The Seven Days
A Novel
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- $10.99
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
The prequel to the critically acclaimed Antebellum tells the powerful story of what happens when a man in modern society is possessed with the spirits of dead slaves.
Nathan Freeman and Xavier Turner are two African American men leading two very different lives. One is a failed academic with a family in turmoil, while the other is an ex-special forces soldier turned family man. They have never met, but they share a bloodline that traces back to African royalty. This bloodline also makes them susceptible to a condition called The Seven Days, allowing them to be possessed by the spirits of their ancestors who died in a rage—and the spirits do just that.
Through a series of unfortunate events, both men manage to lose everything, creating the circumstances needed for the Seven Days to take effect. One of them is strong enough to fight the possession, while the other falls victim to it, and the chaos that ensues threatens to engulf them both.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this uneven follow-up to 2012's Antebellum, Thomas takes on another slave-reincarnation tale, loosely related to his first. After introducing slave Toby and his seemingly superhuman strength in the face of graphic and inhumane torture in the 19th century, the author returns to the 21st century (unlike Antebellum, which toggled between the centuries, this novel remains primarily in the present) and puts two new players on the stage: Xavier Turner, ex-CIA and ex-Special Forces, and Nathan Freeman, a 50-something academic and author. Although they've never met, Xavier and Nathan share a bloodline that reaches back to African royalty and also leaves them vulnerable to possession by their slave forebears who are avenging the atrocities of their servitude. "Somethin' 'bout having king's blood in yo' veins that don't allow you to bow down, even to white folks," Nathan explains to his son of the "doole," or Seven Days, possession curse. While Thomas creates compelling characters, the plot takes a sharp turn into the absurd with the possession angle, whereby seemingly normal men suddenly gain the strength of a dozen and are able to decimate entire crowds.