With the Devil's Help Audiobook By Neal Wooten cover art

With the Devil's Help

A True Story of Poverty, Mental Illness, and Murder

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With the Devil's Help

By: Neal Wooten
Narrated by: Traber Burns
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About this listen

2022 Audible’s Best in True Crime

In the tradition of The Glass Castle, Educated, and Heartland, Neal Wooten traces five decades of his dirt-poor, Alabama mountain family as the years and secrets coalesce.

Neal Wooten grew up in a tiny community atop Sand Mountain, Alabama, where everyone was white and everyone was poor. Prohibition was still embraced. If you wanted alcohol, you had to drive to Georgia or ask the bootlegger sitting next to you in church. Tent revivals, snake handlers, and sacred harp music were the norm, and everyone was welcome as long as you weren’t Black, brown, gay, atheist, Muslim, a damn Yankee, or a Tennessee Vol fan.

The Wooten’s lived a secret existence in a shack in the woods with no running water, no insulation, and almost no electricity. Even the school bus and mail carrier wouldn’t go there. Neal’s family could hide where they were, but not what they were. They were poor white trash. Cops could see it. Teachers could see it. Everyone could see it.

Growing up, Neal was weaned on folklore legends of his grandfather—his quick wit, quick feet, and quick temper. He discovers how this volatile disposition led to a murder, a conviction, and ultimately to a daring prison escape and a closely guarded family secret.

Being followed by a black car with men in black suits was as normal to Neal as using an outhouse, carrying drinking water from a stream, and doing homework by the light of a kerosene lamp. And Neal’s father, having inherited the very same traits of his father, made sure the frigid mountain winters weren’t the most brutal thing his family faced.

Told from two perspectives, this story alternates between Neal’s life and his grandfather’s, culminating in a shocking revelation. Take a journey to the Deep South and learn what it’s like to be born on the wrong side of the tracks, the wrong side of the law, and the wrong side of a violent mental illness.

©2022 Neal Wooten (P)2022 Blackstone Publishing
Murder Alabama Mental Illness
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Featured Article: Best of the Year—The 10 Best True Crime Listens of 2022


While humans have devoured crime stories since Cain and Abel, the line between sensitive reporting and vulturous rubbernecking has been crossed, and then deliberately redrawn, time and again. In a year when true crime TV again made headlines for centering perpetrators and disregarding survivors, these 10 outstanding listens quietly went in a different direction, setting a new standard of excellence for riveting storytelling with a heart of justice.

What listeners say about With the Devil's Help

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Great story

Being from the south, I could relate to the story. It took me back to my own childhood

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Wow, very good!

Loved this book for all the reasons the writer points out in his epilogue. I also came from a city dwelling similar family facing many of the same challenges and social stigmas, and I made my way free to success in my life. Luckily, the mental illness did not get genetically transferred to myself.
Congratulations Sir, you made it and are wiser and more empathetic than those who come from “perfect” homes…if they exist. 😊

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Amazing Story

I loved this book. It was wonderfully read and is an amazing story and perfectly performed.

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honesty

excellent book of survival without self pity. I really enjoyed the matter of fact style of writing without the author being emotionally dramatic.

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Close to home

After watching an interview with Neal Wooten on PBS APT Bookmark I decided to read "With the Devils Help". This story of Mr Wooten's Grandfather Pete and other close family members from the point of view, primarily of Neal himself, presents a valid and graphic picture of life in the hills of rural north Alabama during a time when much of the rest of Alabama was moving into the modern era with fast cars, planes, and food. Pete was a highly intelligent and mentally fractured natural leader with frequent episodes of blazing, physically eruptive temper. His set of values (very good and very bad) included those possessed by both CEOs and hardened criminals and these values were passed down to his son and some even further out into the family tree. To say the family lived a life of difficulty would be, even in those times, a severe understatement. Electricity and even a roof were often non-existent not to mention the scarcity of basic nutrition. While I am quite sure this family was not unique in its poverty, their story is significant given the frequent unwarranted verbal and physical cruelty meted out by its husbands and fathers. Reading this account of life at the very edge of humanity provides a view that a vast majority of folks cannot imagine but who can gain insight into an unknown world that did exist relatively close by.

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Heartfelt story of life

So much of the story sounds like life as we imagined it in the early 1900s. It's amazing to listen to the story and realize much of this was happening in the latter half of the 20th century. Neal shared his story in a way that touched the heart. It made you uncomfortable, and it made you smile....maybe not at the same time but throughout the story he was able to pull this off. I enjoyed this book greatly and would definitely recommend anyone give it a read.

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Great storytelling!!

Loved this book, was like listening to your grandparent telling you about the past with all the twists and turns of real life and poverty. A story about hard times and how we live through them.

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Riveting

I very much enjoyed this from start to finish even though it was very frustrating to listen to sometimes. Not because of the writing or performance but because of the situations described. You want to grab the people and say “you don’t have to live like this! There’s a whole world out there where men don’t pulverize their wives and children! Leave!” I will be seeking out more of his books and recommend this one whole heartedly.

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Great book!

Never have I ever heard a story better than this! Thank you for sharing. The ending was the best ever…… couldn’t figure out who, when or why, until the end! ❤️

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Excellent story of overcoming poverty and abuse

The writer paints a good picture, took me back to so much of my own childhood

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