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Before there was Belle Devereaux, there was Annabelle.
Named for a poem, Annabelle Lee Crump knows the weight of being watched.
In the cotton fields outside Yazoo City, Mississippi, she has learned to make herself invisible - hiding her beauty, intelligence, and ambition behind purple-streaked hair and chipped black polish. The land is patient. The men are possessive. And visibility, she learns early, is not a blessing. It is an invitation.
When Celeste Voss, a woman of quiet power and exacting control, stops at the gas station where Annabelle works the night shift and asks a question no one has ever asked her - have you ever thought of leaving? - Annabelle understands the question is really an offer.
She takes it.
New York City becomes her education. As Belle Devereaux, she learns how power moves through rooms, how silence can be placement, and how a woman who controls her own visibility controls almost everything else. Under Celeste's guidance she is translated, not transformed. The girl from Mississippi does not disappear. She is reorganized - like a violin in a Braque painting, taken apart and reassembled according to different rules.
The women she works beside are extraordinary in their own right: precise, observant, fluent in the language of rooms most people never learn to read. Together they build a world with its own rules.
Until it doesn't hold.
When a man of extraordinary patience and dangerous curiosity decides Belle is exactly what he has been looking for - not for desire alone, but for possession - she discovers that the most sophisticated trap is the one that looks like an opportunity.
And Mississippi, it turns out, does not let go easily.
The Cotton Boll Queen is a novel about reinvention, survival, and the cost of becoming valuable. Moving from the cotton fields of Mississippi to the penthouses of Manhattan, it is the story of a woman who builds herself from almost nothing - and refuses to belong to anyone but herself.
Early Reviews
"Pierce was one of the more unsettling characters I've read lately because he rarely raises his voice. The power dynamics felt disturbingly plausible." - Advance Reader
"I expected a thriller, but it read more like literary suspense. The New York sections especially had a cold, controlled atmosphere that felt convincing." - Advance Reader
"A powerful story about a woman, really a girl, pulling herself up by her proverbial bootstraps to come out on top. We all want to be a little like Belle Devereaux: smart, hardworking, compassionate." - Advance Reader
For readers of Rules of Civility, The Talented Mr. Ripley, and The Secret History.
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