The Water Dancer

Ta-Nehisi Coates

The Water Dancer
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Penguin Books Ltd
Country
United Kingdom
Published
20 October 2020
Pages
416
ISBN
9780241982518

The Water Dancer

Ta-Nehisi Coates

The highly anticipated debut novel from the award-winning, bestselling author of We Were Eight Years in Power – a story of bondage, freedom, and love

Every slave plantation is a house of spies and intrigue. No slave walks a straight line or has a single story – deep within their hearts is rebellion. But against whom?

Hiram Walker is a man with a gift and a curse. He was born between worlds- his father a white plantation master, his mother black and enslaved. And, unbeknown even to himself, he was born with a special power. When he is sold to a new mistress as punishment for attempting escape, Hiram discovers her home is a secret hub of the underground railroad- a training ground for its agents.

Hiram fast becomes a highly skilled agent, retrieving the enslaved from the most dangerous circumstances and gradually learning to harness his power - but betrayals lurk everywhere. And eventually Hiram must risk everything to return to his father’s plantation and free the friends he left behind.

Review

Ta-Nehisi Coates has been a correspondent for the Atlantic and among his bestselling works of nonfiction is Between the World and Me, which won the National Book Award. Coates is also the current author of two Marvel comic series. His debut novel, The Water Dancer, does not disappoint.

Set in the pre-Civil War South, The Water Dancer is a magic-realist, high-stakes adventure tale of slavery and of the secret rescue network, the Underground. The narrator, nineteen-year-old Hiram Walker, is born into slavery on a Virginian tobacco plantation that, by the time we first meet him, is in terminal decline in parallel with the wider region and its way of life. Hiram’s father, Howell Walker, is the owner of the plantation; his mother was a slave, mysteriously lost. Hiram’s adoptive mother, Thena, once had her own family. Sophia, Hiram’s love interest, is a young woman navigating the terms of her life and servitude in her own way, to the extent that she can.

Hiram’s life deviates from the expected path when his father brings him to work in the main house as his brother (Howell’s heir) Maynard’s right-hand-man. This, and the dramatic carriage accident with which the book opens, bring Hiram and his astonishing talents to the attention of the Underground, changing the course of his life and many others.

With rich characterisation and a nuanced story delivered in deceptively restrained prose, The Water Dancer addresses the devastating legacy of America’s slave economy, and is underpinned by an excruciating understanding of the power of storytelling and memory: ‘to forgive was irrelevant, but to forget was death.’ The Water Dancer is a hypnotic story that circles ever more tightly around the reader as the plot moves back and forth through time. Comparisons to Toni Morrison’s oeuvre and to Colson Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad are inevitable, and deserved.


Elke Power is the editor of Readings Monthly.

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