Books·Canadian

Story of Your Mother by Chantal Braganza

An essay collection on the complexities of motherhood, identity and migration.

An essay collection on the complexities of motherhood, identity and migration

A book cover that is half purple and half pink coloured with the book title and author's name on it.

In her debut book of essays, Chantal Braganza considers the limits of understanding motherhood as identity or action alone, while reflecting on her upbringing as a daughter of Mexican and Indian immigrants and the first years of raising her two children. Inspired by the thinking of Dionne Brand, Maggie Nelson and Jacqueline Rose, she explores what shapes the things we reach for as we search for our family's place in the world. How do we tell our children who they are when we're still struggling to find that language to describe ourselves?

Braganza weaves dreamlike memoir sections of her childhood — some memories, some myths passed down from her family in Vallarta, Mombasa, London, and Toronto — with urgent essays about migration, identity, and speech. She wrangles with the limits of language — finding that even fluency doesn't guarantee the ability to translate something for your children. She engages with the physicality of motherhood and loss, nourishment and violence. 

The questions that emerge are: Can we believe the people who have given us the story of who we are? And how do we craft that story for our own children?

(From McClelland & Stewart

Story of Your Mother is available in April 2025. 

Chantal Braganza is a Toronto-based writer and editor. Her writing has been featured in the New York Times Magazine, Hazlitt, The Hairpin, the Globe and Mail, Toronto Life, Fashion Magazine and Maisonneuve, among others. She is currently a senior editor at Chatelaine.