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Friday, January 30, 2026
The Wilderness by Angela Flournoy
This was long listed for the National Book Award and while I do not 100% read that list, I do pay attention to it. I think if I had read this in one or two settings I would have rated it higher--it was a little confusing in the shifting between time periods if you read it over a longer time interval--I just kept being a little disoriented, but the writing is rock solid and the story is very well constructed.
Over several decades, from the early 2000's to the near future, this book follows the lives and evolving friendships of four Black women in America—Desiree, Nakia, January and Monique. We meet the women in their early 20s as they kickstart careers and navigate romantic relationships; we see them through their late 20s and early 30s, reassessing and reconfiguring jobs, values and how to best support each other; we ease with them into midlife, which is at times calmer waters and at others heavy with unforeseen tragedy. Desiree’s sister, Danielle, steps in and out of the narrative as well.
The strength of this novel is getting to experiencthe protagonists’ thoughts as they handle problems—social discomfort, jealousy, conflict avoidance—and the minor strains introduced to friendship due to differing sexual orientations, socioeconomic statuses and mental health conditions. The novel seems to espouse that friendship is about overcoming and about changing with individuals as they change. It has an ending that is very hard to read in 2026 America where American citizens are being gunned down by the government.

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