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MAKE YOUR WAY HOME

A regional relief map of the human heart.

An intimate, meticulously crafted, and tenderly rendered tour through the lives of Black women, men, and children seeking solid ground in a mercurial American southland.

This stirring collection of 11 short stories is a prism of contemporary African American life stalked by history, public and private. For example: In the opening story, “When We Go, We Go Downstream,” Ever, a native son of Texas, is determined to overcome a multigenerational curse to marry the woman he loves, despite long—and exasperating—odds. In “All Skin Is Clothing,” Brayden, a young Kentucky boy, struggles to recover from the trauma of gunfire bursting into his home. “Naturale” is emblematic of Moore’s command of intricate detail, emotional nuance, and tension as she inhabits the voice of Cherie, a Charleston-based hairstylist reassembling her marriage shattered by her husband’s affair with a woman whose hair she is now determined to treat as well as any other customer’s. “The Happy Land” is set in the mountains of western North Carolina where Gideon, a carpenter like his deeply religious father, anxiously risks driving through a heavy snowstorm to look in on his Pa, from whom he has been estranged since his marriage to another man. The southern locales of these stories are diverse. But what links them all is their main characters’ pursuit—sometimes hesitant, often dogged—of peace, or at least grace after personal upheaval. It’s likely you’d have to go all the way back to Hue and Cry by James Alan McPherson (1968) to find a debut collection of short stories by a young Black writer as prodigiously humane and finely wrought as this.

A regional relief map of the human heart.

Pub Date: July 15, 2025

ISBN: 9781963108286

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Tin House

Review Posted Online: May 16, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2025

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THE WEDDING PEOPLE

Uneven but fitfully amusing.

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Betrayed by her husband, a severely depressed young woman gets drawn into the over-the-top festivities at a lavish wedding.

Phoebe Stone, who teaches English literature at a St. Louis college, is plotting her own demise. Her husband, Matt, has left her for another woman, and Phoebe is taking it hard. Indeed, she's determined just where and how she will end it all: at an oceanfront hotel in Newport, where she will lie on a king-sized canopy bed and take a bottle of her cat’s painkillers. At the hotel, Phoebe meets bride-to-be Lila, a headstrong rich girl presiding over her own extravagant six-day wedding celebration. Lila thought she had booked every room in the hotel, and learning of Phoebe's suicidal intentions, she forbids this stray guest from disrupting the nuptials: “No. You definitely can’t kill yourself. This is my wedding week.” After the punchy opening, a grim flashback to the meltdown of Phoebe's marriage temporarily darkens the mood, but things pick up when spoiled Lila interrupts Phoebe's preparations and sweeps her up in the wedding juggernaut. The slide from earnest drama to broad farce is somewhat jarring, but from this point on, Espach crafts an enjoyable—if overstuffed—comedy of manners. When the original maid of honor drops out, Phoebe is persuaded, against her better judgment, to take her place. There’s some fun to be had here: The wedding party—including groom-to-be Gary, a widower, and his 11-year-old daughter—takes surfing lessons; the women in the group have a session with a Sex Woman. But it all goes on too long, and the humor can seem forced, reaching a low point when someone has sex with the vintage wedding car (you don’t want to know the details). Later, when two characters have a meet-cute in a hot tub, readers will guess exactly how the marriage plot resolves.

Uneven but fitfully amusing.

Pub Date: July 30, 2024

ISBN: 9781250899576

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Henry Holt

Review Posted Online: Sept. 13, 2024

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MY NAME IS EMILIA DEL VALLE

An action-packed, brightly detailed historical novel not much hampered by its thinly characterized central figure.

A free-spirited woman forges a career as a writer and journalist, risking scandal and war zones to follow her heart.

Allende’s latest opens in San Francisco in 1873, introducing Emilia at age 7, the illegitimate daughter of Molly Walsh, who, as a novice nun, was seduced and abandoned by wealthy Chilean Gonzalo Andrés del Valle. Molly goes on to a successful marriage, Emilia grows up with a loving stepfather, and at 17 she begins writing, then publishing, sensational dime novels under the pseudonym Brandon J. Price. By 23, she’s a journalist with a column in The Daily Examiner, though still forced to hide her gender behind her pen name. Rule breaking is in her nature, and while she accepts, for now, lower pay than men, she decides on a trip to New York to take a lover and learns to control her own contraception. Later, finally writing under her own name, she’s commissioned to go to Chile and cover its civil war from a human angle, accompanied by colleague and friend Eric Whelan, whose focus is the military aspect. Chilean revolutionary politics make for less sprightly reading, but Emilia’s individual encounters with members of high and low society lend atmosphere. These include the president, a great aunt, and eventually her father—now alone, regretful, and mortally ill. Although he disapproves of working women, the two share a “desire to see the world and experience everything intensely,” and when he offers to recognize Emilia as his legitimate child, she accepts. Now the story gathers pace, with Emilia—always and predictably the rebel—witnessing the horrors of battle, discovering that she and Eric are in love, and getting arrested. Not quite plausibly, she instigates a further sequence of impulsive moves before the story is permitted to conclude.

An action-packed, brightly detailed historical novel not much hampered by its thinly characterized central figure.

Pub Date: May 6, 2025

ISBN: 9780593975091

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Ballantine

Review Posted Online: April 19, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2025

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