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Dominoes

A Novel

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
A tender and provocative debut novel about a mixed-race British woman who makes the shocking discovery in the days leading up to her wedding that her fiancé’s family may have enslaved her ancestors
“Simultaneously sweet and sobering, this is one you will not want to miss.”—Onyi Nwabineli, author of Someday, Maybe

Dominoes opens in London, twenty-nine days before a young couple’s wedding. Layla is a mixed-race woman—with a Black, Jamaican mother, and a white father she’s never met—and Andy is a white man of Scottish descent. When they first meet at a party, they can’t believe how instant their chemistry is, and how quickly their relationship unfolds. Funnily enough, they even share a last name: McKinnon.
Layla’s best friend, Sera, isn’t so sure about Andy, or the fact that her best friend is engaged a white man. As the wedding approaches, Sera prompts her friend to research her heritage more, leading Layla to make a shocking discovery: It’s extremely likely that Andy’s ancestors enslaved Layla’s in Jamaica, and that the money from that enslavement helped build his family’s wealth.
What seemed like a fairy-tale romance is suddenly derailed as Layla begins to uncover parts of her history and identity that she never imagined—or had simply learned to ignore. The process takes her to Jamaica for the first time, where she uncovers truths about her family’s history that will change the way she thinks about herself and her future. As the clock ticks down to her wedding, Layla must make a decision: commit to the man she loves or expose a shameful history that has gone unspoken for far too long.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 29, 2024
      Playwright McIntosh debuts with a thought-provoking study of race, ancestry, and inheritance based on her one-woman play of the same name. When Layla McKinnon, who is mixed race, begins dating Andy McKinnon, who is white, their shared surname feels at first like a meet-cute in the making. But Layla’s best friend, Sera, a social justice activist, is convinced that Andy’s substantial family wealth is tied to his forebears’ history as slave owners, and that they enslaved Layla’s ancestors. After Andy and Layla get engaged to be married, Layla, haunted by Sera’s insinuations, travels to Jamaica for the first time in search of her roots. As a history teacher, she knows the outlines of Britain’s legacy of slaveholding, but she is nevertheless surprised and shaken by the extent of its ongoing economic repercussions. Her conflicted feelings of love and revulsion toward Andy and his family rouse sympathies, but the real heart of the story lies with the damage done to her decades-long friendship with Sera, who can no longer condone the impending nuptials as evidence supporting her claim continues to mount. Despite a somewhat abrupt resolution, McIntosh largely succeeds at transferring her story from stage to page. This stimulating portrayal of a fraught familial history is sure to spark debate.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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