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Swift River

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It’s the summer of 1987 in Swift River, and Diamond Newberry is learning how to drive. Ever since her Pop disappeared seven years ago, she and her mother hitchhike everywhere they go. But that’s not the only reason Diamond stands out: she’s teased relentlessly about her weight, and since Pop’s been gone, she is the only Black person in all of Swift River. This summer, Ma is determined to declare Pop legally dead so that they can collect his life insurance money, get their house back from the bank, and finally move on.

But when Diamond receives a letter from a relative she’s never met, key elements of Pop’s life are uncovered, and she is introduced to two generations of African American Newberry women, whose lives span the 20th century and reveal a much larger picture of prejudice and abandonment, of love and devotion. As pieces of their shared past become clearer, Diamond gains a sense of her place in the world and in her family. But how will what she’s learned of the past change her future?

A story of first friendships, family secrets, and finding the courage to let go, Swift River is a sensational debut about how history shapes us and heralds the arrival of a major new literary talent.

304 pages, Hardcover

First published June 4, 2024

About the author

Essie J. Chambers

1 book174 followers
Essie Chambers earned her MFA in creative writing from Columbia University and has received fellowships from the MacDowell, Vermont Studio Center, and Baldwin for the Arts. A former film and television executive, she was a producer on the documentary Descendant, which was released by the Obamas’ Higher Ground production company and Netflix in 2022. Swift River is her debut novel.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 445 reviews
Profile Image for Lisa of Troy.
743 reviews6,138 followers
May 22, 2024
As currently written, this book doesn’t make any sense to me.

The premise of the book is that seven years ago, Diamond’s father (“Pop”) disappears—only his shoes, ID, and some money are left behind on the banks of Swift River. Now, Diamond’s mom wants to have Pop declared dead to claims his life insurance money. Two sub-plots occur where Diamond strikes up communication with her father’s family, and Diamond suddenly forms a friendship with Shelley, someone she has known for years.

Swift River initially started off strong, but according to my notes, “the ending really sucks.”

Now, this comes from Chapter 3 out of 25 but might be considered a spoiler.

While the letters from Aunt Lena shed more light on the town’s history, they don’t provide any clues as to Pop’s whereabouts or what likely happened to him. The mystery plot, the main plot, seems to be dropped, and the progress is poorly benchmarked.

The ending regarding Shelley needs to be rewritten—it doesn’t carry an emotional punch, and it isn’t memorable.

Finally, the more I think about this book, the more questions that I have and not in a good way:

-Why would Mom want to stay in Swift River? She has poor job prospects, the town is hostile, Diamond has no friends, no availability of buses, no family in the area.
-What about Diamond’s bike accident and knee?
-What happened to Rick?
-Big spoiler question:

*Thanks, NetGalley, for a free copy of this book in exchange for my fair and honest opinion.


The Green Light at the End of the Dock (How much I spent):
Electronic text – Free/Nada/Zilch through NetGalley provided by publisher

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Profile Image for Nilufer Ozmekik.
2,611 reviews53.1k followers
July 2, 2024
This poignant and engaging coming-of-age narrative delves deep into the life of Diamond Newberry, a young Black girl grappling with the complexities of identity and belonging. Born into a town scarred by the legacy of historical injustices and haunted by the unresolved disappearance of her father, Diamond finds herself caught between the pain of the past and the uncertainty of the future.

Raised by her white mother amidst the harsh realities of poverty and racial discrimination, Diamond struggles to find her place in a community that often overlooks or marginalizes her. Her desire to break free from the constraints of her circumstances is palpable, yet she feels tethered to her hometown by the weight of unresolved trauma and unanswered questions about her father's fate.

As Diamond navigates the challenges of adolescence, she is confronted with the harsh realities of systemic racism and economic hardship, further complicating her search for self-discovery and acceptance. Despite the odds stacked against her, Diamond refuses to be defined by her circumstances, yearning for a sense of agency and autonomy in a world that often feels indifferent to her struggles.

When she receives letters from her estranged aunt, Diamond embarks on a journey of self-discovery, delving into her family's complex history in search of answers and connection. Through these letters, she uncovers untold stories of resilience, strength, and survival within the African American Newberry community, offering her a newfound sense of purpose and belonging.

As Diamond navigates the complexities of family dynamics, racial identity, and personal growth, she finds solace and support in unexpected places. Through the lens of her own experiences, she begins to understand the profound impact of history on her present reality, and the power of resilience in shaping her future.

This powerful and thought-provoking narrative resonates with readers through its nuanced exploration of identity, community, and the enduring legacy of systemic injustice. Through Diamond's journey, readers are reminded of the importance of confronting the past, embracing the present, and charting a path toward a more hopeful future.

Many thanks to NetGalley and Simon&Schuster for sharing this powerful book’s digital reviewer copy with me in exchange my honest thoughts.

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Profile Image for Paige (semi-hiatus).
140 reviews949 followers
Currently reading
June 18, 2024
Another day, another arc to catch up on 😭 this one sounds so good for my historical fiction girlies - let's hope it delivers 🤞🏻

Thank you Hachette Australia & New Zealand and Netgalley for the arc in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Karren  Sandercock .
1,030 reviews254 followers
June 1, 2024
1987, Diamond Newberry is sixteen years old, extremely over weight and lonely and she’s the only biracial person in Swift River. Diamond lives with her mother Anna, she has a drug habit and hasn’t been the same since her husband Robert and Diamond’s father went missing seven years ago. Anna and Diamond struggle to make ends meet, they hitch rides into town and Anna is waiting for Robert to be declared legally deceased and claim his insurance money.

Diamond has been secretly saving up to take driving lessons as her mum doesn’t want her to learn, here she meets Shelly and the only friend she has and around the same time Diamond receives a letter from her father’s estranged Aunt Lena, a lady she has never met and she writes about Robert's childhood and the Newberry family history. Diamond discovers she had a Great-Aunt Clara and she was a mid-wife in the mill Town of Swift River in the early 1900’s, and like Diamond she was the only coloured person.

I received a copy Essie J. Chambers debut novel Swift River from the publisher and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Told from the points of view of three Newberry women, the story jumps around a lot and I must admit I found it confusing and at times hard to follow and I’m not sure if I really got the meaning of the narrative and pieced all together correctly?

The family certainly had a lot of secrets, and Diamond loved her father, she wasn’t ready to move on and then she changes her mind. I wondered did Robert really die and stage his own death by the banks of the river and possibly?

A story about racism and prejudice, love and loss, and comfort eating and dysfunctional families. With a small amount of humour added and I did find it hilarious when Diamond cleaned her bike and to make sure it was stolen and three stars from me. Please read the book to make up your own mind, I could have missed something important, despite rereading parts of it and taking notes and it’s released on the 11th of June 2024.
Profile Image for Cheri.
1,942 reviews2,801 followers
April 3, 2024
4.5 Stars

This story revolves around young Diamond Newberry, who shares some moments of happiness in her younger years, her insecurities over her weight, her life before her father disappears, and the years that follow. Life had always seemed different, especially in her younger years, but it seems her family always gets attention because Diamond’s father is African American, and her mother is not. When her father disappears, rumours abound, while the most prominent one suggests that he drowned. All these combined just add to her insecurities, which become a weight that is heavier on her shoulders than an already insecure teenage girl should have to handle.

This goes back and forth in time as old memories surface, giving a glimpse into their families lives in the ‘before’ time.

Diamond has always felt like an outsider, but as she will soon be eligible to apply to get a drivers license, which she plans to do without sharing that with her mother, she joins a friend in taking driving lessons from one of the school faculty, which proves to be…interesting.

There are many flashbacks to the past, moments when her mother and father took her places that come back to in as she tries to navigate the new life her mother and her now have to come to terms with. Old letters from the past, balanced against the present, begin to add a new element to her thoughts on the future. A way to escape the sadness of the past,

A heartrending and moving story of family, the traumatic teenage years made even more difficult as she navigates letting go of the heartbreak of the loss of her father, and finding the path to her future.


Pub Date: June 4, 2024

Many thanks for the ARC provided by Simon & Schuster
Profile Image for Barbara.
1,539 reviews5,154 followers
June 20, 2024


It's summer 1987, and in the New England town of Swift River, sixteen-year-old Diamond Newberry is troubled as usual. Ever since Diamond's father, Robert Newberry, disappeared seven years ago, she's the only Black person in town. Diamond is lonely and overweight, and she observes, "I am so fat I can't ride my bike anymore, so I let it get stolen on purpose....The bruises and stinging raspberries all over my body from weekly falls are constant reminders that the bike doesn't want me anymore."



Diamond lives with her mother, a White woman named Annabelle (Anna), who's very loving, but inept and addicted to prescription pills.



Since Anna's husband Robert has been gone for seven years, she hopes to get a death certificate, for the insurance money. Anna has a police report saying Robert's shoes, wallet, and keys were found beside the fast moving Swift River, but Anna hasn't filled out the proper papers, doesn't have witness statements, hasn't put a death notice in the papers, etc. So Anna has to go back and get her ducks in a row.



It's not clear whether Robert is dead or alive, but he vanished after being accused of theft, and after the police had taken to constantly driving by the house. Many people have reported seeing Robert here or there, but Diamond puts it down to racism - to White people being unable to distinguish one Black man from another.



Diamond and her Ma live in a dilapidated house with Robert's battered car still in the yard, but Anna doesn't drive and she and Diamond have to hitchhike or walk everywhere - including the Goodwill store where they buy their clothes.



Diamond has dreams though, and admits, "By the time I turn seventeen I want: a birthday party with German chocolate cake and friends, new clothes with the store smell still in them, [and] shoes that fit. I imagine leaving this place, leaving Ma. That thought hurts too much and I pinch it down to nothing." Still, Diamond is saving money from her part-time cleaning job at the Tee Pee Motel, and she's secretly signed up for Driver's Ed - to get her driver's license.



In the midst of this angst, Diamond gets a package from her Auntie Lena, whom she's never met. The package contains some keepsakes and a letter in which Auntie Lena says she's a nurse based in Atlanta, but is currently living in Woodville, Georgia. There she manages Newberry Fine Fabrics, the family business established way back in 1915, when the Newberrys migrated from Swift River to Woodville.



Diamond and Auntie Lena embark on a correspondence, and Diamond learns a lot about her history and her relatives. Auntie Lena says she and Diamond's father Robert grew up in Woodville together until the boy was seven-years-old. At that time, Robert's father took him up to Swift River, to be raised by Aunt Clara. When Robert grew up he met Anna in Swift River, and they fell in love, got married, and had Diamond.



The story shifts around between three time periods: 1987, 1915, and 1980.

1987
In 1987, Diamond is living with her doting mother whom she both loves and from whom she wants to escape. In short, Diamond wants to live in a place with people who look like her. Diamond also dreams of going to college and being a botanist. Diamond becomes friends with a Driver's Ed classmate named Shelly, who's 'a loose girl' with a good heart.



Diamond and Shelly's interactions with the driving teacher, Mr. Jimmy, are quirky and - for Shelly - inappropriate.



1915
In 1915, toxic discrimination leads to an exodus of all Black people from Swift River, in an incident called 'The Leaving.'



The ONLY Black person who remains in Swift River is Aunt Clara, an apprentice to the local doctor, who says he'll help her go to medical school at Howard University. Aunt Clara's voice and story are heard in letters she sends to her sister (Auntie Lena's mother) in Georgia.



1980
In 1980, nine-year-old Diamond and her parents take a trip south and have some trouble in town. Later that year, Robert disappears.

In the course of the story we learn about the historic racism in Swift River, which in 1915, was a 'sundown town.'



At that time, Swift River had signs all over town reading, "N....., don't let the sun go down on you in Swift River."



Things are less toxic in 1987, though Diamond is uncomfortable being the only Black person in Swift River. I was surprised that Robert and Anna, an interracial couple, (apparently) didn't experience overt discrimination on that score. Diamond IS called a name by a classmate in elementary school, which causes a small brouhaha.

The story has humor and heart, one of the high points being Diamond's family, who love one another, but have a hard time getting by in difficult circumstances. For one thing, Ma and Pop disagree about visiting relatives in Georgia. It's good to see Diamond mature over the course of the story, and take charge of her life.



Swift River was Jenna Bush Hager's June, 2024 'Book Club Pick.' Hager noted, "Swift River is a story filled with secrets: community secrets and family secrets. It is a book that made me cry and then filled me with enormous hope."

I enjoyed this well-written, enlightening book. Highly recommended.

Thanks to Netgalley, Essie Chambers, and Simon and Shuster for a copy of the book.

You can follow my reviews at https://reviewsbybarbsaffer.blogspot.com
Profile Image for Ellery Adams.
Author 63 books4,658 followers
April 28, 2024
I’d never heard of the Sundown Laws that enforced a curfew on the Black residents of entire towns. The post Civil War North was supposed to be a place of refuge for runaway slaves and free Blacks, but after reading this book, I can see how racism threatened the freedom and opportunities of generations of African Americans.

I loved Diamond, the young heroine of this novel, and would recommend it to anyone who enjoys a coming-of-age story.
Profile Image for Tammy.
1,085 reviews256 followers
June 7, 2024
*Read with Jenna June 2024 book pick.

SWIFT RIVER is about a young girl (Diamond Newberry, 16) coming into her own. Being biracial, poor, overweight and friendless doesn’t quite fit the mold of her peers, or the townspeople for that matter being she’s the only Black resident in town since her Pop disappeared (shoes/items found) on the edge of the local river.. 7 years earlier. Add to the fact that Swift River, a small mill town in rural New England, was once a “sundown town,” .. that legacy of racial discrimination still runs deep.

Her Ma is now trying to get Pop declared legally dead in order to collect his life insurance to buy their home. She wants to learn to drive (secret kept from Ma) to leave Swift River. She also wants to find her Pop’s people.. her people. A paternal cousin Lena writes to her from Pop’s birthplace in Georgia giving her insight into her family line, and she finds a new friendship (and misadventures!!) with a white classmate who also feels the need to leave.

The alternating timelines flash back from the present, to Diamond as a little girl with her Pop in the 1980s, and even goes further back to 1915, through handwritten letters from her paternal great Aunt Clara who was the only Black remaining in town after an event called “The Leaving” of the entire Black community. All driven out due to the heinous practices as a “sundown town.”

[“sundown town” refers to a town where a predominantly white community excludes Black people with laws, harassment, terrorism, or violence - - the name comes from signs that were often posted right at the welcome sign, warning Black people that if they were caught after sunset, they might be killed.]

Chambers explores family dynamics, identity, body image, acceptance, bullying, racism and provides an insightful look into generational trauma. I loved Diamond’s character, she’s quite resilient and downright gutsy. Chambers shows how Diamond feels like an outsider, a universal experience we’ve all felt. Emotional. 4.5 stars — Pub. 6/4/24
Profile Image for Haley Graham.
60 reviews1,846 followers
June 25, 2024
Thank you to Essie Chambers and Simon & Schuster for the copy of this book!
I love a debut novel. I think it's so fun to meet an author right when they start out in their career and watch them grow into their own unique voice: the thing with this one is that it certainly didn't feel like a debut novel to me. Essie Chambers has a voice I can only think to describe as timeless. She created such dimensional characters and didn't sacrifice plot. She created unique voices that felt true and honest. Quite honestly, I was wary given that it was a 'Reads with Jenna' book (NO HATE, I PROMISE. I just feel like those book club books are always 3 stars average for me??) but it truly blew me away. Highly, highly recommend this one!
Profile Image for Suzanne.
600 reviews162 followers
July 9, 2024
I was actually attracted to this book because of the timeline and there was a missing person involved. It was so much more than that. Its a coming of age story along with dyfunctional family with a lot of secrets. What I enjoyed most about this book was the main character Diamond. I connected with her and her emotions and what she was going through. With this book you really need to be on the ball as the people and timeline goes back and forth frequently.
Profile Image for Shelby (allthebooksalltheways).
803 reviews132 followers
June 5, 2024
Thank you #partners @simonbooks @simonaudio & @librofm for my #gifted copies. 💕 #simonbooksbuddy

Swift River
Essie Chambers
6/4

🔖 Read with Jenna Book Club pick

This debut coming-of-age novel follows Diamond Newberry, the only Black resident of Swift River since her father's disappearance seven years ago. Poor, overweight, and born to a white mother and Black father, Diamond is no stranger to hardship. As she grapples with the unknown circumstances of her Pop's disappearance, and the myriad complexities of growing up in Swift River — with it's legacy of racism and white supremacy — Diamond longs to find her place, her people, and her peace. At its core, this is a novel of identity, belonging, self-discovery, and complicated relationships, set within an old New England sundown town.

Compelling, engaging, and exquisitely written, Swift River is a must read! Chambers beautifully captures the turbulence and triumphs of growing up, giving readers an insightful, multilayered narrative, with richly drawn characters, and captivating prose. Chambers is a skilled wordsmith, making me pause numerous times to appreciate her use of words.

"Swift River is a valley town. Once the Sun starts to set behind the two ranges that surround us, they look like outstretched, muscly arms, tricking us all into feeling protected. Keeping us from ever leaving."

I love the way the story is told, through alternating timelines (between 1987 and Diamond's childhood with Pop), as well as through letters from her paternal relatives. And I really appreciate the way it all tied together. 💕

🎧 Narrated by a terrific threesome of talented women: Shayna Small (primary narrator), Janina Edwards, and Robin Miles breathe so much life into this story and these characters, making an already-wonderful story even richer and more compelling.

📌 Available now!
Profile Image for Bam cooks the books ;-).
2,066 reviews276 followers
June 10, 2024
*3.5 stars rounded up.

Diamond Newberry is the only black kid growing up in the New England town of Swift River. But that's not her only problem: she's also quite obese and her father, Robert Vaughn Newberry, disappeared when she was seven. So her life has been quite tough; she has no friends and her mother Annabelle hasn't been stable enough to provide decently for them. Now, seven years have passed, and Annabelle's hope is to have Robbie declared dead so she can finally get her hands on his insurance money. THEN all their problems will be solved. But Diamond has other plans. She's been learning to drive and her father's aunt Lena from Georgia has been in secret contact, finally filling in the details about their family, so Diamond is getting a sense of who she really is.

Diamond is an interesting character whose experiences shed light on dealing with racial issues, the problem of weight shaming and a dysfunctional mother-daughter relationship. The story ends leaving us hoping for the best for Diamond.

Many thanks to the author and publisher for providing me with an arc of this debut novel via NetGalley. My review is voluntary and the opinions expressed are my own.
Profile Image for Dianne.
601 reviews1,170 followers
June 21, 2024
This was a bit of a mixed bag for me. I loved the main character, Diamond, with her wry but vulnerable teen-aged narrative voice. I wasn’t as enamored with the epistolary part of the novel, a story-telling device used to provide the history of Diamond’s estranged paternal relatives and the racism they endured. It felt like two different novels with two different purposes, fighting for dominance.

A 3.5 for me, rounding up for the memorable Diamond and her coming-of-age tale. The relationship between Diamond and her mother was particularly well done, and felt absolutely on point.
Profile Image for Kenzie | kenzienoelle.reads.
578 reviews117 followers
May 30, 2024
The premise of this book had me so intrigued!

I really enjoyed the first half of this novel. It felt like a very singular story. A story that I hadn’t read before. A story of “sundown towns,” family history and a biracial girl named Diamond.

Unfortunately, the second half lost me🙁 There was a specific troupe in this book that I just don’t like (message me if you want to know) and that was a me problem. As a whole, the second half felt to rushed and I had so many unanswered questions and I don’t want to say there were plot holes, but it felt like there were plot holes if that makes sense.

Bit of a mixed bag overall.

Thank you so so so much @Simonbooks for the ARC!! Pub date: 6/4/2024.
Profile Image for Ani Alexandrian.
8 reviews3 followers
March 2, 2024
Reading “Swift River” before its full release was truly a gift. This novel further reminds of the beauty in the way words can convey and hold so much. The character-building in this novel was done with such care and honesty that you could feel their joys and sorrows. This novel explored so many realms of life: the highs and lows that coming-of-age and navigating the complexity of one’s identity brings as well as explored the immense impact of intergenerational trauma due to racism, erasure, and historical displacement.

I truly appreciated the structure and inclusion of the letters from Diamond’s relatives. This novel reminded me of the power of letter writing and how they serve to document lived realities as well as bring healing and understanding to loved ones long after one has passed. A letter is a way of affirming life and preserving both its beauties and horrors. I look forward to more of Essie Chamber’s writing and am deeply grateful this novel exists.

****Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an ARC in exchange for my honest review****
Profile Image for Novel Visits.
892 reviews276 followers
June 13, 2024
Author Essie Chambers brings us an unforgettable character in her debut novel 𝗦𝗪𝗜𝗙𝗧 𝗥𝗜𝗩𝗘𝗥. It’s 1987 and nothing about Diamond Newberry’s life is easy. In the seven years since her father vanished she’s been the only Black person in her small New England town. Her mom is a mess, barely able to keep them afloat. Over the years Diamond has gained more and more weight and it’s now to the point where it’s impacting her day to day life. Without any real friends, the one thing Diamond dreams of is getting her driver’s license. She longs for escape, but to where she’s unclear.⁣⁣
⁣⁣
“That’s how it came to me: I may be too fat for my bike, but I’m going to learn how to drive. I haven’t told Ma. The thought is like a puddle with a river inside it.”⁣⁣
⁣⁣
Diamond knows there’s a different world out there somewhere, a world where she fits in, a world that makes sense. When she receives a letter from her father’s cousin, Diamond begins to see the legacy of her family and how their struggles and their love paved a path where she now walks.⁣⁣
⁣⁣
All the threads of this story were tied together beautifully. The more I read, the more invested I was in Diamond’s life, and the more I wanted for her. 𝘚𝘸𝘪𝘧𝘵 𝘙𝘪𝘷𝘦𝘳 is an impressive debut and a great choice for the @readwithjenna June pick. I know it’s a story I won’t soon forget and I’m betting many others will feel the same. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️.25⁣⁣
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“Something is happening. The past is gathering itself together, taking a solid shape somewhere I can’t see, like hands on my shoulders from behind.”⁣⁣
⁣⁣
Thanks to @simonbooks for an electronic copy of #SwiftRiver.⁣⁣
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
Author 6 books403 followers
June 13, 2024
This book is just outstanding. If this is her first novel I can’t wait to see what she’s writing in 20 years. It’s a heartbreaking and beautiful story of love, loss, alienation, and the necessity of community. She writes: “our instincts, our deepest intuitions, are really our ancestral memory, our people speaking through us.” I love this concept so much, and this is just one of the little gems she’s planted all throughout the book. I’m calling it - this is the best book of the summer.
Profile Image for AndiReads.
1,320 reviews156 followers
March 13, 2024
It's 1987 and Diamond is learning how to drive in her rural town of Swift River. It's just Diamond and her mom now that "Pop" has disappeared and it's important that Diamond learn to drive to fit in with the school crowd as well as help with family responsibilities. When Diamone receives a letter from an Aunt that she didn't realize existed she is transformed to a new life - a life where she isn't the only African-American in town, a life where she truly has a place in her family.

This story is a heart string puller! I loved Diamond and enjoyed the ride with her as she began to mature and "come of age." The flashback were interesting but Diamond was my favorite. This is a great novel for anyone who is looking to fit in and especially great for the many African American students that find themselves the sole Black learner in a classroom. #simon&schuster #essiechambers #swiftriver
Profile Image for Cassidy.
88 reviews6 followers
July 1, 2024
3.5 ★

“I think about what Swift River would be like if the Black people hadn't left, if it was full of normal, like this family, if roots stretched back to olden days when my people filled the streets and went to church and worked in their gardens and ran a whole mill.“

Swift River is a character-driven coming of age story that follows Diamond. She’s navigating growing up in general, and faces a lot of adversity related to both race and class, being the only black person that lives in her town, after her father’s disappearance. It’s a story of mystery, resilience, loss, family secrets, history, and more.

I think the writing is magnificent. You definitely feel immersed into the story and truly just want to give Diamond a hug. I enjoyed the puzzle pieces clicking together and Diamond finding herself and gaining confidence. It was easy to feel connected to Diamond through the flashbacks and family history that was learned through the letters. That said, the letters and timelines were a bit confusing and difficult for me to follow at times. I wish some of the mysteries had more definitive answers and it was less open-ended (that’s just my personal preference).

Overall a great debut that will leave you thinking about it after.

Content warnings: racism, classism, fatphobia, adult/minor relationship, sexual content, death (of a parent), grief, drug abuse, police hostility
Profile Image for Alena.
951 reviews280 followers
July 17, 2024
I really struggled to get into groove with this debut. I appreciated how stories were interwoven past and present and there were some compelling characters but it lacked urgency for me. I never really felt its beating heart. Interesting and promising but a little flat.
Profile Image for Collette.
99 reviews49 followers
March 7, 2024
Swift River by Essie Chambers is a swirling generational saga describing an absent father and the women who suffer the ripple effect of his disappearance. It opens in 1987 with his now 16-year-old daughter, Diamond Newberry, telling her story as the only black person in her town of Swift River. She and her mother have to hitch rides to get anywhere and are trying to make ends meet after Diamond's dad left them eight years earlier. The storyline dips back into this time, revealing Robbie Newberry’s character and complicated past, as well as the turbulent relationship between he and Diamond’s mom.

Meanwhile, Diamond, who is significantly overweight and isolated, is learning to drive in secret and dreams of breaking free from her drug dependent, co-dependent mother. About this time she gets a letter from a relative who tells her more about her dad’s family and offers Diamond a life-raft at a time she is about to be swallowed up by her life with her mom and their problems. A third timeline in the novel comes in the epistolary story of Diamond’s great-aunt and her life as a midwife working in Swift River after “the leaving,” when all the other blacks in town chose to leave rather than live in fear of their lives.

These three time periods and alternating perspectives of women in the Newberry family make for a captivating story, although I found the storyline around Diamond’s life to be the most engaging. Diamond's character-driven life is nuanced and hard-hitting while the other places and times seem two-dimensional. Chamber's writing is strong and peppered with poignant and original observations. Overall, I enjoyed the journey down Swift River and found myself wishing I could accompany Diamond on the next phase of her life.

Thank you to NetGalley and Simon & Shuster for the opportunity to slip into the lives shared in this touching debut.
Profile Image for Stephanie (aka WW).
878 reviews19 followers
February 10, 2024
16-year-old Diamond Newberry is secretly taking driving lessons in the summer of 1987 in Swift River. She and her Ma have been hitchhiking all over the place since her Pop vanished seven years ago. Diamond faces some sizable (no pun intended) challenges: she is constantly bullied about her weight, and, with her Pop’s disappearance, she is the only Black person left in Swift River. As the story opens, Ma seeks to legally declare Pop dead so that she and Diamond can (finally) get his life insurance money, reclaim their house from the bank, and start a new life.

When Diamond begins getting letters from a relative she has never heard of, she starts to get an idea of where she fits in her family’s history and gains the greater picture of prejudice against her race in Swift River. What Diamond will do with this newfound knowledge will guide her in considering her future options and in refining her relationships with her Ma and her best friend.

I enjoyed this book, but found it hard to follow at times. There was quite a bit of jumping around in time, specifically with the relatives’ letters, and I found it difficult to keep track of it all. The overall gist of the story was clear, however, and I appreciated the ways in which the author brought about an understanding of how family history, familial relationships, and friendships guide us in facing the future. Diamond is a character that I won't soon forget.

Thanks to NetGalley and Simon & Schuster for giving me access to this e-ARC in exchange for my honest opinions.
Profile Image for Amy Ngo.
76 reviews53 followers
February 26, 2024
Swift River follows Diamond and her experience being the only black person in her town. She finds out information about her dead father’s family through letters, which jump from a past and present timeline. I enjoyed following Diamond and watching her learn new things and grow, but I ultimately wasn't too connected with anybody. The story was enjoyable but nothing grasped my attention too much.

This ARC was provided by Net Galley and the publisher Simon & Schuster.
July 1, 2024
Beautiful and heartbreaking all in one. Realistic yet sad family dynamics about a mother and daughter in poverty after loosing the father. Daughter Diamond with serious abandonment issues looking for acceptance in all the wrong places and the mother lost in life trying to stay afloat. Diamond connects with her long lost relatives as she pieces together her true family history that keeps her going and gives her purpose. A story about the struggles of a black woman in a white town and how important family is and the connection of your roots and upbringing.
Profile Image for Shannon.
5,857 reviews330 followers
June 26, 2024
An incredibly moving debut about Diamon, an unforgettable biracial African American girl whose father is the only Black man in a small sundown town in the South. Diamond is fat and since the disappearance of her father years ago, has been living with her white overweight mother and trying to survive on very little money.

Through a dual timeline structure and letters from Diamond's father's sister, we learn more about the other women in her family and the struggles they've gone through living in the South. With Push by Sapphire vibes, Diamond is a character who sticks in your mind and this story was equally heartbreaking as hopeful. Great on audio too and a fantastic book club pick!
Profile Image for Helen.
668 reviews72 followers
April 28, 2024
Swift River takes place in a time when racism was an accepted way of life. Young Diamond Newberry is the main character in this story. She is an overweight teen who was born into a dysfunctional family. Her mother is white and her father is black. During this time an interracial marriage was rare and not accepted well in her community. Her life is filled with sadness and bullying. This is a story of her struggles and her eventual release from her depressing circumstances. Unfortunately for me this book did not hold my interest and it took me a bit too long to finish.
Profile Image for Andrea Gagne.
294 reviews7 followers
March 30, 2024
I am floored that this poignant, heartbreaking, and beautifully crafted book is a debut novel!

Diamond Newburry is a teen girl in a small, fading New England mill town. Since her Pop disappeared in 1980, Diamond is now the only Black girl she knows. She is relentlessly teased for her skin color and her weight, and struggles with her home life where she is raised in poverty by her white mother. In the summer of 1987, when Diamond is 16, she dreams of getting her license and breaking free from her hometown, while her mother tries to get her Pop legally declared dead so they can collect on his life insurance money and finally buy their house back from the bank. That summer, Diamond also begins writing letters back and forth with her father's cousin in Georgia, and begins connecting to the history of the Black side of her family that was lost to her.

The character work in this novel was masterful. Of course, Diamond herself was the standout in the story as she struggled to find herself and keep from disappearing inward under the pressure of her hometown, the bullying and suffocating home life and atrempts to come to terms with her own identity. But also, her parents were their own tragic characters, one of the many examples in life where love isn't enough to keep a relationship from turning toxic under the strain of survival. Diamond's friend Shelley, too, shows another complex story of a young girl trapped under the weight of her family, trying to break free.

The book explored many layers of identity through Diamond, her family, her town, and their history -- race, class, gender, body image, family dynamics. I really liked how the author used the letters from Diamond's aunt as a way to reveal the painful history of her family and of their town. While simple flashbacks also could have accomplished this, the decision to use letters made it feel like the three generations of women were in conversation with one another, which created a sense of connection between the past and present. I thought that was so well done.

I'm normally someone who needs a little more of a plot to drive my reading, and sometimes I did feel things were moving a bit slow, but I did get very emotionally connected to the characters and that kept me invested in finding out how the summer would end for all of them.

4.75 stars 🌟

Thank you to NetGalley and Simon & Schuster for this ARC to read and review.
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