A bootlegger's daughter falls into a world of Tin Pan Alley music and mystery in this unapologetic exploration of friendships, motherhood, and the way women care for each other.
"Poor quiet Violet, poor shrinking Violet, used to being cared for. Now there's no way around it. She must face the world like a real adult. Like an heiress."
Violet Radford, an introverted songwriter, is no stranger to grief. She's lost her mother, her best friend, Minnow, and now her father. In a Prohibition-Era town ripe with secrets--when giggle water, speakeasies, and the fight for women's rights are the talk of the town--Violet is sober, disconnected, and adrift. It's only a matter of time before she loses herself in the solitude of her New Jersey estate.
Everything changes when Sally, Minnow's trouser-wearing teenage daughter, comes knocking, hoping to uncover the truth behind the explosion that killed Violet's father. With the door to friendship open, Sally and Violet are drawn into a deeper mystery humming just beneath the surface, one that threads a transformative counterpoint through the rhythm of their lives.
Chock full of brave women who defy societal expectations, THE NEIGHBORHOOD DAMES is a stirring exploration of friendship, music, and womanhood. Perfect for fans of queer and neurodivergent representation, and stories of fighting against oppression, Laura Stanfill invokes
The Great Gatsby in a storyline that centers on women's ambitions, self-discovery, and connections beyond romance.