• One of NPR’s “Nonfiction Books We Love from 2025” • One of Kirkus’s “Best Nonfiction Books of 2025” • A most anticipated book by Washington Post, Vanity Fair, The Root, and Millions • Featured in Debutiful’s “24 debut books to discover in September 2025” and the Southern Review of Books’ “The Best Southern Books of September 2025 •
“This searing, poetic memoir covers generations of powerful Black women who raise their children singly and transmit strength by showing up. . . . Bonét writes her own mothering story with brute honesty.” —NPR
“[A] profound story about all Black women, and about the effects of racism in all Black lives. . . . [O]bservant, thoughtful and poetic, in the best sense. [Bonét’s] account of both her family history and the lives of her tributaries show off her gifts to the fullest.” —The New York Times
“The Waterbearers is one of the most beautiful and truthful books I’ve ever read. Bonét tells the whole history of this country through the relationships of and between Black mothers and daughters. It is as intimate and tender as it is vast and stormy. Unforgettable.” —Imani Perry, National Book Award-winning author of South to America
“Sasha Bonét’s The Waterbearers is a bold new entry in the canon of literature about Black motherhood. With great intention and beauty, Bonét explores what it means to care for others and for oneself in the matrix of race, class and gender that powers American culture. A beautiful counternarrative to the ways motherhood—and Black motherhood specifically—are usually imagined in American literature, this is an intricately constructed sonnet on the inherent contradictions in mothering another person.” —Kaitlyn Greenidge, author of Libertie
“Sasha Bonét’s tale is a tale of evolution and hope—a moving forward while looking back at generations of women who have sought something better for themselves, their families, and, ultimately, the worlds that sought to define them. I have been waiting to read this story for a very long time.” —Hilton Als, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of White Girls
“At once propulsive and tender, Sasha Bonét’s The Waterbearers is an epic love song and a remarkable ballad of generations. By the end of this book, I knew I held in my hands a new American classic, and that I would never forget this family, whose story is the story of America, and that the women in these pages had forever deepened my understanding of motherhood, history, homecoming, and the revolutionary potential of love.” —Leslie Jamison, author of The Empathy Exams
“The Waterbearers is magnificent in its nimble agility. People are elevated to wonders, if that is still possible, and Sasha Bonét dances on our hearts in this classic creation of will and wit. Electrifying. Wow.” —Kiese Laymon, author of Heavy: An American Memoir
“The Waterbearers is an entrancing, poetic ode to Black women and mothers and the things we pass from generation to generation. Sasha Bonét invites us into an expansive, genre-bending narrative that sprawls across time and place, from well-known historical figures to the characters of Bonét’s own world, leaving you reflecting on motherhood, rebellion, and the interconnectedness of us all.” —Leila Mottley, author of The Girls Who Grew Big
“In this piercing and poetic debut memoir, cultural critic Bonét traces three generations of Black women in her family. … Clear-eyed but never cynical, Bonét approaches these cycles of difficulty and disappointment with curiosity, crafting … a beautiful testament to generational resilience and a forceful reckoning with the legacy of American racism.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Cultural critic Bonét makes her book debut with a fervent homage to Black women—grandmothers, mothers, sisters, and cousins—who have instilled an indelible life force in their families. … At times tender, furious, selfish, and sacrificial, these were ‘complicated women,’ whom Bonét portrays with compassion. A fresh contribution to Black history, rooted in the author’s past.” —Kirkus
“A stunning memoir of Black American matriarchy that brings together the author’s research, experiences, and diamond-sharp prose. … Bonét tells the stories of her ancestors, herself, and Black women in U.S. history … [and] 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. Fathoms deep and deeply spellbinding.” —Booklist (starred review)
“[A] rich ode to Black matriarchy.” —Vanity Fair
“Cultural critic Bonét’s first book could also be filed under memoir, but ultimately it’s too capacious for that. . . . [E]xecuted with rigor and lyricism.” —Washington Post
“Bonét offered many insights that return to this core principle: During our quest to find the story, we must stay open and listen when it finds us.” —Nieman Storyboard
“In charting all Bonét’s inherited grief, there is opportunity to finally feel it, which she writes ‘is actually the freedom [her mother and grandmothers] were fighting for. The freedom to live fully in their own bodies.’ The Waterbearers explores the intricacies of that freedom and the immense costs that have been paid to build its road—a road still under construction. For fans of memoir and history alike, this book will leave readers gutted, awed and, ultimately, grateful.” —BookPage