It's 1967. Freedom is unfinished work.
Yote Mark is a runaway swamp shaman who carries the outlaw magic of enslaved fugitives. His traditions were shaped by flight, secrecy, and survival.
Kavita is a young woman formed by the teachings of Sister Jah, where love is practiced as discipline and community is treated as protection.
Hannibal is a feared member of the Myals, a Caribbean-born collective that values survival over mercy. When violence breaks out between them, it reveals a deeper truth that Black spiritual traditions are under threat.
When Cecil Prosperous, a preacher with vast power and little compassion, reshapes belief into obedience, descends on Oakland, Yote, Kavita, and Hannibal are forced into an uneasy alliance. They do not trust one another, but they understand what is at stake. To save their people, they must decide what community demands and what sacrifice can truly redeem.
Ayize Jama-Everett was born and raised in Harlem, New York. He holds a Master's in Clinical Psychology and a Master's in Divinity. He teaches religion and psychology at Starr King School for the Ministry when he's not working as a school therapist at the College Preparatory School. He is the author of three novels, The Liminal People, The Liminal War, and The Entropy of Bones, as well as the graphic novels, Box of Bones Books I and II and The Last Count of Monte Cristo. When not educating, studying, or beating himself up for not writing enough, he's usually enjoying aged rums and practicing his aim.