100 Essential New Works of Fiction by Black Authors

In celebration of Black History Month in the U.S., this year we've gathered together a collection of fiction from Black authors going back a decade. The idea here is to present a sampling of essential works in a variety of genres; these include books that reshaped their respective fields, collected accolades from readers, and are just plain beloved by Goodreads members.
A few caveats: One hundred books is still just a small sampling of the scope of Black fiction in the past 10 years—feel free to make your own suggestions and recommendations in the comments section. It’s all about readers helping other readers. (It is!) Also, genre is a forever-slippery substance. Designations like historical fiction and mystery and romance can and do overlap. We took our best shot, sorting-wise.
Some highlights: Author James McBride made a big splash last year with his fascinating historical mystery The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store, concerning race and prejudice, humor and hope. Short fiction fans may want to consider Deesha Philyaw’s acclaimed 2020 collection, The Secret Lives of Church Ladies. For state-of-the-art speculative fiction, N.K. Jemisin’s instant classic The Fifth Season took home a Hugo Award, a Goodreads Choice Award, and about 20 other honors in 2015.
Browse around below for plenty of other interesting points of departure in honor of Black History Month: A complex love story in the contemporary New South. Horrors both real and supernatural in Jim Crow Florida. The bleeding edge of literary crime fiction. Click through the book cover images for more information about each title, and add anything enticing to your own Want to Read shelf.
Historical Fiction
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Omg yeees! I loved that book. One of my favorite reads of 2023





Of course, the question is hypothetical, a writer is a writer for me, regardless of gender, race, nationality... That's why I find these celebrations funny."
And here is proof that not everyone who reads, learns.

You're welcome, Vanessa! We hope you find lots of great books to read.



I was shocked she wasn't on the list. She is iconic. It does say new so maybe that's why she was excluded.

Thanks to this post I was turned onto a new author. The Last Thing You Surrender is a Must Read.

Absolutely! These are from the UK so not sure if they're available to US readers, but highly recommended; Jason Allen-Paisant's Self Portrait as Othello (won a prize last week too), Manorism by Yomi Sode, Zaffar Kunial's England's Green & Safiya Kinshasa's Cane, Corn & Gully.
I also loved Maame, but Natasha Brown's Assembly was devastatingly special.

First sentence: "In celebration of Black History Month in the U.S., this year we've gathered together a collection of fiction from Black authors going back a decade."

Of course, the question is hypothetical, a writer is a writer for me, regardless of gender, race, nationality... That's why I find these celeb..."
There is no White History Month because only white history is taught most of the year?

I'd recommend Ross Gay! His two Book of Delights are so, so lovely.


Edit: I think the comment above me is a troll, as there are multiple male authors on this list. Don't bother responding to them.