Acts of forgiveness A novel

Maura Cheeks

Book - 2024

"In this big-hearted debut about ambition, race, and class, a family grapples with how much of their lineage they're willing to unearth in order to participate in the nation's first federal reparations program. Almost a decade ago, Willie Revel gave up her burgeoning journalism career in New York to help run her father's struggling construction company in Philadelphia. An ambitious single mother, Willie has reluctantly put family first without being able to forget who she might have become. Now, as the president of the United States prepares to pass the Forgiveness Act, a bill that would allow Black families to claim reparations if they can prove they are the descendants of slaves, Willie delves deeper into her family�...39;s history, while also trying to keep the family from going into bankruptcy. Acts of Forgiveness reveals the ways historical discrimination can manifest in the present. Could reparations help uncover her forgotten roots and right generational wrongs, while also helping save their beloved home and her father's life work? But for reasons both justifiable and cryptic, the rest of the family is hesitant and wary of what pursuing Forgiveness could mean. Her mother who was adopted is not eager to dig up the past; her father doesn't trust the government; and her daughter is just trying to make it through the fifth grade at her elite private school. It's up to Willie to verify their ancestry and save her family from financial ruin-but as she delves into their history, Willie begins to learn just how complicated family can really be. With warm insight and powerful prose, Acts of Forgiveness asks how history shapes who we are, to consider the weight of success when it is achieved despite incredible odds, and what leaving behind a legacy truly means"--

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Subjects
Genres
Novels
Published
New York : Ballantine Books [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Maura Cheeks (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
308 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780593598290
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Complex family relationship dynamics and hidden histories are elegantly examined in Cheeks' debut family saga. Willie is working as a journalist in New York City and had just been offered a promising job with her mentor, a U.S. senator, when her father is seriously injured while working for his construction company. After pressure from her parents to take over the family business, she abandons her burgeoning career and returns to her Philadelphia childhood home, where theirs was the first Black family on the block. Eleven years later, she is still there, raising a daughter and wondering what might have been. Her mentor is now the president and has introduced a reparations act that would provide financial compensation to families who can prove they are descendants of slaves. Hoping to save their floundering business, Willie delves into her ancestry, meeting with much resistance from her family. Cheeks imbues her characters with depth and emotion and tackles the personal and the political with skillful, expressive writing, and the Revel family story is engrossing. Perfect for readers who enjoyed In West Mills (2019) and Red at the Bone (2019).

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In Cheeks's engrossing debut, a Black family faces financial hardships and debates the merits of a new reparations program. After a promising start as a reporter in New York City, Willie Revel reluctantly returns to Philadelphia to help her father, Max, with the family's construction business and moves into the house hers parents proudly bought many years ago as the first Black family in their neighborhood. As the years pass, she gets pregnant from a one-night stand, raises her daughter, Paloma, and tries to help fix the company's various financial setbacks. Meanwhile, her former mentor Elizabeth Johnson, a descendant of President Andrew Johnson, becomes a U.S. senator and then president. Hoping to reverse the damage done by her ancestor, who throttled Reconstruction, Johnson signs into law the controversial Forgiveness Act, which calls for the U.S. government to pay reparations to those who can prove their ancestors were enslaved. Max, desperate to save his business and long distrustful of the government, enters into a construction project with a vocal opponent of the act and considers selling the family home, prompting Willie to unearth their family history in hopes of securing reparation payments, even as a research trip leaves Paloma feeling abandoned. Cheeks seamlessly threads the themes of resentment, forgiveness, and legacy through the multilayered narrative. Readers will be moved. Agent: Stephanie Delman, Trellis Literary. (Feb.)

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

In a U.S. that's just elected its first female president, the members of a Black family find themselves divided when a federal reparations act is proposed. Wilhelmina "Willie" Revel grew up watching her father, Max, who owned a construction company, work tirelessly to provide financial security and upward mobility for his family, having been haunted by his own father's inability to secure a mortgage because of his race. Willie goes to college to become a journalist, and just as she's starting to make a name for herself as a reporter for the Village Voice, she's offered a job with the U.S. Senate campaign of Elizabeth Johnson, one of her former professors. Unfortunately, though, her father gets sick, and Willie needs to go home to take over the business. Eleven years later, now-President Johnson puts forward the Forgiveness Act, which would formally apologize for slavery in part by providing reparations of $175,000 to each descendant of slaves. Willie is now a single mother to a young daughter and is attempting to keep her father's business afloat. When she decides to undertake the genealogical work required to file for the money, she unintentionally provokes her brother, parents, and grandfather, all of whom have different perspectives on why it's a bad idea to go poking into the family history, even as the U.S. deals with a violent backlash. Cheeks' debut novel seeks to explore the question of "whether forgiveness could be political, and, if so, could it last." The story doesn't quite address this ambitious question for the nation at large, instead focusing on the many costs that not knowing where one comes from can take on a person, as well as the social and interpersonal effects of racism. Willie is depicted with tremendous care, but there is at times too much narrative distance from the large cast of supporting characters. A freshly told, complex family drama with an intriguing premise. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 The diner was full of people who wanted to be around others the day the Forgiveness Act passed the House. The proximity to precedent felt good. There was no danger, no history yet, per se, no need to stop routine completely, so it was enough to sit in the old diner at the blue-­speckled tables with scrambled eggs and large steaming mugs of coffee. Enough to ask the person next to you to pass the ketchup and also whether they thought this would go anywhere. "Not in my day" was often the answer. Enough monotony rubbed off of a dreary fall day for neighbors to linger and comment that Forgiveness would never pass the Senate, as the anchor announced the House's intention to vote on it in the evening. The country, the city, the diner--­connected by the same wavering thread of expectation. As Willie hurried in, she took up her usual stool beneath the television and tried to look optimistic, but she had imagined when a moment like this one came she would be sharing the news not watching it. Writing about representatives wrangling last-­minute votes, what families needed to do to prepare for its passage--­not sitting, as she was now, thirty-­four years old in the same town where she was raised. Most days she successfully calmed the disquiet, but today she couldn't help it and picked silently at her life choices like they were scabs. Vice president . . . at her father's construction company. Mother to a precocious daughter . . . from a one-­night stand. Loving parents . . . whom she lives with. The second half of those ellipses ruined the mirage. For a long time, she was buoyed by the belief that change was around the corner, and now that it was here, she realized she should have been more specific in her faith. The Forgiveness Act, for many reasons, threw this into sharp relief. A waitress arched her back against the counter and pointed the remote at the television, inching the president's voice up several decibels. Everyone in the diner talked over one another, and it was possible to hear both the din of the restaurant as one throbbing sound and the individual pieces of conversation. The men next to Willie threw their voices at the screen as though President Johnson stood ready to take their orders from behind the bar. "Fifty bucks she's on here tomorrow saying the House delayed the vote." "It doesn't work like that." "How do you know how it works?" "At least she's not using war as an excuse." The man to Willie's right, whose bald head glistened underneath the harsh fluorescent lights, jabbed his knife at the screen. "She's alright. I'd let her forgive me." "What are you even talking about?" "I'm talking about her priorities and how they're on straight. They keep killing us, and while everyone else wants to pause and look abroad, she's trying to start fixing what's broken." Willie squirmed in her chair, sighing, and they turned to look in her direction. "Well, what do you think?" "I think Johnson's alright." She took a sip of coffee and continued staring at the television, unable to tell them that she'd expected to feel a sense of release, or excitement, that hadn't yet arrived. The men shook their heads and exchanged glances that managed to lament the state of all young people of Willie's generation. Suffice it to say that it is not whether we, as a country, should make amends, President Johnson continued. It is that despite the fact nothing can ever atone for the injustices, we should still try. With approximately forty million Black Americans in the United States today, the amount owed to each African American with an enslaved ancestor is $175,000 per person. This amount will help us begin to close the racial wealth gap in our country. An angry grunt escaped from the gray-­haired man to Willie's left. "Doris, can you turn this down? Not all of us want to listen to this Forgiveness shit." The mood shifted as the men at the other end of the counter looked at one another, now lamenting certain white people of their own generation. A young mother who had been watching the screen expectantly turned back to her toddler. Doris ignored him and looked at Willie. "When is your mother coming in? I need to talk to her." For a moment Willie stared at Doris, whose eyes reflected the concern of someone who still saw her only as a child. "I'm not sure," she replied, shifting again on her stool. "Tell her I want to talk to her. See, there's this--­" Willie, clipping a ten-­dollar bill on top of her check, cut Doris off by saying she had to get to work. Waving goodbye, she stepped out into the thick September air to begin her short walk to the office. The sky was devoid of clouds, stamped instead with the faded color of worn-­out leaves. The familiarity of her surroundings made her a stranger to herself. Rather than Forgiveness allowing her to put a name to her anxiety, as national events tended to do, it instead confused her senses. Years ago, she had been told that the point of a family business was to be in control of your own destiny. For Willie, it had meant the opposite. The business that her father created out of dust and broken promises slowly rose to suffocate her even as it gave her life, gave her family certain freedoms. Her father made her mother believe it. And then her mother made her believe. The business became bigger than itself even as it was their lifeblood. And there was nothing to do with outsize false hope except continue to believe. So believe she did, because there was no other choice. What right did she have to help white people write about art and politics and books when her family needed her? It was one thing to feel like your sacrifices were worth it but another to feel like you sacrificed for nothing. Was it possible to be a good person if you were always resenting the sacrifices you made to be good? Maybe part of her never lost the belief that Max's work was more than a paycheck. She had wanted to believe it was true. At work, as she stared out of a window in her office, she saw not the trees outside or the train station across the street but the man on the other end of the phone line, his thumb hooked through his belt loop, impatient to end the conversation, and wondered if he could hear the anxious rattle in her voice. She did her best to sound resolute, knowing the key to making someone think they had to pay was making them think she'd never give in. "Patrick. Patrick," she repeated. "The payment was due a month ago." "I can't give you a better answer than the one I already gave you." "Which wasn't an answer." "It's the best I can do until I know more on my end." She walked over to sit at her desk, fingering the professional symbolism of her small diamond studs, and bit her tongue--­if not the best journalism technique Alfie Cane ever taught her, at least the most useful. "Look," Patrick finally sighed. "There's a holdup with the FTC, okay? There are some concerns that our latest acquisition is going to be blocked." Willie raised her head and looked out the window. "And what happens if they block the acquisition?" "We pause construction. Probably try to find a buyer for the lot." "The kill fee is $175,000." The irony of the amount made a bitter laugh whisper through her throat. "Ms. Revel. Willie. We wouldn't be killing the project; the government would be. Either way, we should know more next week." Her chest constricted unceremoniously. They were never going to get this money. "Your late fees are still accruing, whether you pay the kill fee or not. Let me know where things stand as soon as you can." Before she could catch herself, she told him to have a good weekend. She watched as a train pulled slowly into the station across the street. It opened its doors as if yawning, not letting anyone but the ticket agents off. At this time of day, people were preparing to go into the city, not return from it. She watched the commuters on the platform playing Friday's rhythm, their bodies relaxed with the weekend's promise of respite ahead. A man waiting to board the train patted his jacket pocket and then jogged back to his car. Two women wearing pencil skirts and sneakers gripped large tote bags on their shoulders like workplace barbies. Commuters coming from comfortable lives who would return to houses filled with children, fridges filled with food. Houses similar to 512 Lewaro Street in their outward façade and dissimilar in the ways all houses are dissimilar because of the people inside them. The train filled slowly with passengers, and Willie kept her eyes on the ticket agents, who laughed at something on their phones. She was embarrassed by the quick flash of jealousy that pierced her. Excerpted from Acts of Forgiveness: A Novel by Maura Cheeks All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.