Redwood Court (Reese's Book Club)
Fiction
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Narrated by:
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Ashley J. Hobbs
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Robin Miles
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De'Onna Prince
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Aaron Goodson
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Dominic Hoffman
“A triumph . . . Redwood Court is storytelling at its best: tender, vivid, and richly complicated.”—Jacqueline Woodson, New York Times bestselling author of Red at the Bone
FINALIST FOR THE WILLIE MORRIS AWARD FOR SOUTHERN FICTION
“Mika, you sit at our feet all these hours and days, hearing us tell our tales. You have all these stories inside you: all the stories everyone in our family knows and all the stories everyone in our family tells. You write ’em in your books and show everyone who we are.”
So begins award-winning poet DéLana R. A. Dameron’s debut novel, Redwood Court. The baby of the family, Mika Tabor spends much of her time in the care of loved ones, listening to their stories and witnessing their struggles. On Redwood Court, the cul-de-sac in the all-Black working-class suburb of Columbia, South Carolina, where her grandparents live, Mika learns important lessons from the people who raise her: her exhausted parents, who work long hours at multiple jobs while still making sure their kids experience the adventure of family vacations; her older sister, who in a house filled with Motown would rather listen to Alanis Morrisette; her retired grandparents, children of Jim Crow, who realized their own vision of success when they bought their house on the Court in the 1960s, imagining it filled with future generations; and the many neighbors who hold tight to the community they’ve built, committed to fostering joy and love in an America so insistent on seeing Black people stumble and fall.
With visceral clarity and powerful prose, Dameron reveals the devastation of being made to feel invisible and the transformative power of being seen. Redwood Court is a celebration of extraordinary, ordinary people striving to achieve their own American dreams.
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Dear Listener,
Dear Listener,
How did my own family history influence my debut novel?
"I watch a lot of narrative dramas, and in a sense, I don’t see what I’m doing as very different: taking real people, a real timeline, and, to quote Tracy Chapman, filling in "the fiction in the space between". When thinking about family history as a narrative jumping off point for
Redwood Court, I feel that I was most interested in telling a
truthful story about ordinary Black Southern folks in a very specific timeframe (the ’90s) in a very specific place (Columbia, South Carolina). In that sense, yes, I leaned a lot on my personal family history to think of situations that my characters might face within the timeline of the story. And yes, my characters are very close to people in my family and in the neighborhoods where I grew up. There are aspects of my family history infused in the storylines of some of my characters, but I also filled in a lot of fiction in the space between what I know and what I imagined. In that way, my characters’ stories became different for me." – DeLana R. A. Dameron, writer of
Redwood Court
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