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The Waterbearers: A Memoir of Mothers and Daughters

The Waterbearers: A Memoir of Mothers and Daughters

by Sasha Bonét

Knopf ·2025 ·320 pages ·History
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Near the Top
I Index
70/99
Near the Top

61/99

Critics

Top of the Pile

80/99

Readers

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Scholars

88/99

Rating

34/99

Volume

96/99

Rating

63/99

Volume

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About This Book

"The Waterbearers is one of the most beautiful and truthful books I've ever read...Unforgettable." —Imani Perry, National Book Award-winning author of South to America"I couldn't write about Black motherhood without writing about America." —Sasha Bonet.Sasha Bonét grew up in 1990s Houston, worlds removed from the Louisiana cotton plantation that raised her grandmother, Betty Jean, and the Texas bayous that shaped Sasha's mother, Connie. And though each generation did better, materially, than the last, all of them carried the complex legacy of Black American motherhood with its origins in slavery. All of them knew that the hands used to comb and braid hair, shell pecans, and massage weary muscles were the very hands used to whip children into submission.When she had her own daughter, Sofia, Bonét was determined to interrupt this tradition. She brought Sofia to New York and set off on a journey—not only up and down the tributaries of her bloodline but also into the lives of Black women in history and literature—Betty Davis, Recy Taylor, and Iberia Hampton among them—to understand both the love and pain they passed on to their children and to create a way of mothering that honors the legacy but abandons the violence that shaped it.The Waterbearersis a dazzling and transformative work of American storytelling that reimagines not just how we think of Black women, but how we think of ourselves—as individuals, parents, communities, and a country.


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Reviews

"Simultaneously a history of American exploitation, a celebration of Black women and an unflinching exploration of family turmoil ..."

Virginia Reeves· BookPage Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Mother to her own daughter, Bonét unfurls the beauty of these women alongside their pain and tethers each word to an immediately felt recognition of the sum total that made her the artist she is."

Annie Bostrom· Booklist Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"A fresh contribution to Black history, rooted in the author's past ..."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"In artfully telling the stories of who stayed alive for her, Bonét has paid a graceful homage to the fictional Eva Peace — and to her own very real family."

Martha Southgate· The New York Times Read review ↗ Near the Top

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