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The Waterbearers

A Memoir of Mothers and Daughters

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Pub Date Sep 16 2025 | Archive Date Oct 16 2025

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Description

“An epic love song and remarkable ballad of generations.” —Leslie Jamison

“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 Waterbearers is 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.
“An epic love song and remarkable ballad of generations.” —Leslie Jamison

“I couldn’t write about Black motherhood without writing about America.” —Sasha Bonet


Sasha Bonét grew up in 1990s Houston...

Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9780593536087
PRICE $30.00 (USD)
PAGES 320

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Featured Reviews

The Waterbearers is one of those books that stays with you long after you finish the last page. Sasha Bonét tells the story of three generations of Black women; her grandmother, her mother, and herself and she writes with such honesty and power, that it felt like sitting down to listen to a family history that’s both deeply personal and universally important.

The book starts with her grandmother, Betty Jean, who raised eleven kids on her own in Texas after years spent picking cotton in Louisiana. Her strength and independence are honestly jaw dropping. Then there’s Mama Connie, Bonét’s mother, who tried to break away from her past but ended up repeating some of the same patterns. And finally, there’s Sasha herself, who is trying to make sense of it all while raising her own daughter and figuring out what kind of mother she wants to be.

Bonét’s writing is gorgeous. It is poetic without being overly flowery, and full of heart. The prose is really beautiful! She also brings in stories of iconic Black women like Nina Simone, Audre Lorde, and Oprah, showing how their lives connect to her own and the women in her family. It’s like a love letter to Black motherhood, resilience, and the way we carry our histories, sometimes without even realizing it.

This book isn’t just about one family, but about legacy, survival, and how women keep going, even when the world expects them to break. If you love memoirs that feel raw, beautiful, and important, you’ll want to add this to your list. I’ll definitely be thinking about this one for a long time.

Thank you to NetGalley, Sasha Bonét, and Knopf for the eARC of this book.

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