Kai Harris is a writer and educator from Detroit, Michigan who uses her voice to uplift the Black community through realistic fiction centered on the Black experience. She resides in the Bay Area with her husband, three daughters, and dog Tabasco, where she is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing at Santa Clara University.
“Harris rewrites the coming-of-age story with Black girlhood at the
center.”
—New York Times Book Review
"[A] sensitive, realistic portrait of a ten-year-old trying to
understand her world in the wake of her father’s death. Sent to
spend the summer with a grandfather she barely knows, she contends
with her losses and fears while learning more about her family,
finding her own voice in the process."
—The Washington Post
"[What the Fireflies Knew] is not an easy read . . . but it feels
authentic, and does what good fiction does: takes readers on a
journey they otherwise wouldn’t travel."
—Associated Press
“What the Fireflies Knew is the best novel I have read in a long
time, and Harris has brilliantly captured KB’s voice. She jumps off
the page so strongly that I was invested not only from the first
page but, indeed, the first sentence.”
—Free Lance-Star
“Harris’s story helped me remember what it was like to be a young
Black girl on the border of adolescence.”
—The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
“Combining complex characters, writing that instantly penetrates
your heart, and the restorative power of nature, What the Fireflies
Knew is a luminous reminder that sometimes the only true path to
healing is through facing our painful histories, and that we don’t
have to do it alone. With a debut novel this remarkable, Kai Harris
is a writer I hope is around for a long, long time.”
—Mateo Askaripour, New York Times bestselling author of Black
Buck
"What the Fireflies Knew is a fabulous debut and truly a gem of a
novel, full of the beauty, tenderness, and poignancy of Black
girlhood.”
—Deesha Philyaw, author of The Secret Lives of Church Ladies
"What the Fireflies Knew is sharp and graceful, poignant in its
depiction of a family learning to acknowledge what’s been broken in
order to piece itself back together. Kai Harris beautifully
captures what it feels like to be out of place—in a city, in a
body, in a family, in the turmoil of adolescence—and then just as
gracefully reminds us what it can feel like to find your way back
to yourself in spite of everything. This book introduces a bold and
necessary new writer, generous in her capacity for holding onto
hope without erasing trauma."
—Danielle Evans, author of The Office of Historical Corrections and
Before You Suffocate Your Own Fool Self
"In this gorgeous and poignant novel, Kai Harris writes a
stunningly crafted tale that explores the beauty and hard truths of
life, loss, and survival through the lens of an unforgettable
narrator. This story of a young black girl navigating the labyrinth
of self and family secrets is told in an authentic voice,
filled with well-observed details and elegant prose. Harris's first
novel showcases her gift as a superb storyteller."
—Nicole Dennis-Benn, bestselling author of Patsy and Here Comes the
Sun
“Kai Harris's fierce, lyrical writing drew me in from the first
page. KB is an unforgettable narrator whose voice comes vibrantly
to life through her journey from childhood to adulthood, even as
she grapples with the forces that tear families apart and the power
that holds them together. This is an extraordinary, powerful debut,
and I hope there will be more to come from Harris.”
—Abi Daré, New York Times bestselling author of The Girl with the
Louding Voice
"A story of Black girlhood from a promising new voice in
fiction."
—Kirkus Reviews
“Kai Harris’s debut novel is a stirring story of a transformative
summer for a Black girl growing up in 1990s Michigan. . . . This
elegant and eloquent novel is perfect for readers who loved Sue
Monk Kidd’s The Secret Life of Bees and Toni Morrison’s The Bluest
Eye.”
—BookPage (starred)
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