When the Floor Remembers Their Names is a quiet, deeply human novel about women who find themselves through movement rather than applause. Set in an imperfect community hall, the story follows a small group of women who gather weekly to dance, not for performance, but for presence. As rehearsals turn into transformation, dance becomes a language for grief, confidence, aging, leadership, and belonging. Through characters like Grace, Amina, and the steady guide Mama Tola, the book explores how the body remembers what the world asks women to forget. This is not a story about becoming extraordinary, but about becoming honest. Told with warmth, restraint, and emotional clarity, it celebrates women who learn to take up space, rest without guilt, and carry their strength quietly into everyday life.