A magnificent new novel from the bestselling, award-winning author of An American Marriage—Tayari Jones has written an unforgettable novel that sparkles with wit and intelligence and deep feeling about two lifelong friends whose worlds converge after many years apart in the face of a devastating tragedy.
Vernice and Annie, two motherless daughters raised in Honeysuckle, Louisiana, have been best friends and neighbors since earliest childhood, but are fated to live starkly different lives. Raised by a fierce aunt determined to give her a stable home in the wake of her mother’s death, Vernice leaves Honeysuckle at eighteen for Spelman College, where she joins a sisterhood of powerfully connected Black women and marries into an affluent family. Annie, abandoned by her dissolute mother as a child, and fixated on the idea of finding her and filling the bottomless hole left by her absence, sets off on a journey that will take her into a world of peril and adversity, as well as love and adventure, and culminate in a battle for her life.
A novel about mothers and daughters, about friendship and sisterhood, and the complexities of being a woman in the American South, Kin is an exuberant, emotionally rich, unforgettable work from one of the brightest and most irresistible voices in contemporary fiction.
Tayari Jones is the author of the novels Leaving Atlanta, The Untelling, Silver Sparrow, and An American Marriage (Algonquin Books, February 2018). Her writing has appeared in Tin House, The Believer, The New York Times, and Callaloo. A member of the Fellowship of Southern Writers, she has also been a recipient of the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award, Lifetime Achievement Award in Fine Arts from the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, United States Artist Fellowship, NEA Fellowship and Radcliffe Institute Bunting Fellowship. Silver Sparrow was named a #1 Indie Next Pick by booksellers in 2011, and the NEA added it to its Big Read Library of classics in 2016. Jones is a graduate of Spelman College, University of Iowa, and Arizona State University. She is currently an Associate Professor in the MFA program at Rutgers-Newark University.
This book is the literary hit of 2026—full stop. It’s gut-wrenching, thought-provoking, empowering, heartbreakingly realistic, deeply embracing, and profoundly resonant. It takes the word kin and restores its true meaning: kin isn’t defined by blood, but by the people who truly see you, who hear the words you can’t say, who touch your soul, who hold space for your flaws, your mistakes, your missteps, and still call you theirs. Your real kin is your person—and this novel captures that truth with unforgettable clarity.
Vernice (Niecy) and Annie’s story begins in Honeysuckle, Louisiana, where both girls are raised not by their mothers, but by the imperfect, complicated, loving “kin” who stepped in when their mothers stepped out.
Niecy’s mother was murdered by her own father, who then took his own life—an unthinkable tragedy that left Niecy in the care of her eccentric, once-wayward aunt. This aunt, who fled Honeysuckle years before, returns with every intention of not just raising Niecy, but mothering her, filling the fractured spaces left behind.
Annie, on the other hand, was abandoned at birth by her mother and never knew her father. Her grandmother raised her with a stern kind of love, but Annie always carried the raw, aching absence of the woman who left her. That absence becomes her compass—her obsession—shaping every choice she makes.
From their earliest years, the girls form a bond so private it almost feels sacred. Annie is bold, restless, animated—a girl determined to fill the void her mother left by searching for her someday. Niecy is the opposite: obedient, careful, loyal, observant, the one who follows rules while Annie breaks them. Their bond is exquisite in its contradictions.
But when Annie decides to escape Honeysuckle at eighteen—right before prom—Niecy’s heart shatters. Abandonment comes back for her a second time, this time wearing the face of the person she loved most. Their lives split apart, and for years, their only bridge is the letters they exchange.
Niecy goes to Spelman College, where the world opens to her in ways both beautiful and brutal. She discovers the power and elegance of Black womanhood, the complexities of class and wealth, the breathtaking force of civil rights activism—and the sting of inequality that catches her off guard like a slap. She befriends Mrs. McHenry, a refined woman of influence who climbed her way up from poverty, becoming an unexpected mentor and mother figure.
Annie’s path is wilder, more precarious. She runs away with a group of friends, and when their car breaks down in the least likely place, she ends up living in a world she never expected—one filled with danger, oddity, and surprising tenderness. There, she forms a deep bond with Lulabella, reading her Bible passages, combing her hair, offering comfort in small, intimate ways that shape them both.
Both young women find unusual, eccentric mother figures who guide them, teach them hard-earned lessons, and nudge them toward identities they never imagined for themselves. And both make choices—some brave, some reckless—that carry weighty, life-altering consequences. When tragedy finally strikes, it pulls them back toward each other, stitching their lives together once more in the most devastating and beautiful way. This book is a punch to the gut—in the best possible way. It’s emotional, haunting, and powerful. It is an extraordinary character study not just of Annie and Niecy, but of the women who raise them, the community that shapes them, and the people who walk beside them.
Along with the unforgettable leads, the supporting cast shines. Miss Jamison, Mrs. Ola Mae, and even Babydoll become characters you genuinely grow to love. And the men—Bobo, Franklin, and Mr. Daniel, the bar owner—bring depth, dimension, and emotional richness that elevate the story even further.
At its core, this book is a luminous exploration of sisterhood, found family, sacrifice, self-discovery, dignity, the brutal reality of inequality and racism, the fire of social justice awakening—and above all, a story about love: pure, unguarded, raw, and real.
I loved this book even more than An American Marriage, and I’m absolutely convinced it will become one of the biggest breakout novels of 2026. Its storytelling is unique, intimate, and fiercely moving in every chapter.
A huge thank you to NetGalley and Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage, and Anchor for sharing one of the most anticipated books of 2026 with me in exchange for my honest thoughts.
Follow me on medium.com to read my articles about books, movies, streaming series, astrology:
Separate life journeys of two young black girls growing up together in Honeysuckle, Louisiana as best friends unfold in this moving and so well written novel. Both are orphans , one by death of her parents, the other by abandonment. One raised by an aunt reluctant to be a parent . The other by her grandmother. Both wanting to leave, but with different hopes and dreams.
Alternating chapters take us on the roads they travel with their intimate points of view . One off to college to Atlanta. The other to Memphis to find the mother who left her as an infant . A beautiful story of two unforgettable characters facing the impact of the racism of Jim Crow in the 1950’s. Their journeys are separate , but connections are impossible to break when the bonds are deep. A different story from An American Marriage, but equally as thought provoking and moving. I loved the inclusion of letters in both novels. Tayari Jones is a wonderful storyteller reminding us what family means.
I received a copy of this from Knopf through NetGalley.
Tayari Jones is masterful. I felt like I was in the deep south of Louisiana, sweating in the dreaded heat, hanging out with some Negro folk. Annie and Vernice have been cradle friends since birth. Both motherless and yearning for that connection. Upon high school graduation, they both go in separate directions. Annie, in a quest to find her mother; Vernice, to college. Jones’ writing is powerful; wrought iron. This goes deep, into the south and into race discrimination. It’s about identity - who and what defines you.;relationships; family. But it’s mostly about women. Women supporting women- the bonds forged. The Mentoring they are given as they navigate through the corridors of life. The family that is created by women who suffer; who grieve; who love. 5⭐️ Another worthy read is An American Marriage
In one of his loveliest and most idealistic sonnets, Shakespeare writes,
Love is not love Which alters when it alteration finds Or bends with the remover to remove.
Tayari Jones knows that’s poppycock.
In novel after novel, she explores the dynamic quality of love without questioning its persistence. How we relate to one another — even those most dear to us — is not “an ever-fixèd mark.” Given the vicissitudes of time, she asks, how could it be? Our affections are altered by distance, thinned in some places, amplified in others, the way sound changes as it travels.
Separation is often physical in Jones’s fiction, as in her most famous novel, An American Marriage, about a husband incarcerated for a crime he did not commit. While his prison sentence drags on, the intensity of their relationship swells and warps in heartbreaking ways.
Jones’s latest novel, Kin, returns again to that interplay of alternating perspectives, a structure that places us in the position of judge, arbiter and intimate confidant. In alternating chapters, two girls — Vernice and Annie, best friends forever — tell their stories, which begin entangled but eventually veer apart. Both young women strike out into the world to reclaim a satisfying foundation that was crushed in infancy. But only one of them will ever find it....
4.5 Vernice and Annie, two black babies born in Honeysuckle, Louisiana who shared a cradle after birth. Both baby girls were left motherless as infants..Vernice’s mother shot dead by her husband before he killed himself, her Aunt (her mother’s sister) raising her up …and Annie’s mother just taking off and leaving Annie with her grandmother to raise. Both girls bonded by the cradle and the loss of their mothers. The time frame for their coming up years was the 1950’s and 60’s, the time of segregation in the South. So the story follows this close relationship until the time in their teens when Annie up and leaves taking up with a boyfriend to get out of town, following her leaving.. Vernice is off to Spelman College as her Aunt saved and saved and the church plate was often passed around to help with expenses. Both their lives change immensely.. Vernice gets through college Annie’s life is complicated by the search for her mother and it takes her to Tennessee and then Georgia. The girl’s relationship.. mostly by letters stays close throughout their different situations and romances and difficulties This is a story of friendships and sisterhood and the power of love. Loved it… but the ending is not concrete…we are not given the final outcome straight out..but still a very enjoyable read.
Thank you to NetGalley and Knopf for the free ebook in exchange for my honest review!
“Before I opened the door, I said, “I love you,” tossing the word over my shoulder like a handful of wildflower seeds.”
Once in a blue moon, a novel arrives that doesn’t just tell a story but claims a piece of your heart. Kin is that rare kind of book. Tayari Jones, already known for her rich explorations of family and belonging, delivers a sweeping, emotionally charged masterpiece. Set across several decades of the Jim Crow South and beyond, Kin begins with two baby girls Vernice, known as Niecy, and Annie born into nearly parallel lives yet fated for different paths. Both are motherless from infancy. Niecy’s mother is murdered by her abusive father, leaving behind a grief that never entirely fades. Annie’s mother abandons her early on, a loss that drives her lifelong search for connection and meaning. Jones traces their journeys with breathtaking intimacy. Niecy’s path leads to Spelman College in Atlanta, a place of both discovery and danger. Annie’s takes her through the working class bars and backroads of the South, where she learns to survive on grit and grace. Across the years and miles, the two women exchange letters intricate, tender, and fierce that serve as the heartbeat of the novel. Through them, we witness the evolution of friendship, womanhood, and the enduring power of hope. “You could only fight scripture with scripture,” Jones writes, a line that captures both the moral weight and the poetic rhythm of the book. Kin is more than a story of two women; it’s a meditation on the meaning of family, the scars of history, and the resilience required to live and love in a world determined to deny one’s humanity. Jones’s prose is lush yet deliberate, her storytelling both intimate and epic in scope. “It’s a future butterfly,” one character reflects. “If we were together, I’d have treated creatures gently too. But we were not together, and I didn’t care that one day this worm would fly.”
There is a scene that takes place in a bus station, where we watch a little girl who anxiously needs to use the restroom. Tayari Jones manages to make us on edge, like a thriller, to see if she will use it responsibly. I anticipated a racist attack against her if she were to go on the bus station floor, and I was anxious to see what would happen next. This tone is meticulously done. “Finally, the colored folks trickled in, drained from the trip but glad to be where it was that they were going. The lady’s husband was dressed smart in jeans, starch-stiff. He dipped his wife and kissed her like that one soldier did in Life Magazine. Then he picked up his daughter who looped her arms around him like a life preserver. Despite everything that led up to it, it was nice to watch.”
That image fragile, defiant, and beautiful captures the essence of Kin. It is a novel about transformation, about becoming, and about the quiet acts of survival that make us who we are.
Do not miss this extraordinary book when it’s released on 2.24.26
A magnificent and unforgettable novel about family and resilience set in the American South on the cusp of the Civil Rights movement. It follows two motherless best friends Vernice and Annie from late teens to early twenties and how not having a mother impacts both of them for years. Upon high school graduation, the girls take different paths in life. They stay in touch through letters until circumstances bring them together again.
This is simply a masterpiece. Tayari Jones writes with both precision and nuance utilizing lush and vibrant prose that completely immerses the reader in this dual POV story. The epistolary aspect of the novel is brilliant and adds another layer of richness to it. The characters are fully fleshed and memorable, including the supporting characters. The use of setting, time and place give the reader insight into segregation, race, class, women's issues and civil rights. I loved reading this book which will continue to stay with me for a long time. The exploration of mothers and daughters, grief and loss, friendship and family is masterful. I highly recommend this novel. Tayari Jones you have a new fan and I plan to read your backlist as well.
Many thanks to NetGalley; Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage & Anchor; and Tayari Jones for an advance reader's copy. All opinions are my own.
3.5⭐️ Whew! This was a ride. At first I didn’t know what kind of ride I was on-I was just on it. As the story progressed, I was able to understand the underlying meaning of it all. Life is all about the choices we make with the hands we’re dealt. Told in alternating POVs from Annie and Vernice, this story is about two motherless girls from the Deep South that were both dealt an unfair deal at life. Their original circumstances were similar, but the paths they chose were totally different. This story was beautifully written, but I will say that the pacing felt off at times. The middle portion was toughest part of the book to get through as it read extremely slow and had a tad bit of repetitiveness that seemed used simply as a filler. Nevertheless, this story has a deeper tone and I could have missed some impactful messages had I rushed through. Being considered “the next of kin” doesn’t always mean the closest family member. It can be that one unrelated person in your life that knows the the WHOLE you-inside and out 💔👩🏾🤝👩🏽
**Thank you NetGalley for this arc in exchange for an honest review.
This book was a slow start for me. In the beginning, the pacing felt deliberate to the point of being difficult, and I struggled to understand where the story was taking me or how I was meant to connect with the writing. But as the book unfolded, it became something deeply heartfelt and emotionally powerful.
My experience shifted as I began to truly know the characters. Although their lives were very different from mine, set during segregation and shaped by experiences far removed from my own, their humanity bridged that gap. Their emotions, relationships, longings, and heartbreak made them feel real and relatable in ways that transcended time and circumstance.
The turning point for me came when Annie began writing letters after arriving in Memphis. Those letters unlocked the emotional core of the story. It was in those moments that the characters’ humanness came fully into focus, and I found myself deeply connected to them. From there on, I was completely invested.
At its heart, this is a story about relationships and family. It explores the deep human need for love, the ache that forms when that love is absent, and the ways people seek belonging and identity through one another. The friendships in this book are especially moving. By the end, their bond felt less like friendship and more like sisterhood, forged through shared history, pain, loyalty, and love.
The ending devastated me. It was sad in a way that felt honest rather than manipulative, and I found myself sobbing as I finished the final chapters. The emotional payoff was profound.
This is not a fast-paced novel, and it won’t be for readers looking for constant momentum. But for those who are ready for a deep, emotional story that explores love, grief, identity, and belonging, this book delivers something lasting. It broke me in the best way, because by the end, I truly felt the weight and beauty of the connections these characters shared.
Content Note: This book includes a same-sex relationship and themes of questioning sexual identity. It did not stop me from appreciating the depth and emotional impact of the story, and it was not descriptive or graphic.
PUBLISH DATE: Feb 24 2026 BOOK TITLE: Kin AUTHOR: Tayari Jones PUBLISHER: Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage, and Anchor | Knopf FORMAT: ebook PAGES: 368
I received a complimentary digital ARC (Advanced Reader Copy) of this book via NetGalley. Thank you to the publisher and the author for the opportunity to read and review this title prior to publication. As always, the opinions expressed in this review are my own.
This is a beautiful and amazing novel from an author I am a huge fan of. I was captivated by the relationship between Vernice and Annie and their plight is relatable in so many ways. An amazing look at what it is to be a black woman in the world while navigating grief, trauma, friendships, family, hardship, The characters are so complex yet so well explained to the reader. The writing is beautiful as always and this is certainly a book with a plot that will stick with me for a long time. Realistic and raw - this book is meant to be devoured. I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
I had high expectations for this because I read and loved An American Marriage when it first came out nearly a decade ago now. That novel also employed multiple perspectives, though I felt that their unique voices grew stronger as the story went on. Similarly, this new one out on February 24th follows two women–Vernice (“Niecy”) and Annie–childhood best friends from Jim Crow era Louisiana who grow up without mothers, a wound that deeply impacts them in different ways throughout the course of their lives.
Tayari Jones does a great job painting the plights of these two women in a time and place where their identities didn’t allow them as much agency in the wider world. They do what they have to to survive and get their needs met, whether that’s physical, financial, or emotional. They are complex individuals with secrets, shames, passions, and desires and I think over the course of the novel you really grow to love them as people.
For me, the story or ‘plot’ was a bit too loose and meandering at times. I think I expected, from the description, for this book to have a bit more narrative thrust beyond watching two women grow up and into their own people, each dealing with their motherlessness in unique ways. It’s much more slice of life as we witness how they seek out things to fill the holes in themselves, and how that affects their various relationships: to family, to each other, and to themselves. Readers who enjoy strong historical settings, compelling fiction about female friendship, and rich character work will definitely find a lot to love in this one!
Tayari Jones’s latest novel is a beautifully rendered story of two motherless daughters – self-named “cradle friends” -- raised together in the small town of Honeysuckle, Louisiana who, despite growing apart and living entirely contrasting lives as adults, manage to maintain their lifelong friendship and sisterhood truly through thick and thin.
After her mother’s death at the hands of her father, Vernice (Niecy) was taken in by her Aunt Irene (her mother’s sister) and raised to be a refined young lady who not only ends up attending Spelman College (one of the most elite schools for Black women), but also marries into a powerful and rich family where she finally gets to experience the “motherly love” that she had been yearning for since childhood. Annie, on the other hand, experiences a completely different fate as she longs to find the mother who abandoned her as a baby, leaving her to be raised by her grandmother. When she inadvertently stumbles across a potential address for her mother, Annie sets off on a perilous journey that takes her on what is essentially a wild goose chase across the American South, searching for her mother while also experiencing love and friendship in the process.
The story is told through the alternating first-person perspectives of Niecy and Annie, and I have to say that this structure worked really well because as a reader, I felt as though I was experiencing everything alongside both women. Jones has a wonderful way of writing unforgettable characters whom we can’t help but root for and love, despite their obvious shortcomings, and this was definitely the case with Niecy and Annie. I love the strong bond between these two characters and the “kinship” they shared despite not being related by blood (there’s a scene late in the book where Niecy refers to Annie as “family” – reading that honestly made me cry). Jones is a masterful writer who has the unique ability of taking a complex theme and weaving an emotionally rich, nuanced story that balances both humor and heartbreak in a powerful and moving way. With the exception of the ending, which gutted me (it was hard not to cry given how invested I was in these characters), the rest of the story was well-balanced on the emotional front (in terms of being both heartwarming and heartbreaking), while also giving us a realistic view of what it means to be a Black woman living in the South during the 1950s and 60s.
This book is getting a lot of buzz (it was recently chosen for Oprah’s Book Club) and deservedly so, in my opinion. Definitely prioritize this one if you get a chance to pick it up – it is truly a wonderful read!
As Canadian Jen said to me ….”your kin was delivering kin.” Timing is everything.
I did have a new granddaughter 🎀 this week so I initially didn’t have the time to sink my literacy teeth into this. Then one night I read two hours straight and I was hooked. Writing - next level! I have quite a few pages annotated.
This takes place in Honeysuckle, Louisiana. If you don’t know what honeysuckle looks like just look at the beautiful cover. We meet Vernice and Annie, two motherless daughters being raised by other family members. Their lives diverge into very different path yet they remain crib mates…. Soul sisters.
Along their journeys we see the complexity of segregation in the Deep South. We begin to understand how it takes all kin, a whole village to raise our children. I loved the friendship of these two. I, too, have a lifelong best friend so it was very accurate in how deep a friendship can be.
Full of emotion and that ending. 🤯 ♥️ this will be in my top 10 this year.
An unforgettable story of resilience and found family that lingers long after the final page.
A powerful work of historical fiction set in the 1950s and ’60s South, Kin unfolds against the backdrop of the social change leading up to the Civil Rights Movement. We meet Vernice and Annie, whose special bond begins in the cradle and carries through their lives. Both women long for the kind of motherly love they have never truly known.
As they grow into young women and head in different directions, living vastly different lives, I became fully invested in their story. Their paths diverge, their lifestyles contrast sharply, yet they never lose sight of the deep love they share for one another. A devastating situation ultimately brings them back together in a way that is both beautiful and shocking.
The dual POV structure works exceptionally well here, allowing the reader to fully understand each woman’s inner world. The epistolary elements—letters sprinkled throughout the novel—create an even deeper sense of intimacy and connection with the characters. I was especially drawn to Annie’s journey, which pulls her into a world filled with danger and adversity, brimming with life and adventure, and ultimately becomes a fight for survival.
Jones’s writing is haunting and intimate—clear, reflective, and marked by emotional restraint and intellectual clarity. The feeling of being unlovable lingers throughout the novel and is carried by many of its characters, making their struggles feel deeply human and achingly real.
If you enjoy books about found family, complex relationships, messy family dynamics, tragedy, and resilience, this is a must-read. Tayari Jones has crafted a brilliant, soul-stirring story that will stay with you long after the final page. This was my first time reading her work, and it certainly won’t be my last.
What does it mean to be family? How does abandonment shape who we become? Can love—especially maternal love—be replaced, reimagined, or reclaimed?
Thank you to NetGalley and Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage, and Anchor | Knopf for the eARC.
Klay Thompson playing in Game 6’s, Beyoncé dropping surprise albums, Tayari Jones writing characters. Those moments when you witness the best cook, that’s this.
I haven’t loved a book this much in a while. The type of book I wanted to immediately run back at page 1. And shit, I might even do it.
Here’s why: -The narrator’s voice is astounding. She captures Niecy and Annie over shifting seasons as kids, teens, and adults perfectly.
-It’s efficient in its profundity. Every sentence felt carefully placed, yet never overdone. And every 150th sentence there’d be some deep, Southern generational passing down on a front porch type wisdom that stopped me in my tracks.
-It’s sharp. Not exactly funny, but filled with character types that we all know and can’t help but make you smile in their accuracy.
Read this when it comes out February 24th—unless you hate incredible books, then do whatever you want.
Kin is absolutely going to be a standout historical/literary fiction book of the year!! A beautiful, emotional story about motherhood, women, female friendships, and how we make choices based on the cards we are dealt in life. I had a feeling this book could have a tragic ending but BOY did I not expect to end this book crying, overwhelmed with how much I had grown to love and root for Vernice and Annie 🥺 Thank you so much to Knopf for the free early copy!! 🤍
Kin follows Vernice and Annie, two Southern Black girls, who have been best friends and inseparable since birth. Their main connection? They both are motherless, adrift in a world where they are convinced being raised without knowing their mother has marred them. Vernice’s mom was tragically killed when she was a baby, and Annie’s mom disappeared and left her with her grandmother. Throughout the book, Vernice and Annie leave their small town, take different paths in life, but are still haunted by their missing mothers.
I felt myself drawn into this story from the beginning, captivated by the lives of Vernice and Annie. Especially as their stories deviated and they each took different life paths, it was so interesting to see how two young Black girls from the same place, raised with the same missing piece in their family, could end up living such different lives. Vernice goes down the path of getting an education and becomes swept up in a more high society family. Annie cannot move on from her missing mother, and finds her entire life dictated by the ghost of her mother and her determination to find her.
Kin explores so many important themes, including racism, queer relationships, the power of female friendships, daughters raised without a mother, and the power of our choices. I felt so swept up in the story as we waited to find out whether Annie would find her mother and how Vernice and Annie would be reunited. Above all, I loved the female friendship of Vernice and Annie and how much they cared for each other.
As a daughter of a southern Black family, this book’s words felt like a warm hug from the women who came before me. As modern as I am, there’s something so comforting about those old down south adages that almost make sense but kind of don’t that just make me think of my own mama and her mama, too.
Needless to say. I loved this book and couldn’t put it down. I was completely rapt by these two divergent paths Annie and Niecey took. The books told from their separate POVs and the voices are so distinct, even without looking at the chapter titles, you know exactly who is talking. The prose was so beautiful, I was brought to tears several times, happy and sad alike. Even though fiction, it’s based so much in the actual happenings of the time; it just as easily could be a true story. The south felt like a character of its own: I could feel the mugginess of Mississippi, the bustle of Black Atlanta.
I felt so much for each of them and it really goes to show just how easy life can be different from one person to the next who come from very similiar upbringings. Annie spent her whole life chasing a mother that she didn’t even get to live while Niecey sought to prove that she was more than a motherless child people looked at her as. While both girls ended up in different places, they were forever bonded by that intrinsic need for love & they found it with one another; sadly, this wasn’t enough for them entirely. The ending felt resolute while also leaving a lot to be imagined. I found myself closing the book and wishing nothing but the best for these two girls who don’t actually exist but could’ve just as easily been my own kin.
As always, Tayari Jone's truly delivers with her story telling. This story was extremely captivating and invoked a lot of emotions out of me. I was so stressed for Annie and Vernice. It truly shows the complexities of womanhood and relationships with others. True Kinship. And not just between them, but all throughout the book as they formed new bonds.
This was a heart wrenching story, but also so fascinating to see them grow and how their lives change as they go in opposite directions . Despite their new paths on their own, you can definitely see how life without their mothers has truly impacted them in life. This books really reminds me of why I love fiction because the empathy I felt for these fictional girls was huge! I adored them and cared for them deeply as they try to navigating their way through the world with and without each other. This book moved me, but it was so heartbreaking.
Two motherless daughters, two different life paths. I loved this book. The way Vernice and Annie stayed each other’s best friend and sister throughout their lives was so inspiring. If you love exploring sisterhood, friendship, found family, and love in all forms then this is the book for you.
A special thank you to NetGalley and Knopf for the ARC.
Kin is an emotional, character-driven novel that has stayed with me after I finished. The story explores sisterhood, found family, self-discovery, racism, and segregation, set against the backdrop of the Jim Crow South.
The novel follows Vernice and Annie, who have known each other since they were babies and grow up without mothers. Though raised side by side, their lives take very different paths as they leave home in search of independence, belonging, and identity. The book alternates between their perspectives, giving readers a picture of how their experiences, choices, and circumstances shape their lives.
Tayari Jones does an excellent job with storytelling, creating rich, emotionally grounded characters. While I found the novel moving, I did wish there had been a bit more at the ending. Even so, this was a powerful and thoughtful read that I would happily recommend.
This is a novel about mothers and daughters, mothering the motherless and finding love in sisterhood and friendship. It starts with an orphaned black baby girl and an abandoned black baby girl in the American South and we follow these two cradle friends into adulthood in alternating chapters. It’s all classic Tayari Jones territory. I always want to spend time with characters created and conjured by Tayari Jones. I want to learn their speech mannerisms and turns of phrase, and follow them where they go. She draws such rich characters and the stakes are always so high. This is a fitting follow up to An American Marriage.
Kin is aptly named as it explores the friendship/found sisterhood of two motherless girls from birth to adulthood. The book provides depth to the vast setting of the American South, moving between Louisiana, Mississippi and Georgia, from segregated busses to college, from rural poverty to a thriving Black upper-middle class. While the friendship between Niecy and Annie grounds the story, much of the book is spent on their separate journeys as Annie looks to find her deadbeat mother and Niecy finds a new life at Spelman. With this divergence, we encounter a cast of side characters that are also well-fleshed manifestations of the various lives available to Black southerners at the time.
As I have recently been revisiting Adrienne Rich's concept of the lesbian continuum, I found a lot of overlap with this story. Beyond the two main characters, there are many instances of homosocial bonds among women that land on various places on that continuum anywhere between kinship and romantic love.
I highly recommend this for folks who like historical fiction about found family, social mobility, and challenging relationships.
Thank you to the publisher and Net Galley for the advanced reader copy of Kin.
Tayari Jones has a brilliant way with words. Kin speaks to the human desire for love, understanding, and acceptance. This coming of age story follows Niecy and Annie, two motherless girls, that form an impenetrable bond from childhood — a kinship. One loses their mother to death (murder/suicide) and the other from abandonment. Both grapple with their paths and realities in different ways as a result of this maternal absence. The girls become women but not without consequence.
I thoroughly enjoyed the supporting characters in this novel — especially Aunt Irene, Lulabelle, and Babydoll.
I struggled with the pacing of this story quite a bit. The beginning and end were great, but the middle was a slog to get through.
This story is more than friendship… it’s survival, So many things and tidbits conjoined together for so many circles of conversations that need to be had today… yesterday… and tomorrow. Just write Niecy… I’m the one who gave her that name 😩😩😭😭😭 - Tayari Jones, Kin (Why am I a wreck? How do people not read books mannnn they be so good 😫😫😫)
From the bestselling, award-winning author of An American Marriage comes a tale of sisterhood, mothers, and daughters in the American South. Vernice and Anne are two motherless girls who grow up as best friends in Honeysuckle, Louisiana, but whose lives are set on very different trajectories. Vernice eventually goes to Spelman, where she enters into a world of affluent and connected Black women. And then there's Anne. The hole left by her mother's absence sends her on an all-consuming journey, which takes her down a road of love and hardship. Throughout it all, we see the various permutations and complexities of women and girls in community. —Erica Ezeifedi