March 17, 2025
Book Travel: Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
“The day the first corpse was discovered in the Mercer Williams House, the old town of Savannah was already a ghost.” John Berendt uses this line to introduce readers to the historic and allegedly haunted town of Savannah, Georgia. In Berendt’s nonfiction novel — and later a movie — Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil readers learn of a 1981 murder and follow its trial. This book was on the 2009 banned books list. While the ban only lasted four days, it’s a testament to its shock value and contribution to literary history.
With John Berendt as our guide, let’s travel to historic Savannah, Georgia. The first stop on our tour must be at 429 Bull Street, the Mercer Williams House — where some of the scenes in the movie were filmed. This house is the real-life location and the scene of the book’s crime, the 1981 murder of Danny Hansford by Jim Williams. At 157 years old, it’s no surprise that this house is full of history and stories, including those of at least two known deaths. Tickets to tour the house are available through many sources, including Mercerhouse.com.
Our next stop is 330 Bonaventure Road, Bonaventure Cemetery. Originally named Evergreen Cemetery, Bonaventure is the location of our murder victim’s grave and the place where the character Minerva performs her voodoo rituals. Designed like a park, Bonaventure is filled with rest and picnic areas, historic sculptures, moss-draped oak trees, and the final resting place of Georgian greats like General Hugh Mercer and Mary Telfair (founder of the Telfair Museum).
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil also escorts readers through Forsyth Park. Surrounded by Drayton, Gaston, and Whitaker Streets and Park Avenue, the park features 30 acres of elaborate fountains, monuments, playgrounds, tennis and basketball courts, a dedicated event space, and, to quote savannah.com, “a fragrant garden for the blind.” Named after a Georgian governor, Forsyth Park is home to the famous Forsyth Park Fountain. Cast from iron, the fountain was made to resemble the Grand Fountain in Paris, and an exact copy resides in Cuzco, Peru.
Savannah is full of picturesque beauty from the underground streets, the 23 town squares, and the great Savannah River — which is sometimes dyed green for St. Patrick’s Day. To purchase tickets for the Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil tour, go to Tripadvisor and pay $35.00 to reserve your spot! Historic Savannah is a culture-filled walking city, and if you take the right path you’ll be brought back in time by the cobblestone streets, the Savannah Brown Sugars (Red Hat Society), roads lined with mossy oaks, houses adorned with chandeliers on their front porches, and horses pulling carriages around the parks. But, if you take the wrong path at night, you could find yourself in the Garden of Good and Evil!