Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI is a 2017
nonfiction book by American journalist
David Grann about the
Osage murders.[1][2][3][4]Time magazine listed Killers of the Flower Moon as one of its top ten nonfiction books of 2017.[5]
The
Old Farmer's Almanac, which first began publishing the names for the full moons in the 1930s, recorded the name given by American tribes to the full moon in May as the "Flower Moon" because of the flowers blooming across North America, signaling abundance and the coming of Spring after a cold, hard winter.[9] The title was originated in the poem "Wi’-gi-e" by Osage poet
Elise Paschen, which was written from the perspective of
Mollie Kyle. Paschen was eventually contacted by Grann, and she sent him the poem, an excerpt from which would be published in the finished book.[10]
Synopsis
The book investigates a series of
murders of wealthy
Osage people that took place in
Osage County, Oklahoma, in the early 1920s—after big oil deposits were discovered beneath their land.[11][12] After the Osage are awarded
headrights in court to the profits made from oil deposits found on their land, the Osage people prepare to receive the wealth to which they are legally entitled from sales of their oil deposits.
The Osage are viewed as the "middle man" and a complex plot is hatched to eliminate the Osage inheritors one by one, by any means possible. Officially, the count of the wealthy Osage victims reaches at least 20, but Grann suspects that hundreds more may have been killed because of their ties to oil.[13] The book details the newly formed
FBI's investigation of the murders, as well as the eventual trial and conviction of cattleman
William King Hale as the mastermind behind the plot.
Reception
The review aggregator website
Book Marks indicated that overall Killers of the Flower Moon received rave reviews from literary critics.[14]
Writing for The New York Times,
Dave Eggers called the book "riveting"[15] and wrote, "in these last pages, Grann takes what was already a fascinating and disciplined recording of a forgotten chapter in American history, and with the help of contemporary Osage tribe members, he illuminates a sickening conspiracy that goes far deeper than those four years of horror. It will sear your soul."[15]
Sean Woods of Rolling Stone praised Grann's book, noting, "In his masterful new book... Grann chronicles a tale of murder, betrayal, heroism and a nation's struggle to leave its frontier culture behind and enter the modern world... Filled with almost mythic characters from our past – stoic
Texas Rangers, corrupt robber barons, private detectives, and murderous desperadoes like the Al Spencer gang – Grann's story amounts to a secret history of the American frontier."[16]
A reviewer of Publishers Weekly stated, "New Yorker staff writer Grann (The Lost City of Z) burnishes his reputation as a brilliant storyteller in this gripping true-crime narrative, which revisits a baffling and frightening—and relatively unknown—spree of murders occurring mostly in Oklahoma during the 1920s."[17]
David Aaronovitch in The Times wrote, "There is a kick-in-the guts half-twist at the end of the book that gives the work its moral heft and reminds the American people of the great cost of their nationhood. It's a twist that owes everything to Grann's diligence and intelligence as a journalist. It could not have been discovered without what he calls his 'research odyssey.'"[18]
In 2021, the
Republican-controlled
Oklahoma Legislature passed
Oklahoma House Bill 1775, a bill regulating classroom discussion regarding race and gender. After the bill's passage, a teacher in
Dewey, Oklahoma, cancelled her lesson plans involving the book.[19] Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma
Matt Pinnell called on the language in the bill to be "clarified so that teachers know what can be taught and not taught".[20] After the release of the film, author
David Grann spoke out against the bill's regulations and wrote an op-ed in The New York Times on the bill.[21][22]
Though the role of
Tom White, the lead FBI agent, was written for DiCaprio, DiCaprio pushed to have his role changed to
Ernest Burkhart, the nephew of Hale, who was played by De Niro.[29] As a result, Plemons was cast as Tom White to replace DiCaprio.[29]