In Hampton Sides' Hellhound on His Trail, the titular hellhound is James Earl Ray. This book is the story of the assassination of Martin Luther King, and it reads like a thriller. The book follows Ray from his escape from prison in 1967, through the assassination and its aftermath, to Ray's capture in London in 1968.
I was shocked, as I read this, to discover how little I knew about this event. I think it's because I am caught in an age-related limbo state. I was in elementary school when King was shot; too young to have been reading newspapers and following the unfolding drama on television. In contrast, my children have studied all this at school. I think they know more about it than I did.
As you would expect, Ray is not a sympathetic character. Neither are supporting characters such as FBI director J. Edgar Hoover, who hated King but was obliged to investigate his death. The author's portrait of King is nuanced and engrossing, and is well balanced. He doesn't give much credence to the various conspiracy theories surrounding King's assassination. Likewise, he doesn't spend a lot of time contemplating Ray's motives, though he makes clear that Ray was a racist and an admirer of George Wallace and Rhodesian leader Ian Smith.
This is a "just the facts, ma'am" kind of storytelling, and it works very well.
Becky Holmes blogs about books at A Book A Week.