Estranged childhood best friends confront long-buried feelings on an emotional road trip.
Nia and Jade had been friends since they were introduced by their mutual bestie, Michal, at her 10th birthday party. Now, 19 years later, Michal is gone—she died of cancer a few years ago—and they’re barely on speaking terms. But before Michal passed away, she left letters for Nia and Jade to open on their future birthdays, and the ones written for when they turn 29 come with a special request: To go on a road trip the three of them had planned to explore the history of Jews (including their own families) in the South. Wanting to cherish and honor Michal’s memory, the two women reconnect, and they set off on the trip with Jade’s twin brother, Jonah, who was Michal’s boyfriend. All three seem to settle back into old habits and routines; in some ways it feels as if no time has passed at all. But there’s still the elephant in the room that blew up Nia and Jade’s friendship—an attraction both feel but only one has acknowledged. Author Katz deftly enfolds multiple themes within their slow-burn romance: the history of Jewish communities in the South and the generational trauma that comes with it; an intense examination of grief; and a testament to the complexities of friendship and sibling relationships. Heaping doses of the two women’s yearning and pining tenderly supplement it all. However sweet and emotional the romance may be, though, it often fights for attention with the novel’s other rich elements. Visits to locations with deep histories for the Jewish and Black communities and a consideration of how ugly, upsetting life moments can leave people and relationships changed are the more compelling components.
An emotional romance buttressed by strong themes of history, trauma, loss, and identity.