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NOW LILA KNOWS by Elizabeth Nunez

NOW LILA KNOWS

by Elizabeth Nunez

Pub Date: June 7th, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-63614-024-7
Publisher: Akashic

After witnessing a Black man shot by police in Vermont, a Caribbean professor tries to decide whether to take action.

When Lila Bonnard arrives in a small, predominantly White Vermont town, her fiance warns her “not to get involved in America’s racial problem.” On the way from the airport to the apartment where she’ll stay for a year’s teaching appointment, though, Lila witnesses police shoot and kill a Black man attempting to resuscitate a White woman. Before she understands what’s happened, Lila is involved. The few Black faculty members are eager for Lila to come forward with what she knows. The man who was killed, Ron Brown, had been a professor at the college and a friend of theirs. But Lila, an immigrant, is frightened of the ramifications of speaking out, and her fiance continues to warn against her involvement. Nunez’s latest novel, though it occasionally takes on the pacing and the plotting of a thriller—someone slips a threatening, unsigned note under Lila’s door—is essentially a quiet account of one woman’s gradual awakening. As a Black Caribbean, Lila’s experience and understanding of racism differ rather drastically from those of her new African American colleagues. The novel traces her growing understanding of the dynamics at play in American racism. Along those lines, Nunez’s prose is thoughtful, nuanced, and unrushed. But there are minor moments that feel improbable—not because the events described are outlandish, but because characters appear to respond to situations in ways that seem unlikely. Minutes after seeing Brown shot dead, for example, Lila has a casual conversation with her landlady in which she mentions, “My grandmother loves the soaps, especially General Hospital. You can’t speak to her when General Hospital is on.” Then, too, not all Nunez’s characters are painted with the same fine brush as Lila, and the dialogue often feels stilted. Still, as a portrait of Lila’s political and racial awakening, the novel is a grand success.

A nuanced portrait of a Caribbean woman’s gradual enlightenment.