Flying the Coop

Flying the Coop, the second novel in my Dreambird Chronicles trilogy, is out today.

Many years ago, I conceived of a future world where the U.S. has fractured along racial and rural vs. urban divides to become the Disunited States. It's frightening to see how much closer we are getting to the post-second Civil War world depicted in the novel.

In this series, enslaved so-called "botanicals" (imported labor not classified as human) have invented a game called Fly the Coop that pays tribute to the civil rights movement and the trials of the Middle Passage. The game the enslaved invent is a cross between a gladiatorial colosseum battle, a cage fight, and a circus. Inside an arena-sized cage, battlers "fly" using equipment like the Jim Crow Nest, Rosa Parks Perches, King-Spins, Douglass Pipes and Ellison Wheels. The most accomplished flyer-battlers can make you believe the bars of the cage no longer exist.

The series calls upon the mythology that has shaped those of us from the African Diaspora as characters dream of ways to come to terms with suffering and live courageously in this terrifying and amazing world. The three friends at the core of the novel are living precariously in D.C.--a Liberty Independent: Ji-ji has undergone a remarkable metamorphosis; Afarra the outcast is haunted by vengeful ghosts called Dimmers; and Tiro cannot reconcile himself to the loss of his executed twin brother.

D.C. is one of my favorite cities in the world. Writing about what it could become in the future has been one of the most exciting and troubling experiences in my entire writing career. If we are barreling toward a future like this, I am grateful to have this ensemble cast of characters by my side. And I'm grateful for the stories we tell that give us hope.
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Published on July 05, 2022 08:55
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