cover image Troubled Waters

Troubled Waters

Mary Annaïse Heglar. Harper Muse, $17.99 trade paper (304p) ISBN 978-1-4002-4811-7

Journalist Heglar’s spirited debut novel layers a story of climate change activism in 2014 Mississippi with a parallel narrative of the 1950s civil rights movement. Corrine, a 20-year-old Oberlin undergrad from historic Port Gibson, Miss., is unnerved by scientists’ predictions of global catastrophe due to climate change. After Corrine’s older brother, Cameron, dies in an accident aboard an oil tanker on the Mississippi River, she grows disenchanted with campus climate demonstrations and wishes she could do something meaningful to honor his memory. A direct action would risk upsetting her grandmother, Cora, who’s not only grieving her grandson’s death but also nursing wounds from her girlhood, when she was at the center of protests over the integration of the Nashville Public School System. When Cora learns Corrine is plotting to trespass on a bridge and mount a protest banner, memories of death threats, school bombings, and hostile classmates come flooding back. Though the characters are underdeveloped, Heglar writes intriguingly of the long trail of injustice faced by subsequent generations of Americans. Readers of message-driven fiction will appreciate this. (May)