The Green Mile by Stephen King — book cover

Book details

The Green Mile

by Stephen King

1996

About the book

Set in 1932 at Cold Mountain Penitentiary, the story follows Paul Edgecombe, the block supervisor of E Block, where condemned inmates await the electric chair. The routine of the death house shifts when John Coffey, a towering Black man convicted of murdering two young sisters, arrives on the mile. Despite his size and the nature of his crime, Coffey exhibits a gentle temperament and possesses supernatural abilities to heal physical ailments and take away pain through touch. Paul begins to doubt Coffey’s guilt while witnessing these miracles firsthand in the shadow of impending executions.

Readers who enjoy historical fiction mixed with supernatural elements will find here a detailed look at the mechanics of capital punishment and the moral weight of legal duty. The book appeals to those interested in the contrast between human cruelty and inexplicable grace. Someone finishing this story walks away with a specific perspective on the fallibility of the justice system and the idea that true innocence can exist in the most desolate environments. It provides a grounded depiction of the Depression-era South alongside a mystery regarding divine intervention in a place of death.

Details

Published
1996
Language
EN