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The Final Revival of Opal & Nev Kindle Edition
“A packed time capsule that doubles as a stick of dynamite.” —THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW
Opal is a fiercely independent young woman pushing against the grain in her style and attitude, Afro-punk before that term existed. Coming of age in Detroit, she can’t imagine settling for a 9-to-5 job—despite her unusual looks, Opal believes she can be a star. So when the aspiring British singer/songwriter Neville Charles discovers her at a bar’s amateur night, she takes him up on his offer to make rock music together for the fledgling Rivington Records.
In early seventies New York City, just as she’s finding her niche as part of a flamboyant and funky creative scene, a rival band signed to her label brandishes a Confederate flag at a promotional concert. Opal’s bold protest and the violence that ensues set off a chain of events that will not only change the lives of those she loves, but also be a deadly reminder that repercussions are always harsher for women, especially black women, who dare to speak their truth.
Decades later, as Opal considers a 2016 reunion with Nev, music journalist S. Sunny Shelton seizes the chance to curate an oral history about her idols. Sunny thought she knew most of the stories leading up to the cult duo’s most politicized chapter. But as her interviews dig deeper, a nasty new allegation from an unexpected source threatens to blow up everything.
Provocative and chilling, The Final Revival of Opal & Nev features a backup chorus of unforgettable voices, a heroine the likes of which we’ve not seen in storytelling, and a daring structure, and introduces a bold new voice in contemporary fiction.
A GOOD MORNING AMERICA BUZZ PICK * NAMED A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR BY BARACK OBAMA * THE WASHINGTON POST *NPR* ESQUIRE * ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY * GOODREADS * THE MILLIONS * READER’S DIGEST * PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER * CHICAGO PUBLIC LIBRARY
- LanguageEnglish
- Publisher37 Ink
- Publication dateMarch 30, 2021
- File size2.4 MB
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From the Publisher


Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Editors' pick: A bold new voice that skillfully serves much needed medicine with the right amount of sugar."—Erin Kodicek, Amazon Editor
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
It’s hard not to be charmed by Nev Charles. When he sings, obviously—that versatile instrument that switches from a sweet and high plaint to a low, cozy rumble—but especially when he laughs. You must have seen this before, in late-night skits or in concert footage or maybe in last year’s surreal Doritos commercial: He throws his head back, his green eyes and ginger hair disappearing momentarily from view, until all you see is chin and tongue and uvula and nostrils. The sound that erupts is boisterous and contagious, a blast of distinct “HA HA!s” often accompanied by a single sharp clap of the hands.
I triggered this delightful response when we finally met, as we were getting settled on his private plane, its dingy seats and the peeling adhesive tint over the windows evidence that the money, while still enough to cover jet fuel, wasn’t quite what it used to be. Our tête-à-tête was the result of a long negotiation—one that had irked Lizzie Harris, the PR maven who has plotted the direction of Nev’s public life for literally as long as I’ve been alive, through crises including Rivington Showcase, addiction, failed marriages, and, in recent years, the collective shrug with which his new music has been received. Lizzie made it plain that this book was proceeding under duress—No offense, doll, she’d said, I’d just planned to arrange the writer myself. But since Opal had floated the offer to me—an independent journalist who couldn’t be bankrolled, who could spill the possible reunion of Opal & Nev at any moment—she was backed somewhat into a corner.
I made concessions, and she made concessions, and our dance involved a loose agreement that I might be granted some time with Nev so long as I kept under embargo this talk of a reunion tour. The final step toward yes had been to get Opal & Nev’s producer, Bob Hize, whose health by then was seriously ailing, to agree to an on-the-record chat with me—touchingly easy, once I put in writing an interview request that revealed who I was. (When I visited him at his bedside, despite his late-stage cancer his eyes lit up and he called me “dear girl,” and I understood why his artists love and respect him so.) Once Bob came onboard for what would likely be the last formal interviews of his life, Lizzie sighed and gave the okay. I thanked her profusely, nearly teary with relief at getting the green light, but, like the toughest, most impressive women with whom I’ve ever worked, Lizzie skipped sentimentality and launched into logistics.
The best way to get several hours with Nev, she advised, was to do them consecutively and in a confined, non-distracting space. And so we planned that I’d join Nev on a twelve-hour flight from London to Kyoto, where he was due to perform the old solo hits (plus float a few new songs) at a jazz and folk festival. I’d brought along a file of clips about Nev from Aural’s archives, including a portrait from 1976, the year America celebrated its bicentennial (and Nev, coincidentally, got naturalized). In it, Nev’s head pops out of a gigantic apple pie. Glops of filling and bits of crust cling to his skin and muck up his mullet; wild-eyed and grimacing, he clenches his teeth around the stem of a miniature American flag.
Sitting across from him on the plane, looking for a way to break the ice as we rumbled down the runway, I showed this old photo to him. “First question,” I said, mock-serious. “Did you consider rescinding your citizenship after this?”
That’s when he gave it to me like a gift: that air-gobbler of a cackle. Which startled our flight attendant so badly that she nearly spilled the club soda she was pouring straight into Nev’s lap, which led Nev to joke about how such a spill would actually leave his blue jeans cleaner than before, which set him off on a recitation of limericks he’d once written in response to Alanis Morrissette’s “Ironic”… all of which, I confess, had the effect of mesmerizing me dumb. Ten minutes later, he ended the riff with an “Ah, well.” And before I could ask a single real question, Nev Charles reclined his seat for what he said would be a power nap. “My left eye’ll go twitchy if I don’t,” he explained, yawning. He proceeded to plunge into a deep sleep, laid out on his back.
I spent the first hour of his snoring organizing my questions and feeling quite competent. Even glancing about with a bit of fondness. The wrinkles around Nev’s eyes made him look smart and distinguished. Better than on television. The kind of older man referred to as a fox. Did he look a bit like an older, redder Benedict Cumberbatch? He did, I thought; he did. In the seat next to him was a tote that had fallen onto its side to reveal what he was consuming these days: The New Jim Crow; a recent issue of The Atlantic; a slim book of poetry that, by some miracle, had just cracked the New York Times’ best sellers list.
When one hour became two became three, when the flight attendant draped a blanket over Nev’s prone body, pure panic surged through me. Time was ticking past, and I’d been told this would be my only shot to interview him. I glanced at the time on my phone, at the books and magazines again: Were these props set up for me to notice them? Would I ruin our rapport if I waggled his foot in order to wake him? Might he think such a move was admirably assertive, or just plain rude? Good lord, had he taken a pill? I asked the pretty young flight attendant how long he normally slept on these flights. “It’s the only time he gets to,” she chided me.
Thankfully, shortly after this, a sudden drop in our plane’s elevation jolted Nev awake. His eyes landed on me and he jerked again, as if surprised I hadn’t parachuted out the back.
“Sorry about the turbulence, Mr. Charles,” the pilot’s voice said over the intercom. “We’ll take her up a little higher.”
Nev returned to an upright position and jostled a pinkie in his ear. Jerked his head toward each shoulder, as if forcing water out. “I’m told you’re Jimmy Curtis’s daughter, is that right?” he asked.
“Yes,” I said, “but I’m not in the business of dropping his name.” I scrambled to open the recording app on my phone while Nev was still alert and somewhat focused. “Shall we start?”
“Straight to the chase, then,” he said. “Good! A real journalist. A little like your father too. Not much for idle chitchat, that one.”
Now Nev was going too fast, getting ahead of himself. As with Opal Jewel, I wanted to start our formal interview at the beginning. I felt that I needed to start there, although initially, with a megastar like Nev, I wasn’t sure why. Certainly there’s been enough ink spilled on the facts of his childhood, enough to comprise two paragraphs of his impressively long Wikipedia page. At first he unspooled it for me with great wit and verve, the way any crowd-pleaser spins through the old repertoire: He burst into snippets of melody when remembering the evolution of a riff or chorus, and his warm English accent modulated high or low with the mood of whatever tale he was spinning. Yes, of course, I was entertained.
But whenever he let loose that silly, spectacular laugh, I couldn’t help but wonder how most of what I’d read about Nev failed to answer these core questions: How does a laugh like this—so unselfconscious and assured in its obnoxiousness, so made for a good-natured mocking on SNL—square with the image of the lonely, bookish boy he used to be? What was the distance crossed? And what got lost along the way?
This journey begins circa 1962—the year Nev turned fourteen, and his musical life began in another Birmingham.
Product details
- ASIN : B08BZFVXFW
- Publisher : 37 Ink
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : March 30, 2021
- Language : English
- File size : 2.4 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 367 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-1982140182
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #99,144 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #90 in Black & African American Literary Fiction
- #165 in British & Irish Literary Fiction
- #279 in Cultural Heritage Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

DAWNIE WALTON is the author of THE FINAL REVIVAL OF OPAL & NEV, winner of the 2022 Aspen Words Literary Prize, the Mark Twain American Voice in Literature Award, the VCU Cabell First Novelist Award, and the Audie Award for Fiction. Her debut novel was also longlisted for the 2022 Women’s Prize for Fiction, and was named one of the best books of 2021 by The Washington Post, NPR, Esquire, and former U.S. President Barack Obama. She is the cofounder and editorial director of Ursa, an audio production company celebrating short fiction from underrepresented voices, and is the cohost of its accompanying podcast. Formerly an editor at Essence and Entertainment Weekly, she has received fellowships from MacDowell and Tin House, and an MFA from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop (where she has taught a fiction seminar). Born and raised in Jacksonville, Florida, she lives in Brooklyn with her husband.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers praise the book's storytelling, with one noting how seamlessly it weaves history into the narrative. Moreover, the writing style receives positive feedback, with one customer highlighting its interview-style format. The characters are vivid, and the book effectively addresses racial issues. Additionally, customers appreciate the emotional depth and creative approach, with one describing it as a love letter to rock and roll.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book's story compelling and well-woven, with one customer noting how it seamlessly incorporates historical elements.
"...The highest praise I can give is that it doesn’t feel like fiction." Read more
"...and in most ways it IS true because it is emotionally true and historically true. this book covers far more than the storyline of two individuals...." Read more
"...This was a human story, of not fitting in and still making a place for oneself...." Read more
"...The story was great - even though I felt it dragged at times- and I loved the interview style and the writing...." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and entertaining, with one describing it as their favorite read of the year.
"...This is an amazing book. It digs into the soul of what it means to be creative and what it means to be a black woman in the music industry...." Read more
"...in that way, this book is important. i enjoyed the delivery method of this book, the various interviews and voices...." Read more
"This was actually a damn good read shout out to Sunny and Opal! I’d read this one again! This book feels really!..." Read more
"...Dawnie Watson has crafted a truly enjoyable debut novel in the form of an oral history using interviews from both Opal Jewel and Nev Charles, an..." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, finding them vivid and indelible, with one customer noting they could see and hear the characters.
"...i enjoyed the delivery method of this book, the various interviews and voices...." Read more
"...The characters are well-drawn, the plot engaging, and the messages of racism and inequality are timely both in the context of the 70s when Opal and..." Read more
"...Even the more peripheral characters are so well crafted that it feels as though you have known them for years...." Read more
"...Walton’s writing is intelligent, poignant, and nuanced. Her characters are so real that you can't believe they don't exist." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, with one customer noting it reads like a nonfiction novel, while another appreciates the interview-style format.
"...the author did a great job of convincing me each person speaking was that person! everyone had their own voice...." Read more
"...I really loved the format of the novel, written as both memoir and article...." Read more
"...was great - even though I felt it dragged at times- and I loved the interview style and the writing...." Read more
"...Mixed in are primary source materials and editor’s notes from the author who just happens to be the daughter of Opal’s late drummer and lover...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's treatment of racial tension, with one customer noting its nuanced approach and another highlighting how it weaves facts throughout the narrative.
"...This is an amazing book. It digs into the soul of what it means to be creative and what it means to be a black woman in the music industry...." Read more
"...This book feels really! Like this is someone’s story, somebody’s life. It gives you all the feels!" Read more
"...are well-drawn, the plot engaging, and the messages of racism and inequality are timely both in the context of the 70s when Opal and Nev were a short..." Read more
"...to this one as an audiobook, as it is a lyrical story of fame, race, love, and legacy. Do yourself a favor and read this book." Read more
Customers find the book emotionally true, with one review highlighting its thrilling power of live music and another noting how it keeps readers fully engaged.
"...wanted this to be true, and in most ways it IS true because it is emotionally true and historically true...." Read more
"...So much importance is placed on sound, music, voice and vibe that I just wanted to hear it...." Read more
"...Like this is someone’s story, somebody’s life. It gives you all the feels!" Read more
"...to this one as an audiobook, as it is a lyrical story of fame, race, love, and legacy. Do yourself a favor and read this book." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's creativity, with one describing it as an amazing piece of art and another noting its refreshing style.
"...It’s gritty, beautiful, and like reading a behind the music documentary...." Read more
"...that dissects issues of sexism, racism, artistic freedom and artistic identity. I really recommend this for the writing and the attention to detail...." Read more
"What an amazing piece of art, for someone who only reads nonfiction, this historical fiction book read like a nonfiction novel...." Read more
"What a truly excellent novel. Refreshing style and beautifully realized characters." Read more
Customers appreciate the music content in the book, with one describing it as a real Behind The Music kind of documentary, while another notes how it showcases a perspective of rock and roll.
"...This was more than a book. It was a love letter to rock and roll...." Read more
"...So much importance is placed on sound, music, voice and vibe that I just wanted to hear it...." Read more
"...It’s gritty, beautiful, and like reading a behind the music documentary...." Read more
"...This felt like a real Behind The Music kind of documentary. I enjoy the usage of real world history infusing it with Opal &Nev's history...." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2025Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI honestly wish I could remember who recommended Opal & Nev to me, because I owe them a debt of gratitude. This is an amazing book. It digs into the soul of what it means to be creative and what it means to be a black woman in the music industry. The highest praise I can give is that it doesn’t feel like fiction.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 2, 2021Format: HardcoverVerified Purchasei wanted this to be true, and in most ways it IS true because it is emotionally true and historically true. this book covers far more than the storyline of two individuals. through the story of their lives, we experience the actual history of the times. not just the history of rock and roll but the history of civil rights (and the lack thereof). in that way, this book is important.
i enjoyed the delivery method of this book, the various interviews and voices. the author did a great job of convincing me each person speaking was that person! everyone had their own voice.
the lack of one star is because i personally felt a bit let down at the rushed ending. it felt somewhat contrived and not as fully developed as the rest of the book. the tension wasn't maintained as well as it was maintained in the first 80% of the book. i could see where the story was rushing to and felt slightly disappointed that once the ending was figured out, the story line was not as fully fleshed out. but a small matter, really. the book was still a wonderful experience.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 5, 2021Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI. Absolutely. Loved. This. Book!!!
If Opal Jewel wasn't real, she damn well should be. She's like if you took Memphis Minnie, Rose Stone, Poly Styrene, Gladys Bentley, Tina Turner, Nona Hendryx, Nina Simone, Merry Clayton, Janelle Monae and Sister Rosetta Tharpe. She's rock, punk, soul and everything.
This was more than a book. It was a love letter to rock and roll. You know, the genre that Black folks invented only to be edged out and also edged ourselves out of? We NEED an Opal Jewel to come along and shake rock up because it desperately needs it. When asked why I'm a rock/metal fan, I merely point out that without the Blues, jazz and Black gospel, there wouldn't have been a British Invasion, much less guitar heroes as we know them.
Thank Sister Rosetta Tharpe for the latter.
This was a human story, of not fitting in and still making a place for oneself. Opal refused to bend or break simply because the rest of the world hadn't caught up to her sheer awesomeness, a situation many Black women can relate to. And yet, the book challenged me as a reader to discover just who Opal WAS in her own words and not as some mythical icon. She's complicated and messy at times. Her story read a little like Nina Simone's in that she was "too Black" for both Black and white worlds. She went bald after discovering she had alopecia. She wore colorful clothes thanks to her best friend and personal stylist, a gay Black man who was as unapologetic in his presentation as she was.
Yes, there's Nev Charles, the red-headed lad from Brummie who saw Opal as his version of the iconic Merry Clayton (and if you don't know who she is, shame on you, lol. I mean she literally steals the spotlight from Mick Jagger on the classic 'Gimme Shelter'. She's also the background lead on 'Sweet Home Alabama' which is just so very fitting when you think about it. Watch '50 Feet from Stardom' on Netflix to see her and other amazing background vocalists of so many hits whom you may not know by name). Nev sees Opal as his muse, which of course never works out well, especially one as driven to carve a niche for herself as an equal.
I really loved the format of the novel, written as both memoir and article. Sunny Curtis is the journalist/protagonist with a complex and uncomfortable tie to her subject, Opal Jewel. Sunny, like her subject, is a Black woman in a highly visible position that sometimes causes her to dim her shine or question herself. Another thing that made this novel stand out was how real life musicians/producers were interwoven into the narrative - I'd like to think Henry Rollins really would have admired Opal as a performer and provocateur.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 10, 2022Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI really enjoyed this story but I genuinely feel like the audiobook would have been the way to go. So much importance is placed on sound, music, voice and vibe that I just wanted to hear it. The story was great - even though I felt it dragged at times- and I loved the interview style and the writing. I kind of felt like a lot of things weren't wrapped up but in a way I can't fully explain you know? Like the ending needed a little bit more or - and I can't believe I'm saying this - an epilogue. Just a little bit more than we got but all in all I had a good time.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 6, 2023Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis was actually a damn good read shout out to Sunny and Opal! I’d read this one again! This book feels really! Like this is someone’s story, somebody’s life. It gives you all the feels!
- Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2022Format: KindleVerified PurchaseOpal and Nev reads like a reminder of a past when music mattered because everyone seemed to be listening to the same songs. Dawnie Watson has crafted a truly enjoyable debut novel in the form of an oral history using interviews from both Opal Jewel and Nev Charles, an interracial rock duo from the 70s, along with a host of interviews with others connected to their stories. Mixed in are primary source materials and editor’s notes from the author who just happens to be the daughter of Opal’s late drummer and lover. It’s easy to forget that all of these characters and all of the events in the novel are fictional because it all seems so real. Opal and Nev are not always likeable but then most celebrities tend to be that way. The fictional author, S. Sunny Shelton has to deal with the egos of the two musicians whose careers have gone in opposing directions. Opal is the center point here. She’s has a lot more conviction than Nev who has gone on to become commercially successful.
This book made many Best Of lists from 2021 and it’s easy to see why. The characters are well-drawn, the plot engaging, and the messages of racism and inequality are timely both in the context of the 70s when Opal and Nev were a short-lived duo and today. Barack Obama listed this as one of his favorites of 2021. I was a few months behind but it was also a big hit for me.
Top reviews from other countries
- Luke DennisonReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 26, 2024
4.0 out of 5 stars More than a fictional biopic
Pretty much every review I have read of this book, references and compares this to Daisy Jones and the six, and I can see why. That was a blockbuster, a book that became the trendy book to read amongst social media casual readers. I read it because I love a rock biography and thought it sounded intriguing.and a novel it was readable but empty, exciting but derivative, and in summary, a rip off of Fleetwood mac.
When I started reading this, on the surface an oral history, in the same format as aforementioned book, I was thinking it's more of the same.
However, as time went on and pages turned this became some thing much more. It touches upon rock stardom for sure but it is about so much more. Loss, trust, the underdog, being and outsider and especially the challenges black people have put up with through history to the modern day.
Like it's main protaginist, this book is brave, challenging, interesting and entertaining.
Good stuff.
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in Canada on July 27, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable read.
Was totally engrossed in the book.
- D. NormanReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 5, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars ..stunning last sequence...
Opal Jewel, born in Alabama US,is a black, gifted vocalist and with a determination to become a successful singer. She teams up with Nev Charles, a talented vocalist/song writer. And are assigned to Rivington studios and promotion. Their second and biggest gig at Rivington Showcase , ends in a riot. Aimed mostly at Opal, involving a Confederate flag, it is promoted entirely by racial hatred, sexism. Jimmy Curtis, drummer of the band is killed.
The reverberations of the riot continue throughout the story. To be taken up later, by Sunny Shelton, Deputy Editor of the Aural magazine, daughter of the drummer Jimmy Curtis.
The stand out part of this book, (for me,) is in the last chapter, After pursuing their own separate careers for several years, Opal & Nev give their first live open air arena concert . The arena is packed with over 20,000 fans. And narrated by Sunny Shelton - six rows in front of the enormous stage. I have never attended a live outdoor rock concert. But the action was so vividly described, so intense i felt I might just have been there.
Opal is a brilliantly portrayed character. Through her, and especially regarding the Rivington riot, it again focuses on the mindless cruelty of racial discrimination.
The book reads rather like a journal. As well as individual chapters, the pages are sub headed, by characters at that point in time in the story, relevant to the story, and driving the story forward. I really enjoyed it.
- Craig F.Reviewed in Canada on May 15, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Love this book
This is an amazing story that really touches me in many ways. I couldn’t recommend it more to anyone that loves music or simply, a great story told really well
- Kee LadyReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 21, 2022
3.0 out of 5 stars A fun read
The Final Revival of Opal & Nev is a fun and entertaining read - I liked it but I wasn’t gripped by it. I’m not sure what but there was something missing for me. I can’t pinpoint exactly why I feel this way since all the ingredients are there; an iconic music duo, rebellion, racism, and sexism to name but a few. I think perhaps it’s because outside of Opal Jewel, I didn’t care much for the other characters, so I didn’t feel invested. Opal is a brilliantly realized, vibrant character full of wit, sass, and talent. For me, she is undoubtedly the best thing about this book (although special mention must go to the fabulous Virgil). Nev was just a shallow, David Bowie wannabe and I don’t think the other characters were fleshed out enough. Having said that, I wouldn’t not recommend this book. It’s a fun read and I know there are many people who will enjoy it. Indeed, Opal Jewel alone is reason enough to pick this up.