Deeply felt ... A profound story about all Black women, and about the effects of racism in all Black lives ... Bonét is a good writer: observant, thoughtful and poetic, in the best sense. Her account of both her family history and the lives of her tributaries show off her gifts to the fullest ... The portraits of her family reveal that weight, as does Bonét’s tendency to step back and offer sweeping digressions about the entirety of Black experience and the agonizing costs of white supremacy ... The volume of broad statements sometimes felt more reductive than expansive, as though forcing the vast river she envisions...through a funnel ... 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.
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