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Runner

A Novel

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Runner

By: Ashton Lattimore
Narrated by: A'rese Emokpae
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“Buckle up, readers! Ashton Lattimore’s gripping Prohibition-era tale of two lady rumrunners who risk everything to rescue their families and their futures is a twisting, turning, thrill ride of a book.”—Marie Bostwick, New York Times bestselling author of The Book Club for Troublesome Women

“A beautifully written, quintessential tale of family secrets, set against the backdrop of prohibition and the rich history of a Black community on Martha’s Vineyard.”—Crystal Smith Paul, author of Did You Hear About Kitty Karr?

Martha’s Vineyard, 1923. The sea was the gift that kept on giving to Lena Jameson’s father, Earl, a fisherman turned successful rumrunner who built up a small fortune smuggling liquor from offshore ships to thirsty customers back on the island. But when Earl and his entire crew are lost in a mysterious shipwreck that some whisper was no accident, his loved ones are left reeling and penniless—and Lena, who’d been on the cusp of a college career in Boston, sees her future slipping away.

Desperate to save her family as well as her own hopes of escaping their small town, Lena decides to take over Earl’s rum-running business. For a crew, she ropes in Walter, her roguish big brother who leans too hard on the bottle; Sam, her steadfast local boyfriend who wants to keep her tethered to shore; and Dee, a glamorous young woman from Boston who is summering in the Vineyard and offers Lena a glimpse of the future that she still wants for herself—and who’s keeping her own explosive secret.

The foursome embarks on a journey from the quaint, colorful streets of Oak Bluffs through gangland Boston to the jazz-filled clubs of Harlem during its Renaissance, all in search of quick money—and the truth about the shipwreck. But as buried secrets rise to the surface and the temptations of the glittering underworld pull Lena in deeper, everything she’s fought to protect soon hangs in the balance: her heart, her family, and her place in a world that’s quick to condemn women who dare to want more.
20th Century African American Historical Fiction Women's Fiction
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Critic reviews

“Buckle up, readers! Ashton Lattimore’s gripping Prohibition-era tale of two lady rumrunners who risk everything to rescue their families and their futures is a twisting, turning thrill ride of a book!”—Marie Bostwick, New York Times bestselling author of The Book Club for Troublesome Women

“Lattimore ably captures the high stakes of the rum-running trade during Prohibition and shows how the danger is magnified for a Black woman.”—Publishers Weekly

“Lattimore again brings tension to the forefront. . . . Historical fiction fans will be drawn to the major theme of young people gaining confidence set against the Prohibition era.”Booklist, starred review

“I loved Runner! It’s a quintessential tale of family secrets, set against the backdrop of Prohibition and the rich history of a Black community on Martha’s Vineyard.”—Crystal Smith Paul, author of Did You Hear About Kitty Karr?

“Lattimore has cemented her place as a bright new voice in historical fiction with her highly anticipated, intimate, and heartrending second novel. . . . Generational secrets come to light, trauma runs bone-deep, and rivals close in from every side, but Lattimore’s characters keep reaching toward a brighter future. Runner is a thrilling adventure that takes readers from the moon-lit shores of the Atlantic to the jazzy speakeasies of Boston and Harlem, while also challenging us all to consider the price we might pay for just one chance at the American Dream.”—Avery Cunningham, author of The Mayor of Maxwell Street
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