Almost ready!
In order to save audiobooks to your Wish List you must be signed in to your account.
Log in Create accountShop Small Sale
Shop our limited-time sale on bestselling audiobooks. Donât miss outâpurchases support local bookstores.
Shop the saleLimited-time offer
Get two free audiobooks!
Nowâs a great time to shop indie. When you start a new one credit per month membership supporting local bookstores with promo code SWITCH, weâll give you two bonus audiobook credits at sign-up.
Sign up todayWith the Devil's Help
This audiobook uses AI narration.
Weâre taking steps to make sure AI narration is transparent.
Learn moreIn 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 werenât Black, brown, gay, atheist, Muslim, a damn Yankee, or a Tennessee Vol fan.
The Wootenâs 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 wouldnât go there. Nealâs 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 grandfatherâhis 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 Nealâs father, having inherited the very same traits of his father, made sure the frigid mountain winters werenât the most brutal thing his family faced.
Told from two perspectives, this story alternates between Nealâs life and his grandfatherâs, culminating in a shocking revelation. Take a journey to the Deep South and learn what itâs 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.
Neal Wooten grew up on a pig farm on Sand Mountain in the northeast corner of Alabama. The first person in the history of his family to go to college, Neal went on to graduate from Auburn University with a B.S. in applied mathematics. He became a math teacher and director of a math school in Milwaukee, winning numerous math awards. He is now the managing editor for Mirror Publishing, a contributor to the Huffington Post, columnist for the Mountain Valley News, creator of the popular Facebook comic strip Bradâs Pit (known as Pancho el Pit Bull in South America), and a stand-up comedian.
Read by Traber Burns, Keith Szarabajka, Adenrele Ojo, Kevin Kenerly, Hillary Huber, Carrington MacDuffie, Mirron Willis, Kirby Heyborne, Priya Ayyar, Neil Shah, Thom Rivera, and Scott Brick
Reviews
âWith the Devilâs Help is a survival story in the mode of Harry Crewsâ brilliant memoir A Childhood. Crews concluded that for a âgrit,â a redneck like him, survival was triumph enough. Wooten concurs.â
âWooten turns in an earnest, sometimes sorrowful account of his upbringing in the poorest part of northeast AlabamaâŚA Drive-By Truckers album of a book, sometimes appalling, always heartfelt and vividly observed.â
âA powerful story told by an excellent writer that paints a true picture of the Deep SouthâŚThis book will draw you in and hold on to you.â
âThe author took a brutal childhood and somehow turned it into a story filled with heart. The way he intertwined the two story lines was masterful.â
Expand reviews