Status
Call number
Genres
Publication
Description
Rear Window meets Get Out in this gripping thriller from a critically acclaimed and New York Times Notable author, in which the gentrification of a Brooklyn neighborhood takes on a sinister new meaning... Sydney Green is Brooklyn born and raised, but her beloved neighborhood seems to change every time she blinks. Condos are sprouting like weeds, FOR SALE signs are popping up overnight, and the neighbors she's known all her life are disappearing. To hold onto her community's past and present, Sydney channels her frustration into a walking tour and finds an unlikely and unwanted assistant in one of the new arrivals to the block--her neighbor Theo. But Sydney and Theo's deep dive into history quickly becomes a dizzying descent into paranoia and fear. Their neighbors may not have moved to the suburbs after all, and the push to revitalize the community may be more deadly than advertised. When does coincidence become conspiracy? Where do people go when gentrification pushes them out? Can Sydney and Theo trust each other--or themselves--long enough to find out before they too disappear?… (more)
Media reviews
User reviews
As a book about how gentrification harms long-established communities and as a history of how that has played out in Brooklyn, this novel is a success. There's also a rising sense of being powerless in the face of injustice that was very effective. As a thriller, the big reveal felt abrupt, although the violent Tarantino-style final scenes certainly made an impact.
Sydney Green, a black woman, grew up in the same house in Brooklyn she is currently living in. She has known the neighbors for years. But some of her neighbors start to move, without telling anyone. And white people move
The very beginning of this book did not capture me, and I spent the prologue thinking, “What am I reading?” But then a few chapters in, I got it. This is a powerful book, especially in these times, with racially driven events.
This book made me sad, mad and scared. The author did a great job in inspiring all emotions. I enjoyed learning the history of Brooklyn, things that I was never taught. The thriller part was definitely in the last few chapters, but it didn’t feel like it was thrown together. It was well planned out.
Sydney Green has spent most of her life in the same Brooklyn neighborhood. But due to gentrification so many of her long-time neighbors have left and the new people moving in have drastically changed the look and vibe of the neighborhood. Sydney wants to preserve the history by giving guided walking tours of the area. Theo, one of her new neighbors, offers to help Sydney with her research. As they dig for info, let's just say things get weird and perhaps they should proceed with caution. The story alternates between the perspectives of Sydney and Theo.
I read books in this genre all the time, and I really feel like the author brought something new to the table. To take a topic like gentrification and to build a story around it was a brilliant move in my opinion. This wasn't a typical mindless read as it was definitely thought provoking. And the reason you feel uneasy, tense, and even angry while reading is because it feels so darn realistic.
The pace unfortunately is very slow for so much of the story but then the ending feels rushed. It doesn't hit all high marks for specific things I like in a thriller but the depth the author brought to the story and Sydney really outshines everything.
Highly recommend giving this book a chance.
Thank you to William Morrow for sending me an advance copy! All thoughts expressed are my honest opinion.
Upset by the seeming erasure of the history of her Brooklyn neighborhood, Sydney sets out to curate a walking tour that will highlight the place she calls home past and present. Highlight the fight it has taken for her neighbors to hold onto their community. Along with her unwitting new neighbor Theo, as they begin to research, they'll discover a sinister layer to the gentrification of Sydney's beloved neighborhood. Is it all undue paranoia from the stress of seeing things change? The question still remains: where are her former neighbors going when they disappear?
I've been hearing about this book for months and I finally had to dive into it. I know it's a departure from Alyssa Cole's previous romance books. So fair warning, this is a mystery/thriller through and through.
It was also soooooo timely. The way that Alyssa Cole ties together history and the erasure of Black history in the name of gentrification and profit is done so well. I always feel like I'm constantly in a state of learning and this book definitely put things into perspectives that I had not fully considered before. Reading an ebook was particularly helpful because with every historical reference that Alyssa Cole brought up I was easily able to do a search from my tablet and get more context. It's accurate to say that I have been thinking about the overarching issues that this book brought up (outside of what is relevant to the story itself) since finishing. While this book may fall in the "fiction" category its overall message is seated in truth and facts.
As for the story itself. I really loved how Alyssa Cole slowly unfolds everything. Things start out a bit questionable - yes, new people are moving into the neighborhood, and all the same uncertainties come up in facing an unknown - and then it just begins to spiral - people are seemingly disappearing, and are replaced by families that seem rather Stepford on the surface.
Sydney is our main narrator. I think it's safe to say Sydney, at first, seems a little unreliable. It's majorly hinted at early on that things are not entirely as they seem for Sydney. She's still healing from a divorce. She's thwarting calls for her mother from debt collectors. Stress gives her sleepless nights which in turn give her anxiety and possible hallucinations. Whatever is, or isn't, happening in the neighborhood is just another layer of stress for Sydney. It's easy to see that she may be jumping at shadows. Regardless of everything, I liked Sydney from the start. As things start to boil over you begin to really root for her to come out on top because she's not really a woman given to irrationality or overreactions. She's a strong women who despite what is happening on a personal level, she wants to fight for her home. The problem is not knowing who she can trust.
Counter to Sydney's point of view we have Theo who is one of the new neighbors. Theo represents, to say it bluntly, the kind of stereotypical white male. He doesn't realize his privilege regardless that he himself doesn't come from affluent background, he's still able to move more easily through society. When he and Sydney begin to work together on her tour of the neighborhood, his eyes begin to open and he sees that there's a definite bias when it comes to what gets written in the history books. Theo, too, is a bit of a wild card. By his own admission he has secrets. Secrets that he really has no intention of revealing. I found it a bit more difficult to warm up to his character probably because Sydney herself keeps questioning his motives. I understand that this tactic was used as a way to up the suspense and to make Sydney's isolation more deftly felt, but it's one aspect of the story that I wish had figured itself out a little bit sooner because the back and forth was getting a bit too repetitive.
I don't really want to say much more because I don't want to ruin anything. Suffice it to say, it is a timely story that's thrilling and suspenseful. It'll cause you to take a good look at the community in which you live and the history of the place you call home.
Sydney Green has come back to her
The research gives Cole a platform to discuss the long and ugly history of systematically depriving Black citizens of property rights – a cycle which seems to be repeating itself as many of Brooklyn’s brownstones pass from multi-family apartments for middle-class Black families to prime targets for renovation and flipping by the new white owners.
Then things get muddled as the story shifts to curious and disturbing disappearances of many of the residents. Friends disappear without a trace, a young man is arrested on what appears to be a trumped-up charge, a neighborhood storekeeper is replaced after unspecified problems with Immigration. Cole does a good job of creating a menacing atmosphere here, but her main characters – Sydney and Theo – are so unlikable that it’s hard for the reader to care about them.
Things drag on for the middle third of the book as our two unreliable narrators move into and out of a prickly relationship, and then the last fifty or so pages turns to a video-game level of violence and a conspiracy theory to end all conspiracy theories, only to be overcome by an even less-likely counter-conspiracy.
It’s too bad Cole didn’t narrow the focus a bit and keep the very real problems of gentrification on the front burner, instead of conjuring up Illuminati-style plots.
The protagonist is Sydney who is trying to save her mother's home from being sold as many of her neighbors have sold their homes and left the area. She notices all the changes that have taken place and starts to investigate what's happening. She becomes friends with a neighbor, Theo, who she meets on a walking tour of the neighborhood. We soon learn that there is a system regarding housing developments that harms and afflicts minority residents. This was very disturbing to me. There was a lot of gun and racial violence during the last third of the book, also very disturbing.
There was a secondary plot with a romance between Sydney and Theo which wasn't necessary to the plot. They could have been friends so we wouldn't have had to experience the open door sex scene between them. But what was really uncomfortable to me was the use of the "F" word. It was used 4 times on the first, short, page; actually used 94 times throughout the novel, according to Kindle's count.
If I didn't know much about gentrification, I surely do now. I felt this was a good learning experience but there was not much enjoyment due to the violence and language.
This thriller about gentrification in a Brooklyn neighborhood was a fascinating combination of history, all-too-believable current-day racist
Gentrification has come to Sydney's Brooklyn neighbourhood. Neighbours that have been in their homes for forty years are selling up and
Right off the bat, I have to say how disgusted I was with the new white people moving in this predominantly Black neighbourhood. Their comments and actions are so disgusting - and yet sadly are true. A timely take on race and privilege. So that's one bit of this book. But there's also some romance - also well done. Cole's previous books have been romance reads, so they come off well. History plays a part also, with details of Brooklyn and New York past. And last but certainly not least - the thriller part. Completely unexpected! There was no way to predict this plotline at all. And I'm not going to spoil it for you at all. Things do end on a bit of a rushed note, but it was hard to stop flipping pages at the end.
A great read on so many levels. Cole is a talented wordsmith, weaving together many threads.
Sydney has recently moved back to Brooklyn from Seattle after her divorce and is living at her mother’s house. Her mother is very ill, and Sydney has a
Meanwhile, Kim and Theo move into the neighborhood, along with other white families, pushing out the black owners. Stores are disappearing, and homeowners seem to go missing as well. There is a new hospital being built in the community, although the residents have opposed it.
All of these changes and worry over her mother are weighing heavily on Sydney. Although she doesn’t want to, she finds herself doing some research on the history of the neighborhood and is using Theo to help with her research. What they uncover is more sinister than you can imagine.
The novel builds and builds until reaching a tense conclusion.
I enjoyed the novel up until the last few chapters which I felt were an unlikely. outcome, just not all together believable. Other than that, I did enjoy the book.
Thanks to The Book Club Girls, Harper Collins, and NetGalley for the ARC. Opinions are my own.
#WhenNoOneIsWatching #NetGalley
#AlyssaCole
The book is billed as a thriller, but most of the book spends time leading up to that part that one would call a thriller. For about 3/4ths of the book, the topic really revolves around corruption, racism and romantic
For most of the book, the reader will wonder where the thriller part is, as the residents are preoccupied with day-to-day events, survival, planning, sparring and spatting with each other. As residents seem to disappear, as property changes hands, often unfairly, the atmosphere in the neighborhood begins to grow tense. The residents are powerless against the forces that are blossoming around them, changing their world, they cannot get answers to their questions which are dismissed as not credible or worthy of answers. Sometimes the answers, when provided, are insulting. The fears and questions the residents have raised are dismissed as conspiracy theories, as they have been, for years. How the residents are taken advantage of, mocked and injured, in the effort to remove them from their homes, and in the broader world, as well, is the main thrust of the book. As the characters face their racial differences, the reader witnesses the formation of new bonds, even as others are broken. A commonality is sometimes discovered which finally offers some hopefulness.
Often, the two main characters spar with each other. Theo tries ineffectively to please Sydney, who is black, and Sydney who is conditioned to resent and fear Theo because he is white, constantly taunts him. Sydney, is a responsible citizen, however, a teacher who struggles, but tries to do the right thing. Theo on the other hand, has a GED, is out of work, and has no compunction about committing crimes to satisfy his needs. On the surface, he seems genuine, but he has spent his life taking advantage of others, in contrast with Sydney who lives in a neighborhood where people help each other. Both Theo and Sydney like their neighborhood, however, although Theo’s girlfriend Kim wants to change it so that her elitist friends and business associates can take over and then force out those who have been residents for years. Where do they expect them to go? Theo and Sidney first meet when they go on the same walking tour of their black neighborhood. Sydney insists on asking several disruptive questions, causing the very rude tour guide to suggest that she start her own tour business. Encouraged by her mom, Sydney attempts to do just that. Soon, as Kim and Theo move into their new house, and they become neighbors of Sydney, resentment grows between the two women.
Soon Theo and Kim's relationship withers. They both have different world views. Will that be the catalyst for a new relationship to form, because both Sydney and Theo are dumped by their significant others? Will they cross the color line?When there is a meeting of the neighborhood residents to plan for their annual Gifford Place event, Theo attends, but Kim does not. He becomes better acquainted with Sydney who really treats him rudely and mocks him. When he offers to help her with her research for her neighborhood tour business, she agrees, but she insists she won’t pay him, but he should consider his help, as reparations.
As the forces at work seem to influence some of the homeowners in the neighborhood to sell their places, they seem to leave without saying goodbye. No one hears from them again. Where are they going? Is this real estate market on the up and up? Is it the elitists forcing out the poorer homeowners so they can live in luxury without any regard for those they displace? At the same time, as property is changing hands, there is also a medical research lab being built in an old hospital facility nearby. Is something nefarious going on there too?
Eventually, after many trials and tribulations, after Sydney jumps to false conclusions and Theo reveals more about himself, they become good friends, helping each other, trusting each other, regardless of racial issues. As they both notice odd things going on in the neighborhood and their curiosity and fear are piqued, the action develops. In the end, will they be able to stop the forces of evil at work? In the end, will they bring about positive change? Is their retribution or resolution of the many issues raised? Not all questions will be answered.
The dialogue is often crude and too sexual, creating a negative stereotype, unnecessarily, and making the book a difficult read. On the positive side, the narrators do a very good job creating their characters.
The saving grace was the history that was brought up throughout the book. Although I'm not American, I am half-black so I found it really interesting albeit very disturbing.