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Nyani Nkrumah on racism: ‘It’s so difficult to break these chains’

In her thought-provoking debut novel, Nyani Nkrumah takes a fresh look at the 1964 murder of three civil rights workers – James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner – by members of the Ku Klux Klan in Philadelphia, Mississippi, and the effect of these killings on people’s lives decades later. “Wade in the Water” explores these events through the unlikely friendship of young Ella, a smart and feisty African American girl, and a white woman, Katherine St. James, born in Philadelphia but now doing graduate research at Princeton University, who comes to live in Ella’s all-Black neighborhood in Ricksville, Mississippi, in 1982. Both hold tight to their secrets. Neither is wholly who she appears to be. Ms. Nkrumah’s book raises intriguing questions not only about Black-white relationships but also issues of colorism within the Black community. She spoke recently with the Monitor about her lifelong interest in Mississippi and how this curiosity sparked the idea for her novel. 

Why did you choose Mississippi as the setting for your story? 

I chose it, first, for its history, the sometimes violent interactions between Blacks and whites. But I’ve always been fascinated by Mississippi. Everything about it. Maybe this had something to do with the word itself, with the rhythm of it. The repetitive spelling. I was attracted by this from the time I was a young girl. But when I decided to look at the intersection of race and society and to what extent our past influences our future and who we are, and the roots of the legacy of racism and colorism … Mississippi seemed like the perfect backdrop.

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