'GMA' Buzz Picks: 'Skye Falling' by Mia McKenzie

McKenzie's new book is a portrait of family, queerness and finding your people.

June 25, 2021, 8:40 AM

If you've finished our "GMA" Book Club pick this month and are craving something else to read, look no further than our new digital series, "GMA" Buzz Picks. Each week, we'll feature a new book that we're also reading this month to give our audience even more literary adventures. Get started with our latest pick below!

This week's "GMA" Buzz Pick is "Skye Falling" by Mia McKenzie.

McKenzie -- who is the award-winning author of "The Summer We Got Free" and the creator of Black Girl Dangerous Media -- is out with a new hilarious story about a portrait of family, queerness, race and finding your people.

Book cover of "Skye Falling" by Mia McKenzie.
Penguin Random House

The story follows a queer Black woman named Skye, a free-spirited 26-year-old who lives life on her own terms. When she donates her eggs for money, she doesn't think much about it until nearly 20 years later, when a 12-year-old girl named Vicky finds Skye and informs her that she's "her egg."

After having a conversation with Vicky, Skye decides to have a meaningful relationship with her, but it's not easy. Things get even more complicated when Skye realizes that the woman she tried and failed to pick up the other day is the girl's aunt -- awkward.

"I'm so thrilled that 'Skye Falling' is your new 'GMA' Buzz Pick," McKenzie told "GMA." "I hope 'Skye Falling' makes you laugh."

"Skye Falling" is available now. Get started with an excerpt below and get a copy here.

Read along with us and join the conversation all month long on our Instagram account -- GMA Book Club and #GMABookClub

“GMA” Buzz Pick: “Skye Falling” by Mia McKenzie.
ABC News Photo Illustration

*****

"You still live there?"

"I left the day I turned eighteen. But I still stay in West Philly when I'm in town. My friend owns a bed-and-breakfast not that far from here."

She's watching me intently now and I'm sure she's trying to read me. I don't like it. Most people can't get a read on me but I worry that if this kid really wanted to, she could, like a genetic knowing, passed to her through my DNA or some shit. Then she says, "Why'd you do it, though? Just for money or, like, other reasons, too?"

I can see the kid is getting at something. I guess this is why she came: to know the reasons she exists. That feels heavy and I wish this conversation wasn't happening.

"How'd you find me?" I ask her, mostly to deflect.

"Google."

"You searched 'where is my egg donor' and that led you right to me? Wow, technology really is on some next-level shit."

She laughs a little, and I like the sound of it more than I could have anticipated. "No, not like that," she says. "I saw your name on these papers. I guess they were my mom's. Then I looked you up on Face­book and saw you might be at that art thing today."

"Ah."

"So, why'd you give your eggs to some girl you only knew at camp?"

"Jesus Christ, kid," I say, because she's legit relentless. "That's a really heavy question."

"Sorry," she says. "I'm a lot sometimes. People say that about me."

Same."It was a long time ago," I tell her. "I don't really remember all the reasons. But probably some part of my twenty-six-year-old self thought it would be cool to help make a kid I could maybe someday meet but not have to, you know, support financially. Speaking of which, you know we're going dutch here, right?"

She laughs again. The sound gets up under my ribs in this weird way, like a vibration. And then, out of nowhere, this thought occurs to me: I have never seen such a perfect human being.

"Excuse me for a second," I say. "I need to, um, vomit." I get up and walk toward the bathroom. When I'm out of sight of the kid, I change course and head straight for the exit. I stop. The stepsister is right there by the door. Shit. I head for the bathroom instead.

I'm halfway out the window when the door opens and the kid enters. She sees me making a break for it and now she looks horrified. Not curious. Not amused. Horrified. I knew we'd get there eventually.

"You're sneaking out?"

"No!" I look down at myself, one leg already out the window, the other foot dangling above the sink.

"Well, yes."

"Why?"

Trouble is, I don't really know why. Not entirely. I mean, obvi­ously I can't handle this. But going out a window to escape my brother is one thing. Going out a window to ditch a twelve-year-old girl seems extreme even to me. "Look. You seem like a nice kid. But I'm not really . . . you know . . . motherly."

"Yeah, that's kinda obvious," she says. "Good thing I don't need a mother."

I'm not sure I believe her. People can be tricky when they're try­ing to get something from you, especially if that something is love.

The kid shakes her head. "Fine. Whatever. Just go."

I feel shame blossoming in my chest and I don't like it. Maybe it would be better if I came back inside. Maybe the kid really isn't look­ing for another mother. I mean, how many mothers does one girl need in a lifetime? I have one and, frankly, it's too many! And even if she is . . . well . . . maybe I could be that. I mean, I might not make the best mother, but I probably wouldn't be the worst. I could maybe pull off second mom in a pinch. I look at the kid. Take a deep breath. And climb a little farther out the window.

"You're still going?!"

"What? You just said I could go!"

Exasperated, the kid turns and storms out of the bathroom.

This is the part where I'm supposed to go after her. But I don't. I just sit there, half in, half out of the window, until some old lady comes in to pee, sees me, and frowns, all judgy, like she thinks I'm trying to dine and dash or some shit.

"This isn't how it looks," I tell her.

She smirks like, if you say so and goes into a stall.

When I get back to our table, the kid and her stepsister are gone. The word "dutch" has been scrawled on the check and there's cash for one hot dog beside it.

It's mid-afternoon and even warmer and sunnier than it was this morning, the sky a stunningly clear, almost glassy, blue. I walk the eight blocks back to the bed-and-breakfast because I think the air will help clear my head. It sorta does and it sorta doesn't. I'm less queasy, but the last couple of hours feel like a weird dream.

When I get back to my room, I'm thrilled to find it clean and com­pletely free of naked strangers. I put the do not disturb sign on the door, strip down to my underwear, then go into the bathroom and throw up one more time for good measure. My phone buzzes. It's Viva. I ignore it. I get in bed and close my eyes. My phone buzzes again. It's my brother. I put it on silent and pull the covers up over my head. At least the kid doesn't have my number.

*****

From the book "Skye Falling" by Mia McKenzie. Copyright © 2021 by Mia McKenzie. Published by Random House an imprint and division of Penguin Random House LLC. All rights reserved.

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