Taylor
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
Taylor Johnson was a twenty-six-year-old EMT in Laurelton, Kentucky. She spent her life answering doors — walking into strangers' emergencies, treating their wounds, bringing them back from the edge. On a night in March, plainclothes officers executed a no-knock warrant on her apartment. They were looking for a man who hadn't lived there in months. They fired thirty-two rounds. Taylor was hit six times in her own hallway.
No officer was charged with her death. One was charged with wanton endangerment — for the bullets that missed her and hit a neighbor's wall.
The city settled. The department restructured. The officers scattered.
But Taylor answered the door that night. And now she's answering back.
She can't speak — not yet. But she can press. She can shift the temperature in a room. She can make a dead phone play a song at 3:14 AM. She can read the warrant that killed her and find the lie inside it. She can sit with the officers who fired and wait — with the patient, clinical precision of a woman trained to assess damage before she treats it — for them to feel the weight of what they did.
Each intervention costs her something she can never get back: a memory, a sensation, a fragment of the woman she was. The smell of her boyfriend's cologne. The sound of her grandmother's voice. The taste of her mother's cooking. She is spending herself to expose a system that measured doors instead of people — and she is running out of what made her human.
TAYLOR is a novel about a woman who refused to be erased. About a system that operates exactly as designed. About the distance between a warrant and a life, between a metric and a person, between a door that opens and a woman who won't let it close until every question it asked has been answered.
For readers of Toni Morrison, Victor LaValle, and Jordan Peele.