FINALIST FOR THE 2024 TRILLIUM BOOK AWARD
One of:
CBC's "Best Canadian Fiction of 2023"
Indigo's "Best Books of 2023"
Kobo's "Best Books of 2023"
The Walrus' “Best Books of Fall 2023”
Chatelaine's “Your Official Summer 2023 Reading List”
CBC’s “74 works of Canadian fiction to read in fall 2023”
CBC’s “12 Canadian sci-fi and fantasy novels to escape into this summer”
CBC’s “14 Canadian mystery and crime novels to dive into this summer”
Electric Lit’s “7 Books About Jamaica by Jamaican Authors”
Cityline's October Book Club Pick
Praise for River Mumma:
“River Mumma is a mad-dash hero’s journey of mythical proportions carried out in the span of a single day. It is both a love letter to Toronto and a meditation on ancestor gratitude. A masterclass in fusing cultural stories with current struggles, both internal and global, River Mumma will have you conflicted on whether to speed ahead or slow down to savour the deft writing and unforgettable imagery. Zalika Reid-Benta has created a story that will make you want to live fully, with eyes wide open to take in all the magic around us. There is so much to learn from this book, and so many loveable characters and locales to relish (and a badass spirit you wish you could be more like). Wholly original, remarkably crafted, and unmatched in voice, atmosphere, and action, River Mumma should be on every must-read list this season. I loved this book!”
—Cherie Dimaline, bestselling author of VenCo and Empire of Wild
“River Mumma is a blessing and Zalika Reid-Benta’s talent is a truly special gift. This is a quest novel that maps Jamaican folklore across modern-day Toronto; three young people are sent on a mission by a goddess and if that doesn’t pique your interest then something is very wrong with you.”
—Victor LaValle, award-winning author of The Changeling
“Prepare to be seduced by this book the way Alicia Gale succumbs to the pull of her ancestors' messages. An emotional quest painted with magic realism and folklore and set against the vibrant backdrop of Toronto’s York region, River Mumma is more of the Zalika Reid-Benta magic I’ve been waiting for.”
—Catherine Hernandez, award-winning author of Scarborough the novel and screenwriter of Scarborough the film.
“Zalika Reid-Benta's latest novel moves with the urgency and inevitability of a river. Her shimmering prose and evocative characterizations make it a joy to follow Alicia and her friends on this tense, but powerful journey--not only across Toronto, but into Alicia's own family history. River Mumma is the type of vivid, rich novel I love best. It left me turning pages and pondering possibilities well into the night.”
—Alicia Elliott, author of A Mind Spread Out on the Ground
“River Mumma has everything you want in a great read—magic, adventure and mystery—all with incredible characters you’re rooting for from the very first page.”
—Jael Richardson, author of Gutter Child
“River Mumma is a profoundly moving celebration of kinship, following the journey of a dynamic trio that turn into a family and find ancestry that is at once defining and liberating. It’s funny and colourful, and it paints a nostalgic image of a Toronto where communities create homes, all while specifically honouring Caribbean wit and magic and joy. Zalika Reid-Benta’s writing is riveting; it is meant to entertain and inspire and leave you one step closer to your truth.”
—Téa Mutonji, award-winning author of Shut Up You're Pretty
“River Mumma is a love letter to culture, home, and coming of age—and will spark important, relevant book club conversations, too. What a ride! I loved every moment.”
—Marissa Stapley, New York Times bestselling author of Lucky
“A fast-paced and absorbing adventure steeped in Caribbean folklore and mythology, River Mumma is a treat for the senses. Zalika Reid-Benta does magical realism right—with delicious storytelling and characters both relatable and compelling, plus the best parts of Toronto on display! From patty discourse to TTC transit woes . . . this novel has it all. I enjoyed every page!”
— Uzma Jalaluddin, bestselling author of Much Ado About Nada and Hana Khan Carries On
“With River Mumma, Zalika Reid-Benta entangles realism so real and fantasy so fantastic. The magic of this novel extends beyond the scintillating crafted universe and remarkable quest that our protagonist takes on. It also includes the sparkling dialogue, nuanced characterizations, and absorbing representation of youthful malaise in contemporary Toronto. River Mumma is a necessary book about race, gender, ancestry, colonialism, eco-existentialism, and desire. I’ve not read anything like it!”
—Jenny Heijun Wills, author of Older Sister. Not Necessarily Related.
“A page-turner of a novel that is both funny and poignant, River Mumma magically and seamlessly weaves Jamaican folklore and myth with the winter landscape of Toronto to create a compelling fictional landscape.”
—Shyam Selvadurai, author of Mansions of the Moon
“River Mumma is a luminescent novel! Where liminality lurks in the crevices of dreams, love, friendship—and water, Zalika Reid-Benta delivers us a layered story that is both urgent and satisfying. River Mumma is a vivid, poetic exploration of identity and all the delicate pieces in between.”
—Chelene Knight, author of the Carol Shields Prize long-listed novel, Junie
“Zalika Reid-Benta is a mesmerizing and generous storyteller. I loved this book!”
—Lauren Tamaki, illustrator of Seen and Unseen: What Dorothea Lange, Toyo Miyatake, and Ansel Adams's Photographs Reveal About the Japanese American Incarceration
“From the first page, I knew I was home. River Mumma embodies the duppy stories our grandmothers used to tell us, the stories that shaped and defined us. A powerful and evocative novel weaving threads of magical realism to create a powerful and moving tale about a search for identity. It is a journey–diasporic, ancestral, cultural, and personal–all coming together by the importance of storytelling by a master storyteller.”
—Maurice Broaddus, award-nominated author of Sweep of Stars
“This quirky, fizzy, charming debut surprises and amuses. Reid-Benta writes beautifully, drawing on Caribbean mythologies to create a fast paced and entertaining tale. It's rare to find a novel written with such humour and heart.”
—USA Today bestselling author T. L. Huchu, for the Nommo Award-winning The Library of the Dead
“A generational saga, a big-city survival narrative, a study of diasporic cultural nuances, all wrapped inside a thrilling adventure. Complex, deep and resonant, River Mumma is coming for your heart.”
—Samit Basu, author of The City Inside
“A powerful yet funny, thrilling yet zany exploration of the past and present, a must-read for the end of summer.”
—Toronto Star
“Amid a crash course in Jamaican folklore, Reid-Benta’s novel takes a gleeful swipe at everything from Toronto’s unreliable transit system to the cult of celebrity...But it’s the dialogue—uncontrived, self-aware, and often deeply funny—that drives the story...there are conversations—about priorities, about deadlines—that many of us probably need to be having too.”
—The Walrus
"Reid-Benta’s stunning debut draws on Caribbean myth, horror, and old-school urban fantasy . . . to build a quest tale for the postpandemic generation of the region’s diaspora. It’s a rich and sometimes even dizzying brew that marks the emergence of a powerful new voice."
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“[Reid-Benta’s] deft character development and thoughtful threading of Jamaican history into the plot make for a novel that resonates on many levels and should certainly succeed with readers.”
—Locus
“A race-against-the-clock page-turner with friendship and diasporic community building at its heart, this book is a winner.”
—Booklist (starred review)
“This is a splendid story about ancestry, identity, and creativity.”
—Apple Books Review
“River Mumma is a propulsive read filled with captivating characters, page-turning mystery, and a thoughtful examination of kinship and ancestral ties.”
—Toronto Life
“This story is set in Toronto, but it is Jamaican through and through. . . . It’s an exploration of what “home” means—whether you live on its land or carry it in your heart.”
—Electric Lit