They dream in gold A novel

Mai Sennaar

Book - 2024

"When Bonnie and Mansour meet in New York in 1968--his piercing gaze in a downtown jazz club threatening to carry her away--their connection is undeniable. Both from fractured homes, with childhoods spent crossing the Atlantic, they quickly find peace with each other. And as Mansour's soaring Senegalese melodies continue to break new ground, keeping time with the sound of revolution and taking him and Bonnie from Paris to Rio and Switzerland, it seems as though happiness might finally be around the corner for them both. Then Mansour goes missing. His Spanish tour was only meant to last three weeks, but three months later, he and his band have not returned. In his absence, Bonnie reckons with her memories of him, and comes to under...stand that the hopes of so many women--her mother and grandmother; his mother, aunt, childhood friend--rest on her perseverance. Stirred by the life growing inside her, Bonnie puts a plan in action to find him"--Dust jacket flap.

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FICTION/Sennaar Mai
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Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Sennaar Mai (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 16, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Novels
Published
New York : SJP Lit, an Zando imprint 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Mai Sennaar (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
415 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781638931102
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Sennaar debuts with a remarkable chronicle of a young couple separated by mysterious circumstances and their families' attempts to forge better lives in the American South and Senegal. In 1969, Bonnie Ndoye, a young African American woman, is pregnant and living in Switzerland with her Senegalese mother-in-law, Mama Eva. It's been three months since Bonnie has heard from her husband, Mansour, a singer who recently toured Spain to promote his first album, and who should have returned by now. She can't help but wonder if Mansour has abandoned her and their child, recalling how her own mother, Claudine, neglected her as a girl in the 1950s to become a ballerina. Eventually, Sennaar reveals the source of the Ndoyes' generational trauma, showing how Claudine's emotionally distant mother witnessed the murder of her civil rights lawyer father as a teen. A parallel narrative follows Mama Eva, who abandoned a young Mansour for Paris, where she toiled as a dishwasher, and is now about to realize her life-long dream of opening a Senegalese restaurant. Sennaar impresses with her colorful cast of characters and deep well of stories. It's a stunner. Agent: Mariah Stovall, Trellis Literary. (July)

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