i cannot emphasize just how brilliant this book was. seriously, go buy a copy or check one out from your local library right now.
i was pulled in by the cover when i saw it displayed at the library (as i often am), so i went into ‘one of the good ones’ with next to no background information other than, “wow! pretty cover.” it had equal potential to be dragging-myself-through-the-mud boring and knock-your-socks-off good. luckily, it was the latter: i didn’t want to put it down.
the main plot follows kezi smith, a black teenager killed by the police after attending a social justice rally. her sisters, happi and genny, are left reeling over her loss. this is a book about mourning: the two sisters embark on the road trip kezi had planned for after graduation, along route 66, rich with black history. reluctant at first, bitter at being forced into the national spotlight and still unwilling to come to terms with the death of her sister, happi eventually agrees. in life, they bickered and had disagreements. she wants to get to know her sister a little better in death.
this is also a story about family: the complex relationship all three sisters shared and the way that it was fractured, and then put back together again, after the loss of one integral piece. it is a story of social activism and the corrupt police system, about the loss of Black lives in america and the justification thereof. kezi was on track to become valedictorian and ran a successful youtube channel. she was an angel child and, therefore, “one of the good ones.” hers was a death willing of mourning and outrage - at least in the eyes of white america. but the truth is, there isn’t, and shouldn’t be, an allotment of who deserves justice and who doesn’t, so this is also a book about justice. this is a book about history: about the fractured families and trauma and generations of racism and mistreatment that is the foundation of where we stand today. multiple points of views are explored, including that of their ancestors, the people who created the people who made the sisters who they are today and the trials they had to bear in order to do so.
the characters were rich and so easy to fall in love with. the plot was complex and intriguing and had me turning each and every page, eager to find out with happened next. there were points that i was gripping the book with fear and anger, so many emotions broiled right up to the surface. it was everything that a book should be: i don’t even have the words to express how much i loved it, how beautifully it was written, and how much i think you should read it, too.