an investigation into the serial embezzlements, fatal boat crash and other events leading up to the slaughter at Moselle. Having traveled extensively in the Lowcountry interviewing people involved in the case (including Murdaugh's notorious 'Cousin Eddie') and attending hearings with Murdaugh himself, Lasdun looks at Murdaugh through a series of revelatory perspectives that include recordings of Murdaugh's jail conversations, the literature of criminal psychology, and the murder trial itself, to create a masterful portrait of his subject and an immersive account of the psychological and social processes by which a seemingly loving family man became a 'Family Annihilator.'"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Case studies
Études de cas
Published
New York, NY : W.W. Norton & Company [2026]
Language
English
Main Author
James Lasdun (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781324075325
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A multi-hyphenate writer brings his keen curiosity to a true-crime story that captured America's attention. When Alex Murdaugh's wife and youngest son were murdered on their thousand-acre property in South Carolina's Low Country in 2021, Lasdun was working on a novel whose central character fails to recognize the evil in front of her. Covering the Murdaugh saga for theNew Yorker became a way for him to wrestle with his own inability to accept the existence of evil at its most extreme in a "family annihilator": a locally famed patriarch convicted of killing his own wife and child. Lasdun is lured into the entirety of Alex's web, from his deep community ties and intense familial loyalty to his sinister series of interconnected misdeeds: unexplained (or unsatisfactorily explained) deaths of community members, extreme drug use and possible gang entanglement, and extensive financial theft. The author's desperate quest is to understand what could possibly drive a man to kill his own family, and he pursues his mission with an obsessive, dogged, and sometimes speculative fullness, unwinding every spool of the Murdaugh family's persistently ascendant generational wealth and its insulating facade of invincibility in a place increasingly marked by destitution, drugs, and decay. Lasdun's bewilderment and dissatisfaction with every element of the murders and the legal case seeps palpably to the page, drawing readers into an investigator's obsession, though the text does miss an opportunity to address the twisted appeal of such deranged stories of true crime. There is a distinct regional flavor to the story, with prayerful juries, marshy landscapes, and an abundance of guns and good ol' boys, but the picture of an "exceptionally crooked man, with some alarming ways of handling pressure" that emerges not only exceeds southern stereotypes and wealthy villain caricatures, but defies any understanding of limits to human depravity. A tenacious effort to grapple with how a man becomes a monster. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.