Following the murder of his teenage cousin Darius, young Black political activist Nate Evers devises what his friend Isiah calls a “crazy-ass reparations scheme.”
Along with Darius’ older brother, Joshua, and their friend Rachel, Nate and Isiah track down descendants of men who committed hate crimes in the South decades ago, abduct them, and teach them a fatal lesson. One of their victims is a man inaptly named Chipper whose forebears lynched a formerly enslaved man who’d been wrongly imprisoned for raping a white woman. Following the disappearance of Chipper, who was known for having torn down a memorial to the hanged man, the avengers are pursued by Chipper’s brother, Samuel, “a cross-burner with psychosis” who leads the white supremacist Righteous Boys. Nate and his mates, who gradually begin to differ over their aims and methods, are also pursued by Mason Farmer, a former white Birmingham cop with a racist streak. He went to work for a private investigative firm so he could afford the prescription drugs his wife needed after having been badly traumatized by a gang of “homeboys” who forced her off the road. There’s nary a moment in Mayfield’s bravura debut that isn’t tense and unsettling or lets readers off the hook. Inspired by Black activist Kimberly Jones’ fiery video, “How Can We Win?,” this politically charged crime novel refuses to settle for easy answers, or easy anger. “We’re doing Darius a disservice making this just about terrible white people,” Isiah argues. One white character asks Nate, “How can there ever be any meaningful change if it’s your people and my people?” He replies, “Race is a complex issue.” That complexity has rarely been captured as powerfully or affectingly as it is here.
A provocative, page-turning treatment of racism in America.