cover image 54 Miles

54 Miles

Leonard Pitts Jr. Agate, $19.95 trade paper (344p) ISBN 978-1-57284-337-0

Pitts (The Last Thing You Surrender) returns with the page-turning story of a family caught up in the turmoil of the 1960s civil rights movement. Adam Simon, a college student from New York City, arrives in Selma, Ala., to participate in the Selma to Montgomery march unbeknownst to his parents, Thelma, a Black attorney, and George, a white minister. After Adam is badly beaten by state troopers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, he winds up in the hospital and out of touch with his parents. His mother enlists her brother, Luther Hayes, with whom she witnessed their parents’ lynching 40 years earlier, to find him. When Luther unexpectedly encounters the man responsible for their parents’ killings, who happens to be residing in the same senior home as George’s father, he falls off the wagon, and his drunken antics bring more trouble to the family. The novel’s strength lies in Pitts’s atmospheric rendering of 1965 Alabama replete with scenes of Martin Luther King and other civil rights leaders marching with a “great procession” past the “shy, solemn” gaze of children and the “flinty” young Black men who show up to support them. Historical fiction fans ought to snatch this up. (July)