February 2026
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    This month I want to read the works of black authors. I know there is a lot out there, but main stream media doesn’t always highlight books by people of color. I’m here for any suggestions! I love sci-fi, thrillers, mystery, some fantasy, and general fiction.

    Some books by black authors I’ve read and loved:

    Parable of the Sower

    Parable of the Talents

    Beloved

    Reformatory

    My Sister the Serial Killer

    Thanks!!

    by Annoying_Rhymes

    15 Comments

    1. adjective_animal_ on

      So far I’ve only read Razorblade Tears by S.A. Cosby, but I see some of his other books recommended as well so he would be a good author to look into! Some other recs:

      – Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi
      – Sky Full of Elephants by Cebo Campbell
      – Chain-Gang All-Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah

    2. For fantasy check out David Anthony Durham’s Acacia.

      Other authors I really like:

      Toni Morrison

      Ben Okri

      Samuel Delany

      Zadie Smith

      Walter Mosley

    3. Literally anything by Colson Whitehead. He won Pulitzer Prize for both Underground Railroad and Nickel Boys. He is a great writer with great range.

    4. BookNotification on

      S.A. Cosby was mentioned. If you listen to audiobooks, be sure to listen to his. Adam Lazarre-White is the narrator and takes them to another level.

      The Wormwood trilogy by Tade Thompson is worth looking for. The first book won a Best Sci-Fi novel at the Arthur C-Clarke awards.

    5. Virtuous_Beetroot on

      SciFi/Fantasy:

      Nnedi Okorafor – Try “Lagoon” or “The Book of Pheonix”

      N.K. Jemesin – All three books in “The Fifth Season” won a Hugo award. Absolute materpiece

      Tade Thompson – His “Rosewater” trillogy is the big one, but I really liked “The Murders of Molly Southborne”

      General Ficton:

      Brandon Taylor – “Real Life” is his first. Was nominated for the Booker Prize.

      Akwaeke Emezi – writes across genres and does it well every time. “Freshwater” is quite surreal fantasy. “The Death of Vivek Oji” is probably the easiest entry point

      Caleb Azumah Nelson – “Open Water”

      Tade Thompson – “Open City” – feels like a walk through the streets of New York.

    6. Percival Everett. The Trees, Dr. No, Erasure and James are all highlights. His books are all well written and dripping with satire.

    7. myrrhicvictory on

      The Blacker the Berry by Wallace Thurman. I wanted to read something from the Harlem Renaissance era so I picked this up and am reading it now. I’m enjoying it so far.

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