

Paradise & Corktown
Detroit, 1936. A city divided by industry, hope, and hate.
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In the vibrant, resilient heart of Paradise Valley, Grace Williams fights to build a better world for her young son, George. Across the city in the working-class enclave of Corktown, Janice Yates nurtures her own family with a quiet, defiant faith. Their worlds are separated by an invisible map of racial and social lines—until a chance meeting in a segregated park sparks a fragile friendship between their two little boys.
That fragile bridge becomes the only lifeline when the unthinkable happens: George vanishes from his bed in the dead of night. Met with the cold indifference of the police, Grace and her husband Clarence are forced to confront a terrifying truth—their child is not a priority to the city that has always neglected them.
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But Janice and her husband John, a weary public defender, refuse to accept the map that divides them. What begins as a desperate search for one missing child explodes into a city-wide reckoning. A trail of marbles. An abandoned factory that is a monument to civic neglect. A poisonous rhetoric echoing from the radio. And an unlikely fellowship—seamstresses and mechanics, lawyers and grandmothers, church mothers and immigrant railroad workers—who choose to show up.
Paradise & Corktown is a sweeping, deeply human work of historical fiction. It is a parable of hope in the face of systemic fracture, a testament to the radical power of seeing each other not as categories, but as neighbors. From the smoky jazz clubs of Black Bottom to the tense courtrooms of a city on the brink of labor revolution, this novel asks the timeless question: When the night is darkest, who will you choose to be? The one who builds a wall, or the one who builds a bridge?
