The Last Dance of Gus Finley


Fiction - Southern
232 Pages
Reviewed on 01/20/2011
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Author Biography

John Sparks is a part-time writer and former preacher who spent 10 years researching and writing his history of the “Old Time” Baptist Churches in Southern Appalachia. A medical lab technician by trade, he finished the book The Roots of Appalachian Christianity: the Life and Legacy of Elder Shubal Stearns (University Press of Kentucky, 2001) while his union was on strike. Appalachian scholar Loyal Jones encouraged him to send the manuscript to the University Press of Kentucky. It was published as part of its "Religion in the South" series.

In 2005, Sparks published a biography of “Raccoon John” Smith, the most famous and flamboyant preacher in Eastern Kentucky during the frontier era, and the same year a novelette, “On Edge,” won honorable mention at the Appalachian Writers’ Association. It was subsequently published by the Blue Cubicle Press.

In his novel The Last Dance of Gus Finley (April 2009), Sparks has written a
fictionalized account of events leading up to the last actual judicial execution in Floyd
County, Kentucky, the hanging of Gus Finley. John narrates the event by being the voice
of Finley and the eyes and ears of a young man in the community.

John Sparks’ latest nonfiction work is Kentucky’s Most Hated Man: Charles
Chilton Moore and the Blue Grass Blade, released in the summer of 2009 by Wind
Publications of Nicholasville, Kentucky.

    Book Review

Reviewed by Anne Boling for Readers' Favorite

The Last Dance of Gus Finley is a fictional account of an actual event. The setting was Friday, April 17, 1885, in Prestonsburg, in the eastern hills of Kentucky. Gus Finley was sentenced to die by hanging. For a year the prisoner had been housed in the local jail. The sheriff resigned because he didn’t want this man to die on his watch. The jailer allowed many opportunities for Gus to escape, but he never once made an attempt. Gus admitted to the murder and felt he had to be punished, but he was afraid of death. Sightseers came from all around to see the man hanged. The shopkeepers were eager because it meant revenue for them.

Frank, John, and Lee traveled from Greasy Creek to see the hanging. Along the way they began to put the pieces of the event together through the rumors of other sightseers they met along the way.

Gus and a bunch of his friends were drunk when he got in a fight with John Degley. John got the best of Gus. Staggering, barely able to see what he was aiming at, Gus pulled his revolver and shot 17-year-old Jimmy Hunt. He’d never meant to kill Jimmy; it was a drunken accident. The State’s Attorney knew what a conviction would do for his political career.

The deputy assigned to hang Gus did not know what he was doing, so it was not a quick death. Gus Finley was the last man hanged in Prestonsburg, Kentucky.

The Last Dance of Gus Finley is well written. The author brings a bit of history alive in the retelling of the hanging of a man that should not have been hanged. The characters were so real. The professor was a real twist. The cover is well done. The quality of the paper is good. I enjoyed this book.

Justin Williams

wow wow i need to read this book as Sandy Gus Finley is my great great great Grand Father. I would love to connect with you jdwilliams06@gmail.com