Monday, June 30, 2025--San Antonio
Swift River by Essie Chambers is an interesting novel. It was named a best book of 2024 by many online publications, and I liked the story. The problem I had with it was that I just wasn't motivated to go back to it quickly. In other words, it isn't a page-turner. I was interested, but not excited by it. The story incorporates a number of aspects that have affected the lives of Blacks in America--the immigration from the South to the northern manufacturing areas, sundown cities that ran all of the blacks out of their city, mixed-race marriages and how families react to them, etc. The protagonist is a 16-year-old mixed (white/black) race girl who weighs over 300 lbs. and is the only "black" person living in her town since her father disappeared 7 years ago leaving her there with her white mother and grandmother. But it back-tracts to tell the stories of her family when they lived in Alabama and left for better opportunities and of when all but her aunt (a mid-wife and trained by the local doctor to even perform other medical duties and was, therefore, valuable to the community) were eventually run out of the northern factory city of Swift River where they had settled. Life has been hard for the protagonist, and she dreams of leaving the hard-scrabble life she and her mother lead to find a place where she can fit in better, make friends, and go to college. During the time she plans for this, she carries on a communication with an aunt still living back in Alabama which answers her questions about her family history, and she wonders if her disappeared father died 7 years ago or is just living elsewhere. I gave the book 3 1/2 stars out of 5.