If you’ve come to Savannah because of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, welcome. John Berendt’s 1994 book put this city on the international tourism map in a way that hasn’t let up in thirty years. I’ve guided people who’ve made the pilgrimage specifically to walk in its footsteps. I’ve also watched those same people feel vaguely confused when the reality doesn’t quite match the atmospheric novel they’d built up in their heads.
Let’s be honest about what that book is and isn’t.
What it got right
The texture of Savannah’s social world — particularly the old-money eccentricity, the insular nature of generational wealth here, the way outsiders are tolerated but not quite trusted — Berendt captured that with uncomfortable accuracy. Savannah has always had a complicated relationship with itself, a city that presents a gorgeous face while housing considerable darkness just underneath.
The Mercer-Williams House is real. The murder trial is real. Jim Williams was real. The characters, even the ones Berendt paints most vividly, were drawn from actual people. That’s worth something.
What it compressed and constructed
Berendt took liberties with timeline and composite characters. He’s been upfront about the fact that it’s a work of narrative nonfiction, which is a genre that permits significant shaping of events for storytelling purposes. Some conversations couldn’t have happened the way they’re written. Some scenes are assembled from fragments. That’s fine — it’s literature, not a court transcript.
But visitors who arrive expecting to find the exact Savannah of the book will find something different: a real city that has lived 30 more years since that book was published, that has grown and changed and absorbed a million tourists looking for the Lady Chablis and a Spanish moss-draped frozen moment.
The real recommendation
Read the book. See the movie if you want (it’s uneven but watchable). Visit Bonaventure Cemetery, where the famous Bird Girl statue originally stood. Walk past the Mercer-Williams House on Monterey Square.
Then set the book down and let Savannah show you what it actually is in 2025. It’s stranger, more layered, and in many ways more interesting than Berendt’s version. The real city always is.
Experience Savannah In Person
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- How to Visit Bonaventure Cemetery the Right Way
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- Mercer Williams House — Official Site
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