Sunday, April 5, 2026

REVIEW: Happy Land by Dolen Perkins-Valdez


Synopsis

In the hills of Appalachia, there once was a kingdom...

Nikki hasn't seen her grandmother in years. So when the elder calls out of the blue with an urgent request for Nikki to visit her in the hills of western North Carolina, Nikki hesitates for only a moment. After years of silence in her family due to a mysterious estrangement between her mother and grandmother, she's determined to learn the truth while she still can.

But instead of giving answers about the recent past, Mother Rita tells Nikki an incredible story of a kingdom on this very mountain, and of her great-great-great-grandmother Luella, who would become its queen. 

It sounds like the makings of a fairy tale-- royalty among a community of freedpeople. But the more Nikki learns about the Kingdom of the Happy Land and the lives of those who dwelled in the ruins she discovers in the woods, the more she realizes how much of her identity and her family's secrets are wrapped up in these hills. Because this land is their legacy, and it will be up to her to protect it before it, like so much else, is stolen away.

Inspired by true events, Happy Land is a transporting multigenerational novel about the stories that shape us and the dazzling courage it takes to dream.

Format 368 pages, Hardcover
Published April 8, 2025 by Berkley
ISBN 9780593337721 (ISBN10: 0593337727)


About the Author

Dolen Perkins-Valdez is the New York Times bestselling author of Wench (2010), Balm (2015), Take My Hand (2022), and most recently Happy Land (2025). Take My Hand was named a Most Anticipated Book of 2022 by Newsweek, San Francisco Chronicle, Essence, NBC News, and elsewhere. The novel was a finalist for a Goodreads Choice Award and named a Top 20 Book of the Year by the Editors at Amazon.  It was awarded the 2023 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literary Work-Fiction and the 2023 BCALA Award for Fiction. The audiobook version of Take My Hand was named a Best of 2022 by Audible. Happy Land appeared on many "Most Anticipated" lists for 2025, including People, Elle, Reader's Digest, Woman's World, and elsewhere.

The American Bar Association recently awarded Take My Hand its prestigious Silver Gavel Award which recognizes an "outstanding work that fosters the American public's understanding of law and the legal system."

In 2011, Wench was a finalist for two NAACP Image Awards and the Hurston-Wright Legacy Award for fiction, and in 2017, HarperCollins released Wench as one of eight "Olive Titles," limited edition modern classics that included books by Edward P. Jones, Louise Erdrich, and Zora Neale Hurston.

Dolen has established herself as a pre-eminent chronicler of American historical life.  In 2013, she wrote the introduction to a special edition of Solomon Northup's Twelve Years a Slave, published by Simon & Schuster, which became a New York Times bestseller. She followed that with an introduction to Elizabeth Keckly's Behind the Scenes, published in 2016, and the forthcoming 75th anniversary of George Orwell's 1984 which will be published by Penguin Random House in 2023.

Dolen is a three-time nominee for a United States Artists Fellowship and is currently Associate Professor in the Literature Department at American University and lives in Washington, DC with her family.

Learn more about the author


My Thoughts
Our Land

We should have a land of sun, 
Of gorgeous sun, 
And a land of fragrant water
Where the twilight is a soft bandanna handkerchief
Of rose and gold, 
And not this land
Where life is cold.

We should have a land of trees,
Of tall thick trees,
Bowed down with chattering parrots
Brilliant as the day,
And not this land where birds are gray.

Ah, we should have a land of joy,
Of love and joy and wine and song,
And not this land where joy is wrong.

-- Langston Hughes

The story of Happy Land is inspired by actual "intentional communities" formed by freed slaves who, after securing their freedom, faced violent persecution by the Ku Klux Klan. Told across a split timeline, the novel follows Luella and the Montgomery brothers in the 1800s alongside their modern-day descendants, who are now fighting to hold onto the land their ancestors built.

The story opens with present-day Nikki visiting her grandmother, Mother Rita, at her home in the North Carolina Blue Ridge Mountains. Approaching forty, Nikki barely knows the woman. Her own mother left the mountains long ago to build a life elsewhere and rarely brought Nikki back to visit. Now, summoned by her grandmother without explanation, Nikki answers the call hoping to uncover what drove a wedge between her mother and grandmother all those years ago. Instead of answers, Mother Rita offers her something else entirely — the story of their people, of a queen, and of the land over which she ruled.

"We was owned by a white man by the name of Bobo. To say that he did not kill us was to give him a compliment of sorts."

The dual timelines alternate between Nikki in the present and Luella in the past. We meet Luella at twenty, newly freed alongside her father and settled in a nearby town. She is sharp, loyal, and regal. Her father, a minister, has established a church among fellow freed slaves when the Montgomery brothers — William and Robert — join the congregation. As the Klan tightens its grip on South Carolina, the congregation agrees to follow William north into North Carolina, eventually finding a large plot of land to work and eventually buy in the Blue Ridge Mountains. There, they build more than a settlement. They build a kingdom.

"I'm saying we make this place a kingdom, just like back in Africa. I'm saying we need to claim our royal robes."

William, a visionary and storyteller, draws on the history and legacy of African rulers to inspire his people. He urges them to create something that reaches back to the old country — a reminder of who they were and who they still are. Together, they establish a community treasury, a governing committee, and a shared identity. The people choose William as their king, and William chooses Luella as his queen. The Kingdom of Happy Land grows, prospers, and endures — through decades of love and joy, hardship and loss.

"...But one thing we always knew was that we lived a life in that other land across the ocean before we was brought here in the dark of ships and worked to death. So we made something here on this mountain, something to remind us of who we used to be before they tried to kill us."

In the present, their descendants are fighting to hold on to the very land that fed, sheltered, and shaped their ancestors. As that battle unfolds, Nikki deepens her bond with Mother Rita and works to heal the long fracture between her grandmother and mother — all while coming to understand that she is the great-great-great-granddaughter of a queen.

Five words: Inspiring, heartfelt, rooted, resonant, ancestral

Buy Now:
Purchase through the author's website

My final word: I loved this book! The author has a remarkable gift for humanizing her characters — laying them bare, rendering them complicated, and refusing to reduce anyone to simply "good" or "bad." The way she threads the past into the present is both graceful and powerful, reminding us that we are products of those who came before us and that our histories are not so distant as we might think. Luella was born to be a queen, and Mother Rita is her great-grandchild through and through.
"But what it mean to be a woman, Ma?"

"It mean when it come time to make a decision, you step right up to it. It mean when life send you hardship, you go to bed and get up the next morning to face it."

"And if I don't?"

"Then you leave it to God."
Trigger Warnings:
Abuse, miscarriage, domestic violence, slavery







My Rating:


 


The Cerebral Girl is a middle-aged blogger just digging her way out from under a mountain of books in the deep south of Florida.
I received a copy of this book to review through BookBrowse, in exchange for my honest opinion. I was not financially compensated in any way, and the opinions expressed are my own and based on my observations while reading this novel.