In If We Were Kin, Lisa Beard has crafted a work of urgent beauty, offering readers a powerful exploration of identification and the many ways people come to understand themselves politically. Drawing on a vibrant tradition of Black, Latinx, queer, and trans activism, organizing, and theorizing, Beard moves from civil rights and Black Lives Matter activism to rural southern LGBTQ+ kinship organizations, to migrant justice struggles to far-right political campaigns, crafting a rich and ideologically capacious account of identificatory appeals and what such appeals make possible. Through both methodology and archive, Beard reminds us that the struggle to forge a larger and more just sense of who we are is the democratic challenge of our time.