Five men in Ward's life die in the space of four years. All are Black men between the ages of 19–32, including her brother, Joshua, killed by a white drunk driver. Though seemingly unconnected, Ward takes her readers on a journey—personal, familial and communal—showing how they were in reality bonded by identity and place, and how race, poverty, and gender predetermined the outcome of their lives. Ward was born in
California when her mother was 18 and her father 20. She was born premature and was a sickly child, not expected to survive. Her family later moves to Mississippi, where her parents are from. Ward describes growing up in the poor, small towns of
DeLisle and
Pass Christian, where her family, like the community around them, experiences a lack of opportunities and an abundance of violence, including from the police, leading many to sink into abuse of drugs and alcohol. She also recounts how in her family, her mother raised her children on her own due to infidelity and abandonment by her husband. Ward contrasts their lives, choices, and experiences, and her own life zig-zagging between them: "What it meant to be a woman: working, dour, full of worry. What it meant to be a man: resentful, angry, wanting life to be everything but what it was." Ward learns at an early age how girls are treated differently than boys when she gets into trouble for doing things her cousins do freely (smoking), and also seeing how her father gets to spend the family money on a motorcycle and then ride away on it, while her mother works extra hard to put food on the table. She also learns that for her male relatives, being Black is dangerous in America, as her mother and grandmother worry about them being arrested or experiencing violence. As her mother works long hours as a maid, Ward is expected to care for her younger siblings and the household. She has
depression. At school, she experiences bullying. Her mother's rich, white employer offers to pay Ward's tuition for private school. There, however, she must deal with being the only Black girl in a white environment. Attending the private school, she experiences racism and rejection. Ward's father is now living in
New Orleans. When Ward and her siblings visit, their mother sends them with groceries because she doesn't trust him to
feed the children. Her brother Joshua moves in with him, and Ward later learns that he is dealing crack to help his father pay bills. Ward heads out of state for university, to
Stanford, becoming the first member of her family to attend college. Her grief for the loss of her brother never leaves her, but she knows it will change over time. Ward closes with her memory of riding in a car with Joshua, declaring, "I don't ride like that anymore", and imagining that when her life is over, Joshua will ride up and ask her to go for one more ride. The men "reaped" in the book, narrated in reverse of the order in which they died: •
Roger: Ward meets Roger through her sister Charine. Roger dies from a heart attack brought on by a combination of
cocaine and pills. •
Demond: Ward meets Demond through her sister Nerissa. Unlike most of the boys she knows, he grew up in stable home with both parents. After testifying in court against a murderer and a drug dealer, Demond is shot in his front yard coming home from work one night. •
C.J.: Ward's cousin. An athletic young man, loyal and protective but who also exhibits erratic behavior and does drugs. He is killed when his car is hit by a train at a crossing with broken signal lights. •
Ronald: A camper at a camp where Ward is a counselor. As an adult, Ronald is seemingly happy and confident, but as it turns out, he is severely depressed and struggles with addiction. Ronald dies by
suicide. •
Joshua: Ward's brother and the first of the men to die, shortly after Ward completes her
master's degree. Joshua is hit by a drunk driver, a white man who is let off with a token sentence. == Reception ==