The shape of dreams A novel

April Reynolds

Book - 2026

"In this second novel by the award-winning novelist, a trio of women in East Harlem come together in friendship and tragedy to organize against the systems that hold them down We're in East Harlem, in the mid-eighties, and the large and formidable (some say crazy woman) Twin Johnson discovers the body of Anita's boy, Tyrone, on the sidewalk. She does just what her uncle, who runs his basement crack den as a family business, warned her never to do: she calls the police, setting in motion a cycle of events that expand the consciousness of this struggling community. Anita, a postal worker, army widow, and church lady, is determined to solve her son's murder, but her quest for justice rattles the neighborhood, which itself i...s like a complex character in this teeming novel, with its Mets fans and gossips, immigrant shop owners and sneaker-obsessed teens on its garbage-piled streets. The local dreamers include a charismatic man of the cloth, a teenage girl with a Whitney Houston voice and no prospects at all, and Anita's opinionated new bestie, Wanda, whose own truant son the police harass and arrest on a regular basis, and who brings both blessings and curses into Anita's exploded world. Anita, Wanda, and Twin, the power triad of this vibrant novel, are all drawn into the basement den as the reader sinks into their rich backstories. Will they be able to break its spell? Will the Reverend's pressure on the authorities to find Tyrone's killer yield answers? In the end, in the NY Mets' banner summer of 1986, this community will come together to mourn, find justice, and shape their dreams as best they can"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Novels
Romans
Published
New York, NY : Alfred A Knopf 2026.
Language
English
Main Author
April Reynolds (author)
Edition
First hardcover edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9780593316863
9780593467657
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Reynolds (Knee-Deep in Wonder) paints a vivid portrait of East Harlem during the Reagan era. At the outset, streetwise Matilda "Twin" Johnson, 57 and nearly six feet tall, discovers the corpse of Tyrone Jackson, a Black 12-year-old whose widowed single mother, Anita, is a hard-working postal employee. When the police ask if he was affiliated with a gang, Anita scoffs. Her neighbors, led by her best friend Wanda, come together to support her in her grief. At the center of their lives is Reverend Carl's Ethiopian Church, which becomes the site of the novel's second significant event, a destructive fire. Other prominent characters include Wanda's shiftless son, Daryl, who's regularly shaken down by the police, and the enigmatic Lara Taylor, a star soprano singer at the church. As Anita slowly emerges from her grief, she seeks answers and closure. Without losing track of its well-developed characters, the novel morphs into a gripping whodunit, as the neighbors try to solve the mysteries of the fire and Tyrone's death while the police drag their heels. Readers will savor this rich tableau of a resilient community. Agent: Jennifer Lyons, Jennifer Lyons Literary. (Feb.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A disquieting and savage era of not-so-benign neglect of at-risk Black New Yorkers during the Reagan years is evoked with poignant warmth and unflinching precision. It's the middle of the Morning-in-America 1980s and the era's go-go financial opulence is an unfounded rumor in East Harlem, where the crack epidemic has taken hold along with its attendant crime wave and debilitating malaise. One very early morning in October 1985, Matilda "Twin" Johnson, a lifelong El Barrio resident and self-styled "roaming soul" who is "almost six feet tall…[and] a kiss away from three hundred pounds," comes across the body of 12-year-old Tyrone Jackson in a pile of garbage. Going against her initial instincts and the stringent demands of her drug-dealing Uncle Manuel, Twin notifies the police. Tyrone's mother, Anita, a military widow and postal worker, is devastated and determined to solve his murder with help from her "crazy" friend Wanda, whose own son Daryl is more prone to trouble with the NYPD than Tyrone. The women are aided by their earnest, ambitious neighborhood pastor, the Rev. Carl Harpon, whose church has been burned down in a suspicious fire. (Daryl is a prime suspect.) Reynolds--author ofKnee-Deep in Wonder (2003)--deftly weaves in the lives of other local residents, including the mothers who, like Anita and Wanda, no longer have a church to go to but maintain their solidarity by getting the neighborhood involved in finding out who killed Tyrone, whose own final days are recounted in flashbacks. As the months pass, Anita and Wanda are pulled deeper into despair by false leads, dead ends, and the toxic allure of crack itself, even while their neighbors continue to help search for Tyrone's killer. Reading this engrossing novel is like watching East Harlem morph into the shape of a shabby but tenacious dreamer imprisoned in a time and place where dreams can be snuffed out as haphazardly as the lives of its young. A crafty murder mystery in the multihued form of an urban symphony. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.