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Overcharged Ambition

Kem Hinton Author Interview

Nether Land is a reflective true crime memoir about ambition, memory, and the friend you never stop trying to understand. You begin with Ed’s funeral and then move backward through time. Why did you choose to frame the story around memory instead of chronology?

The mind works in mysterious ways… Ed was never a friend, and only after his funeral did I discover his complicated life of overcharged ambition. Due to his need for monetary fortune and fame, he damaged so many. It seemed most appropriate to set the strange reality of what happened after his funeral with the grudge I’d held since 1972. 

This book lives between memoir, true crime, and investigation. How did you decide what kind of book it wanted to be?

After Ed’s death, I was simply interested in what this fellow student did. Like peeling an onion, every new layer of his exploits was surprising, fascinating, and too frequently disgusting. This book started as a nonfiction short story, but with the discoveries and interviews, it became more intense. It took ten years to thoroughly document his misguided adventures… and I did not disclose all I found and documented. I had a personal issue to settle…. and yet, as the title says, that “resolution” was stolen. 

The book openly acknowledges resentment, admiration, and confusion. How important was it to let your bias remain visible on the page?

It was essential.  

What do you think writing this book changed for you, personally?

We are all products of our parents, schooling, careers, loves… I was blessed with excellent parents, so many friends, a loving wife, and great opportunities. Ed chose to go down a strange, sad, and eventually dangerous path. His needs eventually caught up with him… He had an impact on me, one reminding me to be careful…but not cynical.. and of the importance of trust, honesty, and care for others. At 72, I can look back and smile with constant gratitude. 

 
 
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After the shocking murder of Ed Netherland at a secluded location in the Virgin Islands, award-winning author and architect Kem Hinton is stunned and confused by a mysterious occurrence at the funeral of his former classmate. Given a haunting challenge, he embarks on a decade-long investigation into the lifetime exploits of this ingenious person. After their shared time in high school and college, Kem uncovers a fascinating yet bizarre tangled web of toxic waste endeavors, controversial life insurance techniques, enticing investment schemes, the accumulation of enormous wealth, and then great loss … any one of which may have contributed to the wildly-ambitious Netherland’s death in paradise.Author and renowned architect Kem Hinton tells the story with a quick wit and an entertaining style that chronicles not only Netherland’s life but also what it was like to grow up in Tennessee in the last quarter of the twentieth century. Filled with anecdotes and photos, Nether Land is a spell-binding page-turner that will keep the reader mesmerized and awake at night pondering the still unsolved crime and its darkest questions.

Nether Land: High School Temptation, Insurance Haze, Stolen Resolution, and Murder

Nether Land follows the tangled rise and tragic end of Ed Netherland, a boy from Murfreesboro who grows into a bold, brilliant, often reckless man whose life eventually spirals into money schemes, fraud, and a mysterious death on St. John Island. The story begins with his funeral and jumps back to the author’s childhood, tracing decades of shifting friendships, grudges, ambition, and uneasy admiration. The book pairs coming-of-age moments with a slow, unsettling unraveling of Ed’s world, and by the time the narrative returns to that final day in 2014, the path feels both inevitable and deeply strange.

While reading it, I felt pulled into a long conversation with the author, one that wandered through memory in a way that felt warm, irritated, tender, and suspicious all at once. His writing is simple on the surface, yet tight with tension underneath. I liked how he captured the awkward cliques and rivalries of Central High. I also felt his lingering resentment toward Ed slip through, even when he tried to be neutral. That honesty made the book feel more vivid. The chapters about UT football, fraternity life, and early adulthood had a friendly, nostalgic tone. Then the tone shifted. The deeper the book went into Ed’s business dealings, the more the storytelling tightened. I could feel the author wrestling with disbelief. The emotional through-line held steady even when the pacing slowed because he kept circling the same question that I found myself asking, too. How does a smart kid from a decent home end up in a storm of lies, lawsuits, and danger.

I kept thinking about the author’s mix of curiosity and frustration. He wrote with affection for the people who shaped him, although not always affection for Ed. Even so, he treated Ed as a real person and not a tabloid headline. I liked that balance. Sometimes I felt the narrative turning slightly dreamy as he drifted back into old school hallways or late-night parking lots. Other times, the writing snapped into something harder when he described the financial tricks, the false promises, and that chilling stretch before the murder. I found myself reacting in quick swings. I laughed at small teenage moments. I felt annoyed at Ed’s constant posturing. I felt sad when the story reached the island and stayed there. The emotional unpredictability made the book gripping, and I never drifted away from the author’s voice.

I would recommend Nether Land to readers who enjoy true crime that leans more toward reflection than sensationalism and to people who like memoirs about Southern towns, complicated friendships, and the strange ways ambition can bend a life. If you enjoy true crime with heart, you’ll enjoy Nether Land.

Pages: 246 | ASIN : B0FZWPXJ9R

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