“HISTORY IS FUCKING WILD.”
When No One is Watching is a powerful and uncomfortable book to read. It is also difficult to describe, and although it's being marketed as a thriller, it is only part thriller, and not really a thriller until closer to the end. It is a mixture of genres blended together to craft a powerful message on social justice and gentrification.
Sydney Green, a black woman in her 30’s, is literally fighting to hold onto her mother's house in Gifford Place, a neighborhood going through “revitalization” in Brooklyn. Corporations, condominiums, and soul-crushing Bougie millennials are moving in and driving out the culture and people who built the neighborhood. Pressured to sell, but not willing to move, Sydney puts together a tour of the neighborhood that encompasses its African roots and a past that is on the verge of disappearing.
Theo, a white man with a secretive past, strikes up an unlikely friendship with Sydney and becomes her assistant on the tour. As the two begin researching and planning, their neighbors begin to disappear. They are both in danger and could be the next to be taken.
The narrative is split between Sydney and Theo. Both are dynamic characters. Sydney’s anger at the injustice of what is happening to her neighborhood emanates off the pages. Her anger masks her pain and fear of losing all she has ever known. On the other hand, Theo’s character is a little shady. He hides his emotions, and so many other things, and is a bit of mystery. He plays the role of the white person who wants to support the cause, but at the same time is oblivious to what’s really going on (I can identify with this aspect of his character).
The narrative kept me on my toes, as I wasn’t ever really sure where things were going, but it GOES there in a very blatant and obvious way. There is a level of underlying tension and suspense throughout that gradually builds as the narrative progresses.
I have to say this book goes off the rails in the last 25% or so. I was wondering if what was really happening was all just a crazy dream, but it was all very real. I was a little put off by how far Cole went, but then I realized she had to go in this way to get her message across.
This is a provocative, timely, and engaging read. It’s a page-turner with a message that will, hopefully, keep the reader thinking about history, racism, gentrification, and social justice.
“People bury the parts of history they don’t like, pave it over like African cemeteries beneath Manhattan skyscrapers.”
I was lucky enough to win a copy of this book in a GoodReads giveaway!