HARDCOVER
Didn’t We Almost Have It All is the debut novel from writer, actress, producer, and director Denyce Lawton, an R&B memoir told through auto-fiction. Set in early-2000s New York and Los Angeles, the story unfolds during an era shaped by slow jams, unanswered questions, and love lived without digital proof.
At its center is Imani, a young woman navigating love, ambition, and identity in a world where timing often matters as much as feeling. In New York, she becomes entangled with Dray, a rising rapper whose momentum and promise blur the line between devotion and damage. Through youth, loyalty, and naivety, Imani allows herself to be pulled through years of emotional back-and-forth, a relationship that slowly reshapes how she trusts, how she loves, and how much of herself she’s willing to compromise.
By the time she reaches Los Angeles, the residue of that love follows her. Fear disguises itself as caution. Guardedness passes for strength. And just when she’s convinced herself she knows what love costs, she meets Jackson—steady, present, and seemingly everything she once imagined for herself. But timing, fear of falling again, and the habits formed in her first adulthood complicate what should feel simple.
As the years unfold through a series of almosts, Imani wrestles with the tension between choosing the man she dreamed of and choosing herself—questioning how early heartbreak shapes future decisions, and whether love can survive fear when it arrives too late or too perfectly. Inspired by real emotional truths, this intimate, conversational love story captures a generation that learned romance through R&B lyrics, survived heartbreak without timelines or receipts, and discovered that some of the most defining relationships aren’t the ones that last—but the ones that change you forever. (HARDCOVER BOOK)
Didn’t We Almost Have It All is the debut novel from writer, actress, producer, and director Denyce Lawton, an R&B memoir told through auto-fiction. Set in early-2000s New York and Los Angeles, the story unfolds during an era shaped by slow jams, unanswered questions, and love lived without digital proof.
At its center is Imani, a young woman navigating love, ambition, and identity in a world where timing often matters as much as feeling. In New York, she becomes entangled with Dray, a rising rapper whose momentum and promise blur the line between devotion and damage. Through youth, loyalty, and naivety, Imani allows herself to be pulled through years of emotional back-and-forth, a relationship that slowly reshapes how she trusts, how she loves, and how much of herself she’s willing to compromise.
By the time she reaches Los Angeles, the residue of that love follows her. Fear disguises itself as caution. Guardedness passes for strength. And just when she’s convinced herself she knows what love costs, she meets Jackson—steady, present, and seemingly everything she once imagined for herself. But timing, fear of falling again, and the habits formed in her first adulthood complicate what should feel simple.
As the years unfold through a series of almosts, Imani wrestles with the tension between choosing the man she dreamed of and choosing herself—questioning how early heartbreak shapes future decisions, and whether love can survive fear when it arrives too late or too perfectly. Inspired by real emotional truths, this intimate, conversational love story captures a generation that learned romance through R&B lyrics, survived heartbreak without timelines or receipts, and discovered that some of the most defining relationships aren’t the ones that last—but the ones that change you forever. (HARDCOVER BOOK)
HARDCOVER