One of our recommended books is The Last Dreamwalker by Rita Woods

THE LAST DREAMWALKER


From Hurston/Wright Legacy Award-winning author Rita Woods, The Last Dreamwalker tells the story of two women, separated by nearly two centuries yet inextricably linked by the Gullah-Geechee Islands off the coast of South Carolina—and their connection to a mysterious and extraordinary gift passed from generation to generation.

In the wake of her mother’s passing, Layla Hurley unexpectedly reconnects with her mother’s sisters, women she hasn’t been allowed to speak to, or of, in years.

Her aunts reveal to Layla that a Gullah-Geechee island off the shore of South Carolina now belongs to her. As Layla digs deeper into her mother’s past and the mysterious island’s history,

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From Hurston/Wright Legacy Award-winning author Rita Woods, The Last Dreamwalker tells the story of two women, separated by nearly two centuries yet inextricably linked by the Gullah-Geechee Islands off the coast of South Carolina—and their connection to a mysterious and extraordinary gift passed from generation to generation.

In the wake of her mother’s passing, Layla Hurley unexpectedly reconnects with her mother’s sisters, women she hasn’t been allowed to speak to, or of, in years.

Her aunts reveal to Layla that a Gullah-Geechee island off the shore of South Carolina now belongs to her. As Layla digs deeper into her mother’s past and the mysterious island’s history, she discovers that the terrifying nightmares that have plagued her throughout her life and tainted her relationship with her mother and all of her family, is actually a power passed down through generations of her Gullah ancestors. She is a Dreamwalker, able to inhabit the dreams of others—and to manipulate them.

As Layla uncovers increasingly dark secrets about her family’s past, she finds herself thrust into the center of a potentially deadly, decades-old feud fought in the dark corridor of dreams.

The Last Dreamwalker is a gripping, contemporary read about power and agency; family and legacy; and the ways trauma, secrets, and magic take shape across generations.

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  • Forge Books
  • Hardcover
  • September 2022
  • 272 Pages
  • 9781250805614

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About Rita Woods

Rita Woods is the author of The Last DreamwalkerRITA WOODS was born and raised in Detroit, Michigan. She received a BS in Microbiology from Purdue University before graduating from Howard University College of Medicine. She completed her training at Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska, and currently serves as Medical Director of a Wellness Center that provides care for members of one of the largest Trade Unions in the nation.

Rita lives in suburban Chicago with her family, where she also serves as a Trustee on her local library board. She loves magic, books, history, coffee, and traveling, not necessarily in that order. She is the author of the award-winning novel, Remembrance.

Author Website

Praise

The Last Dreamwalker will pull you headlong into its perilous world, where three generations of women haunted by history take actions in dreams that can save or doom others in daylight. Like her dreamwalking characters, the talented Woods weaves unforgettable, inescapable magic. A triumph.”—Greer Macallister, bestselling author of The Magician’s Lie

“Deeply evocative and clings to you like the humid air of the South. It is a creepy, moving tale in which intergenerational trauma reaches out of dreams and makes the waking world a nightmare. I keep thinking about it.”—Mary Robinette Kowal, author of The Calculating Stars

“Vivid descriptions and well-developed characters.”Booklist

“Thoroughly entrancing and hauntingly mystical. Rita Woods has woven a deeply complex novel where dreams blur reality and old family secrets torment the waking world. Long after it’s finished The Last Dreamwalker will linger in your thoughts as you pull its threads apart to examine the vibrant textures a little more closely.”—Heather Webber, USA Today bestselling author of Midnight at the Blackbird Cafe

“Family life is the grounding for a compelling story of strange powers and old secrets.”–Kirkus Reviews

“A fascinating novel of a family heritage that is both gift and curse, of the struggle of once-enslaved mystics and their contemporary descendants to command their power, and to take their rightful place in the world. Dr. Woods displays a wonderfully sure hand with her prose, and a delightful mastery of dialect. I love this book both for its voice and its story of a painful history set right.”—Louisa Morgan, author of A Secret History of Witches

Discussion Questions

1. After her mother’s unexpected death, Layla learns that her mother Elinor has been withholding generational and historical secrets. How did you feel about Elinor’s decision to leave the past behind and start a new life?

2. Family legacy is a core theme of the novel. How did you respond to Layla’s unexpected inheritance? What would you have done in her situation?

3. The gift of dreamwalking is passed down to women in the family; the third daughter of a third daughter, until it transforms and is passed down to the sole daughter, as in the case of Layla. What do you believe is the significance of women holding this distinct power? How would you use this gift, if you inherited it?

4. How were you affected by the novel’s alternating timeline, with chapters told from the point-of-view of Layla as well as her Gullah ancestor Gemma? What are the similarities and differences between the two women?

5. The Aunts, Jayne and Therese, become mother figures to Layla. What do you see as their role in The Last Dreamwalker?

6. What was your first impression of Layla’s estranged cousin Charlotte? How did your reaction to Charlotte change over the course of the novel?

7. Layla’s relationship with her two older brothers strengthens as family secrets unfold. How did their close- knit relationship affect you? What was you reaction to Layla’s evolving friendship with Viktor?

8. Place plays an important role in The Last Dreamwalker. We come to find out that the inheritance is connected to the land, and Charlotte is extremely protective of her sense of place. “Charlotte defends Scotia and Scotia defends her…” as Aunt Therese explains on p. 212. Have you ever felt a strong connection to a place? How so?

9. Gemma’s daughter Lavender plays a key role in determining the family’s fate, and securing their land into perpetuity. How do you imagine Lavender felt at that moment? Brave? Proud? Scared? Nervous?

10. At the end of the novel, Layla ends up caring for her cousin Charlotte, despite ongoing tensions between the two of them. What did you make of that decision? Would you have done the same? Have you ever cared for a relative in your own personal life? How did it impact you?

11. The Aunts mention that Layla is the last dreamwalker. Why do you think that is? Discuss the themes that are woven into the novel’s title, The Last Dreamwalker.

12. Charlotte alternates between speaking English and Gullah. What did you learn about the Gullah people and their culture as you were reading the novel? How have they maintained their traditions?

Excerpt

Gemma

1861

Gemma’s master was dreaming of the war again. He did that more and more now, returning in sleep, night after night, to the same time, the same place.

It was as if as Rupert Everleigh’s life grew shorter, his dream world grew emptier. He dreamed of his wife, long dead, and Nell, his daughter, most likely so. He dreamed of his son, disowned, dissolute, lying drunk in yet another cat house. And of the expensive cigars and aged whiskey he’d enjoyed with the other rich, white planters in his big house in Savannah, back when his body was strong and the money seemingly endless. And of course, on many nights, he dreamed of the rice harvest here on Scotia Island.

But it was the war, always the war, that began and ended most of his nights. And she was there too, watching, waiting, walking inside those dreams with him, skirting the edges of the shadows cast by his memories.

An explosion like thunder shook the ground under her feet and Gemma looked up to see dark smoke drifting above a too-green hill, toward a too-blue sky.

War.

The buckras—the whites—they were always making a war about one thing or another, blowing each other to bits over this piece of water, that smidge of mountain top. They were making one now, out there, in the waking world. She’d heard the rumors the wind carried, the rumors that seeped up through the dark, rich soil. Heard that this war was different, that this war concerned them: the slaves that worked Master Everleigh’s rice. Heard that there was a buckra named Lincoln, up North ways—the master of all the buckras—who was saying that blacks might not be slaves no more.

Gemma pressed her lips into a tight line. That faraway war, that white master, Lincoln, had nothing to do with her. Tonight, she was searching for Rupert Everleigh in his dreams, walking the twisted wreckage of his memories. Tonight, she would try once again to grab hold of him there, bend him, shape him, take from him what she wanted.

There!

* * *

She’d found him.

He lay at the edge of a narrow mule track, alone, his belly pressed flat into the swampy earth, half-hidden between the gnarled roots of a black cypress tree. From a distance, she watched him cradle his rifle in the crook of his arm, take aim, then fire into a thick wall of mist and smoke. Flashes of red—uniforms, the vague shapes of men—appeared, then disappeared, as if no more than a trick of the eye. She watched her master rip the paper of an ammunition cartridge with his teeth and pour powder into the muzzle of his rifle before firing again.

She smelled the gunpowder, the blood. But the sharp bite of gunpowder was from the dark caverns of his memories, the blood, from the corpses of soldiers long dead and rotted into soil.

This war that haunted him night after night was from when he was young, from a half century past. From when his whole life spooled far out ahead of him, instead of far behind. This was his dream, and she was walking in it with him.

She waited. She could wait forever. In dreams, time was meaningless. The roar of cannon fire crashed over them, and Rupert Everleigh fired his rifle again and again at the ghosts of the long-dead British, near a place called New Orleans.

The instant he saw her, she knew.

His eyes went wide, and suddenly, he was no longer a young man, but bent and frail, his old man skin the color of rice water.

She approached him, taking her time. She was in no hurry. She had all the time in the world. Her master dropped his rifle and struggled to get to his feet, his arthritic hands clawing desperately at the gray trunk of the cypress for support. The cannons had gone silent and around them the world swirled, changed. The ground dried, grew sandy, the vegetation more sparse, the air taking on the salty smell of the sea. They were back on Scotia Island, back on the plantation where she’d spent every waking moment of her life.

He held up one twisted hand, as if to hold her back, and in the warm sunlight she saw that he was trembling.

“Stop,” he cried. “You are an abomination, a damned creature. You stop right there, you hear?”

Gemma’s lips pulled back from her teeth and she made a sound, half laugh, half snarl. This was his dream, but there was nothing he could do to make her leave it.

She was a Dreamwalker.

She could slip into the world of a sleeper and wander at her will, a spectator in the theater of the unconscious. Or, if she was of the mind to do so, she could twist those dreams, change their shape, change their meaning. And what she did as she meandered in and out of those dark nooks and crannies of the night world could even change the dreamer himself.

Tonight, and the night before, and the night before that, she was exactly of that mind. This dreamer—her master—had something she wanted, and she intended to use what she could do, what she had been born to, to make sure he gave it to her.