cover image Redwood Court

Redwood Court

DéLana R.A. Dameron. Dial, $28 (284p) ISBN 978-0-593-44702-4

Poet Dameron (How God Ends Us) makes her fiction debut with a gratifying collection about a Black family in South Carolina. The title story centers on Louise “Weesie” Bolton Mosby, who settles with her Korean War veteran husband, Teeta, in a cul-de-sac in suburban Columbia, S.C., in the late 1960s. While raising their daughter, Rhina, Weesie collects money from her neighbors to support others during tough times. In 1979, teenage Rhina gets pregnant with her older daughter, Sasha, and marries Thomas Tabor. “How Do You Know Where You’re Going?” follows Teeta as he dotes on Sasha and her younger sister, Mika, in the 1980s. “Thirty-first Annual Chitlin Strut” portrays the aftermath of Teeta’s death from lung cancer, when Mika, now in eighth grade, grows closer to Weesie as they learn about relatives in Florida. Later stories trace Mika’s coming-of-age as she contends with racism and financial hardships. In “Rollin’ with My Homies,” local reporters spread panic about gang activity in the neighborhood and the sheriff institutes racial profiling, while in “Independent Women,” which perfectly ties the collection together, Mika takes after Weesie by leaning on the family’s neighbors to raise money for her 16th birthday party. Even amid heartache and turmoil, this brims with joy. Agent: Victoria Sanders, Victoria Sanders and Assoc. (Feb.)