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GOOD DIRT by Charmaine Wilkerson

GOOD DIRT

by Charmaine Wilkerson

Pub Date: Jan. 28th, 2025
ISBN: 9780593358368
Publisher: Ballantine

The 2000 murder of a Black teen during a home invasion resonates through the years before and after.

Wilkerson’s ambitious follow-up to Black Cake (2022) centers on a wealthy Black family, the Freemans, who have made their home on the Connecticut coast. The family’s prized possession is a 20-gallon stoneware pot they call “Old Mo,” made by an enslaved ancestor. The jar was broken during a horrible, never-solved incident in which masked men broke into their home and shot 15-year-old Baz to death in the presence of his 10-year-old sister, Ebony, called Ebby. As we meet Ebby, she has suffered a second trauma: In 2018, her rich white husband-to-be has ditched her on their wedding day for reasons that take a while to emerge. Wilkerson traces in detail the storylines of preceding generations of Freemans going back to Africa, follows Ebby and her family for the next several years—including an escape to France—and also features chapters focusing on various supporting characters with connections to the murder. With so much ground to cover, the overstuffed narrative loses steam. Furthermore, the reliance on a major improbable coincidence to force Ebby and her ex back together raises an eyebrow that never quite comes down, and the France section introduces additional characters with questionable claim on our attention. Is there really a reason to care about the trajectory of the woman Ebby’s ex shows up with at his vacation rental? However, Wilkerson’s highly readable writing style and wily withholding of a key secret will keep the pages turning happily enough for many readers.

Much to admire, but half of what’s here might have made for a more successful novel.