The first crack at The Bone Tree starts rough. Half the club members are missing due to delayed escorts from their cells, which leads to lots of interruptions and scraping chairs as the guys finally settle in. The book itself is no light read: 900 pages smack in the middle of Greg Iles' trilogy, thick with KKK vigilantes, mob ties, JFK conspiracy threads, and the haunting "bone tree," a secret spot where victims' bones were hung like trophies, rooted in slavery and secrets. There's a lot going on in this novel, but it pulls in the club members fast. The settings feel real to the men: nearby Natchez, Angola prison down the road, even the prison near Woodville where the club members are incarcerated makes an appearance.. "Man, we're sitting right where this could've gone down," one member observes. Due to logistical issues and the fact that this is the club's first foray into the book, the discussion is at times meandering. Some members haven't started the book, others are tearing through, but a conversational theme eventually develops, about the risks of secrets, how they rot families from the inside, shatter trust and echo through the generations. X-Man lays it out straight: "Everybody's hiding something... and you see what it does to everybody around them." Dollar, who says he coached football with Iles in Natchez 15-20 years back, calls it a barely veiled truth, "like he lived this instead of just made it up." Battle is already deep into chapter 41, dropping conspiracy teases. Chris2 lists characters like they're people he knows. Holloway lands a solid hit, tying the bone trophies to twisted Army war stories. Iles' death still haunts — he passed away on Aug. 15, 2025, at age 65 after battling multiple myeloma since '96. The club grabbed this book as a way of paying tribute. His Natchez roots make the loss hit closer. The meeting is loud and at times borders on chaotic, but the men are clearly animated by this book, and by the proximity of the Wilkinson prison. Justin, stuck in solitary, sends his notes by hand: Truth surfaces eventually. Keep digging. This episode catches the raw spark when a heavy crime thriller crashes into prison reality — secrets, race, loyalty, and the thin line between the page and the life they've lived. Books mentioned: The Bone Tree by Greg Iles (part two of a trilogy that includes Natchez Burning and Mississippi Blood) | Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel | nods to past picks. Podcast funding from the McMullan-O'Connor Fund; book club sponsored by the Mississippi Humanities Council. Engineered by Jesse Naus, Shawn Jackson and Charlie Sensabaugh at Red Cayman Studios, in partnership with assistant producer Amanda Akari. Edited and hosted by Alan Huffman. Initial support and recordings provided by Management and Training Corporation, operator of the Wilkinson County Correctional Facility for the Mississippi Department of Corrections. Special thanks to Robert Connolly Farr for use of his song "Everybody's Dying."