c.2019, One World
$28 ($37 Canada)
416 pages
You canโt breathe.
Thereโs really no describing the panic when that happens. Your ribs struggle to rise, your chest feels like itโs being stomped, youโre on fire, and your brain screams. Your arms flail. Your hands grasp at nothing, and then โ ahhhhh, you gasp. And in the new novel โThe Water Dancerโ by Ta-Nehisi Coates, nothingโs better than the first breath of freedomโs air.
Hiram was drowning.
One minute, he was in the carriage and the next, he and the horse were struggling in the water. Oddly, though, the lack of breath, seeing his half-brother float away, tasting mud on the riverbanks, none of that bothered him. He thought he saw his mother dancing on the bridge, but she was sold away years ago; the water felt familiar but everything did, all the time. Hi grew up knowing he had a gift that allowed him to see his ancestors and to remember everything, and this drowning was one of those things.
He woke up in a bed wearing fresh clothes that belonged to his half-brother, Maynard. Hiโs father โ the man who owned him โ was weeping because Maynard was lost, and Hi realized then that whatever relationship heโd had with his white father was over.
His life at the great house on Virginiaโs Lockless Plantation, over. That his father looked the other way when Hiram showed interest in Sophia, a housegirl Hi delivered every weekend to his fatherโs brother for reasons Hi preferred not to think about โฆ done. His whole life was spent as a Tasker for people who owned him, toiling for Quality folk and thinking that if he did the right things, heโd be rewarded with some sort of equality or freedom or โฆ
Or heโd been fooling himself.
Heโd never be equal to the Quality. Heโd never love who he wanted to love, or know for certain that heโd never be sold Natchez-way. And that meant just one thing.
It was time to run.
Hunched over. Thatโs what youโll be with โThe Water Dancerโ: hunched over as you read, to protect your heart from this story and because the anticipation of whatโs to come is too much to handle if youโre upright.
Using a little magic, the full meaning of which may not become totally clear until nearly the end of this tale, author Ta-Nehisi Coates captivates readers with language rich and reminiscent of poetry or song. The beauty of those words is calming-not-calming, like lying on a fresh-smelling, springy bed of moss on the edge of quiet woods, waiting to hear heavy footsteps you know are coming. Cue the ominous music, but donโt think that this is a horror novel. No, itโs more of an escape-novel-thriller-love-story-drama-history with a cast of characters that couldnโt seem more real.
One of them, in fact, was real so look for her and donโt worry if the plot of this book doesnโt make sense at first โ it will soon enough. Just settle, let the words wash in, and โThe Water Dancerโ will knock the breath out of you.

