The Grand Scheme of Things

Published by Washington Square Press.

ISBN:
9781668062364
4 stars (1 review)

Two unlikely friends hatch an extraordinary scheme to expose the theater world in this wildly entertaining and sharply observed debut novel exploring perception, redemption, and how success shapes us all.

Meet Relebogile Naledi Mpho Moruakgomo. Or, for short, Eddie: an aspiring playwright who dreams of making it big in London’s theater world. But after repeated rejections from white talent agents, Eddie suspects her non-white sounding name might be the problem.

Enter Hugo Lawrence Smith: good looking, well-connected, charismatic and…very white. Stifled by his law degree and looking for a way out of the corporate world, he finds a kindred spirit in Eddie after a chance encounter at a cafe.

Together they devise a plan, one which will see Eddie’s play on stage and Hugo’s name in lights. They send out her script under his name and vow to keep the play’s origins a secret until it reaches critical levels of …

1 edition

Chock full o' folly!

4 stars

A couple of months ago, I read Yellowface by R.H. Kuang. While I enjoyed it for all the juicy drama (and gave it four stars), part of my critique was that the characters felt two-dimensional, making the book seem less about people and more about the issues on which the author wanted to opine. So I picked up Warona Jay’s debut, The Grand Scheme of Things, which has a similar theme – a white creative using the work of a person of color to achieve success – expecting similar fare.

Instead, I got an engrossing story with complex characters that explores how racism, sexism, and creative gatekeeping impact the humans who live within these systems. The premise of the book is that a young, black, queer, immigrant woman living in London named Relebogile Naledi Mpho Moruakgomo a/k/a “Eddie” has written a brilliant play and can’t find representation. She meets a …