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Raisin in the Sun - genius play that is so highly relevant today
Go tell it on the mountain - James Baldwin Underground Railroad - Colson Whitehead |
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These are all such serious books.
If you like romance, any historical by Beverly Jenkins. She features different aspects of African-American history. Alyssa Cole and Rebekah Weatherspoon are other good authors. If you like thrillers, My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite is interesting. It’s set in Nigeria. |
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Machado de Assis.
Start with “Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas.” |
NP I didn’t really like the main character in Americanah. I found her tone annoying. |
| Sing Unburied Sing by Jesmyn Ward |
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Edward Jones: All Aunt Hager’s Children
Dolen Perkins-Valdez: Take My Hand Tara Stringfellow: Memphis |
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The Mothers and The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett
An American Marriage by Tayari Jones |
| Last PP: also Razorblade Tears by S.A. Crosby |
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The Cross and the Lynching Tree by James H. Cone.
The Autobiography of Malcolm X. |
| So many great suggestions! Thanks PPs (not OP). |
I’m with you on reading more entertaining books. My reading taste is middle-brow at best, and I’m comfortable with that. Agree on My Sister the Serial Killer and Homegoing. Other fiction books I’ve enjoyed in recent years: The Death of Vivek Oji, Luster, The Other Black Girl, Such a Fun Age. There was also a spy thriller from around the same time as My Sister the Serial Killer where the main character goes to Africa (maybe Nigeria?), but I can’t remember the title or author. If you’re okay with depressing but beautiful books, I loved Ruby and Washington Black. On the nonfiction front, Hood Feminism, A Black Woman’s History of the United States, Eloquent Rage, and Tressie McMillam Cotton’s essay book stand out (I’m very bad with names so hope I didn’t mangle the spelling). I also loved The Cook Up, by D Watkins, which is about growing up in Baltimore. |
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This is going way back, but I used to be obsessed with Tina McElroy Ansa. The Hand I Fan With used to be my favorite book. I found a copy in a free library recently and can’t wait to see if I still love this book, since I was a late teen last time I read it.
I love many of the books on the list, but agree that many of them are so serious. This one is lighthearted and just a beautiful story. Many of her books have the same characters/same town and build on each other (but can be read as a standalone IMO). |
Ahhh! For less serious books, I like the mystery series by A.L. Herbert — starting with Murder with Fried Chicken and Waffles. It gets bonus points for being (mostly) set in nearby PG County. The books cam be read as stand-alone mysteries, but I preferred reading them in order. I’m not sure what’s still easily available, but the Blanche White mystery series by Barbara Neely is one of my favorites. Real Men Knit — by Kwana Jackson is another book that I thoroughly enjoyed. Royal Holiday — by Jasmine Guillory is delightful. Very much a Fun Read. For serious fiction, I probably recommend A Lesson Before Dying, by Ernest Gaines more than any other book. bell hooks is another author that I recommend a lot — for people looking for serious nonfiction. |
Oops: I left out the mysteries by Karen Grigsby Bates: Chosen People and plain brown wrapper. I love everything about these books! Everything! |
| The Salt Eaters by Toni Cade Bambara, which I learned about while reading bell hooks. |