People of Means by Nancy Johnson

When a writer has a writer friend who has climbed the mountain and published TWO amazing novels with New York publishing companies, WOW.
For me, that friend is Nancy Johnson, author of THE KINDEST LIE, a Book of the Month Club selection and a Target Book Club Pick…and recently, PEOPLE OF MEANS, a William Morrow novel.
I met Nancy at a Writing Retreat sponsored by Women’s Fiction Writers Association, or as it came to be known, WFWA. When we realized we were both Chicagoans, a bond formed. When her first novel was published, I immediately purchased a copy and wrote a review. Breaking into New York publishing is no easy task. Nancy’s second book meant some changes…a different publishing company for one. But like all writers, when we believe in our work…we do not give up.
This novel is a close-up history of characters caught in the battle for civil rights.
Johnson writes: One little Black girl, who had to be no more than five years old, with pigtails and barrettes on the ends of her hair, carried a sign almost as big as she was. It read: END RACISM SO I CAN GROW UP. TV and newspaper photographers crouched on the ground in front of her to capture what had made so many people stop and take notice. The girl posed, enjoying the attention.
Nancy Johnson and I were both born and raised in Chicago, her novel addressing movements and problems that she experienced and I did not.
One of the characters in PEOPLE of MEANS explains: “I’ll tell you what it’s like. I’m a single mother. It’s just the two of us, and Falana has no where to play, no where that’s safe to run around and be a child. She climbs in bed with me when gunshots go off. She takes cold showers at night because we don’t have hot water. The city has never done anything about that.”
This is Johnson using her characters to relate how things were, to underline and make history personal and human. Which is what we readers NEED, so that we can fully understand the struggle Black people endured in this country for decades.
In the novel a White man threatens, “They string y’all up on trees here in Tennessee and bring the whole family out to watch.” This, and then: “Travis Lee slid one finger covered in black grease down the front of Gerald’s freshly laundered white shirt.”
Soon after Johnson writes: Gerald opened and closed his hands, inhaling deeply. He was still alive, but the man had sapped his spirit, making him feel low like some creature that crawled underneath your shoe. Gerald turned his anger inward. Why had he gotten ahead of himself, letting his hopes rise higher than his station in this world? Gerald stood next to his dead car, the exhaust from Travis Lee’s station wagon covering him in gray haze.
YES, Nancy Johnson knows how to end a chapter, leave us in a world of sadness and anger. Yes, she writes of those things in the past…but we all know that in many places this evil, this prejudice still exists. It should make every person wake up and fight for equality for everyone of us.
Years ago, I benefitted from a Pullman Scholarship to help pay for my college degree. Johnson’s character Darius says: “As long as Pullman porters have been transporting money for the MOVEMENT, we’ve never had reports of any of them stealing. It’s hard to explain, but ones who do it treat this as a scared duty, an honor. Those men don’t even tell their wives about this.”
Yes, this is history, this is Johnson writing about Chicago, about prejudice, about the struggle to live a good life. Johnson’s skill is having characters from the past COME ALIVE for us on the page. People of means is history, struggle punctuated with LOVE, STRENGTH and surprising conclusions. Nancy Johnson’s latest novel is a MUST READ.








