Reviews for Your plantation prom is not okay

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

High school senior Harriet Douglass lives on a former plantation in Louisiana. Westwood is an outlier in the area, not only because it is owned by Black people, but also because it’s not a bed-and-breakfast: Harriet and her parents moved to the former sugar cane plantation when she was 9 and restored it into a museum honoring the enslaved people who lived and worked there. Harriet loves being a tour guide teaching visitors the hard truth about Westwood, even when the weight of its tragic history takes an emotional toll on her. Since her mom’s death from cancer, Harriet has also had trouble regulating her emotions, and when her “rage monster” shows up, she blacks out and loses control. Her temper has led her to distance herself even from those closest to her, but when a White actor buys the plantation next door—turning it into a wedding venue—Harriet needs help from friends. First, a celebrity wedding is scheduled and then her prom is booked there. Harriet decides to use social media to fight back and spread the truth about plantations. McWilliams’ portrayal of grief is well written and appropriately nuanced; readers will feel angry and sad and will cheer for Harriet all at the same time. The book’s confrontation of the romanticization of plantations and present-day medical neglect of the Black community is not only important, but necessary. An emotional exploration of the continued impact America’s racist history has on contemporary society. (author’s note) (Fiction. 12-18) Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Publishers Weekly
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Plans to turn a plantation into a wedding venue force a Black teen to confront loss while fighting racism in this moving novel by McWilliams (Mirror Girls). Harriet Douglass is passionate about highlighting the legacy of Westwood, a museum in Louisiana focusing on enslaved people’s history, which her mother curated up until her death from cancer. When Harriet discovers that the Belle Grove plantation next door has been bought by white soap opera star Claudia Hartwell to host celebrity nuptials, Harriet determines to prevent it from becoming a party venue. Claudia’s daughter, Layla, a popular online influencer, shares in Harriet’s disappointment about her mother’s plans and—despite Harriet’s original mistrust and Layla’s initial microaggressions—the pair work together to “cancel Belle Grove,” developing genuine friendship along the way. Meanwhile, Harriet’s private struggles regulating strong emotions; managing romantic feelings for a childhood friend; and navigating her father’s grief are exacerbated by her school’s intention to host prom at Belle Grove. McWilliams pens a touching story about grief, compassion for one’s ancestors, and one teen’s pursuit of justice in this thoughtfully rendered telling, which interrogates the romanticization of Black pain and the pros and cons of social media activism. Ages 12–up. Agent: Michael Bourret, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret. (May)


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Harriet Douglass has always had a rage monster inside her, but since her mom died, her anger has exploded out of her. As a tour guide on the Louisiana plantation that her parents turned into an enslaved people's museum, she has a lot of reasons to be angry. When famous, white Claudia Hartwell buys the plantation next to theirs and announces her plans to turn it into a wedding venue for A-list stars, it flies in the face of everything Harriet and her historian father have worked for. Harriet expects Claudia's daughter, white influencer Layla Hartwell, to be just as bad, but she actually seems like a potential ally. Layla has a plan to take her mother down, but Harriet's both afraid to trust her and afraid that if she puts herself out there, she'll become another angry Black girl stereotype. At times, this is a very painful read; McWilliams doesn't shy away from the harsh realities of plantation history, nor the ways in which contemporary culture desecrates that history. Neither does she back away from the impact that living alongside this history has had on Harriet, who often can't tell friend from foe and whose anger is nuanced, complex, and painful. Still, this is a well-rounded story, well characterized with snappy dialogue and moments of levity and romance that ease its harder moments. Recommended for all collections.


Horn Book
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Seventeen-year-old Harriet Douglass and her father live on modern-day Westwood Plantation, a Louisiana sugar plantation where enslaved Africans once lived, which is now one of the few plantation museums run by Black people. Since her mother's death from cancer, Harriet runs tours with her historian father that keep the legacy of those who were captive on the land alive. But when new owners take over the plantation next door, Harriet is appalled to find out that they plan to turn it into a wedding venue. Even worse, her high school decides to host the prom there as well. Harriet campaigns via social media against the erasure and commodifying of the enslaved. Though burdened with grief over her mother's death and righteous anger for the people whose memories she keeps alive through the museum, Harriet is a full, well-rounded character and an often amusing narrator. Themes of community, grief, mental health, activism, allyship, and racism are explored in the pursuit of reconciling and healing a difficult history. (c) Copyright 2024. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


School Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Gr 8 Up—A white soap opera star purchases a Louisiana planation with plans to turn it into an event venue, spurring a neighboring Black teen out of her grief shell and into righteous indignation and action. Harriet Douglass is heading into senior year and reeling from her mother's death from cancer. She lives with her depressed father, a historian, and busies herself working at her family's museum, which honors and centers the narratives of the enslaved. Though she's been working on grounding techniques and coping skills through talk therapy to help with her complex PTSD, Harriet's anger and sadness overwhelm her, sometimes giving her amnesiac events fueled by what she thinks of as her "rage monster." The plantation next door becoming a place to hold weddings and proms (where guests can enjoy the romanticized "antebellum aesthetic") is the last straw. Harriet teams up with Layla, an influencer and neighboring soap star Claudia's rather fickle daughter, for sabotage through social media activism. Layla and Harriet, with the allyship of classmates and childhood-friend-turned-maybe-boyfriend, Dawn, hope to get Claudia and her plantation canceled. As she works with her community, Harriet realizes she's not nearly as alone as she has felt. Though secondary characters are not nearly as richly developed as the impassioned Harriet, this is a well-written, insightful, and emotional look at healing, stewardship, action, shame, and traumatic grief. VERDICT A powerful, unflinching look at the hard truths of the legacy of slavery, mental health issues, and the connection between medical neglect and racism.—Amanda MacGregor

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