The Great Wherever by Shannon Sanders
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The Great Wherever by Shannon Sanders

Historical fiction

The Great Wherever

Debut

by Shannon Sanders

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Quick take

This sprawling historical saga captures the generational reverberations of a Black family’s reckoning with inheritance.

Good to know

  • Illustrated icon, Multiple_Viewpoints

    Multiple viewpoints

  • Illustrated icon, Family_Drama

    Family drama

  • Illustrated icon, Nonlinear_Timeline

    Nonlinear timeline

  • Illustrated icon, Magical

    Magical

Synopsis

At thirty-two, Aubrey Lamb is stumbling through adulthood. An underpaid gig worker in Washington, D.C., she’s grieving the end of a serious relationship and the recent loss of her father. When Aubrey learns she has inherited his stake in a sizable Tennessee farm she sees an opportunity to get out of the city―and to erase a mounting pile of debt.

Watching her arrival with great interest are four ghosts―Aubrey’s ancestors, who’ve staked their own claims to the farm and who never hesitate to pass judgment on the mistakes made by the living, whether romantic, financial, or sartorial. As Aubrey reconnects with her living family, another story unfolds in parallel: the history of the land, beginning with its purchase by Thomas, Aubrey’s great-grandfather and one of the first Black landowners in his community. Though Thomas hopes to give his children a homestead on which they could flourish, the land proves to be a burdensome inheritance. Over the years, it turns the Lambs against one another, culminating in a catastrophic tragedy that splinters the family and echoes through the decades.

Now, as the clock ticks on a potential sale of the farm, the ghosts fear expulsion from the home they’ve made, and Aubrey must weigh the hopes and burdens of her forebears with the very real needs of her future.

Content warning

This book contains mentions of miscarriage, abortion, and the death of a child.

Read a sample

Get an early look from the first pages of The Great Wherever.

The Great Wherever

Okay, but the afterlife? It’s nothing like it looks in the movies. It’s a lot more forgiving than that, for which I guess I’m thankful. I died early on a Saturday morning wearing an old pair of H&M tights under an oversize Hot Chelle Rae T-­shirt I had jury-rigged into a minidress. I was wearing the dress ironically—I wasn’t even a little bit into HCR; my tastes then ran moodier and boozier: Kendrick Lamar, Lana Del Rey—but if I were to get the Hollywood treatment, I’d be stuck in that minidress for all eternity. Badly sewn hem and all.

Luckily, it doesn’t work that way. My eternal spirit isn’t trapped in the wrong clothes: not the slashed-up tee I died in nor the ugly frock my mother picked out for my wake, with its churchy neckline and repulsive peony print. And although I died in an ugly way, I don’t look ugly. I look beautiful, more beautiful than I ever felt alive, though I was beautiful then, too.

Almost no one ever gets a good look at me now, but if they did, they’d see me in my favorite going-out dress from that year, the one I wore all the time before my old college roommate swiped it from me. BCBG, black Lycra with a tummy panel and a cutout just at the center of my rib cage. A little diamond of teasing brown skin placed just so, hints of underboob on either side. Exfoliated, moisturized, hair freshly relaxed. Lips plumped up with this gloss I liked at the time that had a little bit of a chocolaty flavor. One tiny little tube cost twenty-four dollars, a splurge, and if we’d just had a fight, I could sometimes get my boyfriend to buy it for me. I was proud of that then, but I’ve since realized it’s nothing special.

Mostly the look goes to waste, though. Around here, it’s generally the same tired old audience. A few relatives of mine from various generations who couldn’t care less about my overpriced lip gloss. Who, like me, got chopped from the family tree before their branches could flower. Who died on the receiving end of a particular unfulfilled promise—which, by the way, is the best we can figure as to why we’re here. At the heart of all of this is a family farm, a share of which was supposed to pass to each of us but didn’t because we all died cruelly and too soon. The farm is the only thing that connects us four, aside from our deep Cupid’s bows and our insatiable love of gossip.

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Why we chose it...


We love a novel that starts with a family tree—by the end of this book, the characters truly came to life and the Lambs’ story felt as unforgettable as the best kind of family lore.


The story’s central themes of inheritance and legacy made for thought-provoking reflection about the intangible attributes we pass on and how to process generational baggage while still paying homage to our past.


We’d never read a historical fiction novel told from the POV of a deceased cousin before…yet this ghostly narration added a fresh, speculative, and downright gossipy edge to the story.

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View all
Broken Country
The Women
Six Days in Bombay
The Lion Women of Tehran
Shelterwood
A Thousand Times Before
Spitting Gold
The Seventh Veil of Salome
The Mayor of Maxwell Street
The Great Divide
The Storm We Made
The Disappearance of Astrid Bricard
Lessons in Chemistry
The Frozen River
What We Kept to Ourselves
The Last Russian Doll
The First Ladies
The House Is On Fire
Malibu Rising
The Book of Longings
The Final Revival of Opal & Nev
The Nightingale
Daisy Jones & The Six
The Lincoln Highway
The Secret Book of Flora Lea
Did You Hear About Kitty Karr?
Peach Blossom Spring
Hang the Moon
Booth
The Good Left Undone
The Perishing
The Family
Things We Lost to the Water
The Spectacular
Still Life
Send for Me
The Magnolia Palace
China Room
Atomic Love
The Vanishing Half
The Four Winds
Libertie
The Great Believers
The Clockmaker's Daughter
A Gentleman in Moscow
The Great Alone
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo
The Heart’s Invisible Furies
Circling the Sun
Don't Cry for Me
The Christie Affair
Bloomsbury Girls
The Wedding Dress Sewing Circle
Bronze Drum
Isaac’s Song
The Stolen Queen
Buckeye
Skylark
The Great Wherever