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  • Books by Black Authors We Can’t Wait to Read in August 2024

    Books by Black Authors We Can’t Wait to Read in August 2024

    Book lovers have a lot to get excited about in August, as the month brings new titles in just about every genre. If you need a break from the news, you can sink your teeth into a dystopian novel, get lost in a creative book of poetry or flip through adorable photographs of young Black dancers. And for the word nerds out there, thereโ€™s even a book of Black crosswords! These are the books we canโ€™t wait to get into in August 2024.

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    Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
    Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

    โ€œShe Who Knowsโ€ by Nnedi Okorafor (August 20)

    Photo: Amazon.com Photo: Amazon.com

    โ€œShe Who Knowsโ€ is the first novel in a sci-fi trilogy infused with African culture and spirituality. The coming of age story centers around a young girl. Everything changes when she leaves her family behind for a whole new world.

    โ€œBefore the Ships: The Birth of Black Excellenceโ€ by Maisha Oso and Candice Bradley (August 6)

    Photo: Amazon.com Photo: Amazon.com

    โ€œBefore the Shipsโ€ is a stunning picture book that takes young readers back to a time before the Transatlantic slave trade. Geared towards kids ages 4-8, the book inspires with stories of Black royalty and warriors who are an example of all that weโ€™ve accomplished.

    โ€œIn a League of Her Own: A Novelโ€ by Kaia Alderson (August 6)

    Photo: Amazon.com Photo: Amazon.com

    Author Kaia Alderson loves to write about the most amazing little-known stories in history. Thatโ€™s exactly what inspired โ€œIn a League of Her Own,โ€ a novel based on the life of Effa Manley, a Black business woman who goes on to become the only woman inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

    โ€œBad Witchesโ€ by H.B. Akumiah (August 20)

    Photo: Amazon.com Photo: Amazon.com

    Brooklyn-based Ghanian-American author H.B. Akumiahโ€™s debut novel โ€œBad Witchesโ€ is being described as โ€œCharmedโ€ meets โ€œSex and the City.โ€ The story follows three young women who meet in the club on their mutual twenty-second birthday. But during their girls night out, the three learn they are witches and have to come together to save the Witch Sphere when a crisis strikes.

    โ€œOn a Moveโ€ by Mike Africa Jr. (August 6)

    Image: Amazon.com Image: Amazon.com

    In โ€œOn a Move: Philadelphiaโ€™s Notorious Bombing and a Native Sonโ€™s Lifelong Battle for Justice,โ€ Mike Africa Jr. writes about his experience growing up in MOVE, a Philly-based Black civil liberties group that police bombed in 1985.

    Along with pictures of his family and other members of the movement, Africa Jr. writes candidly about his experience being born to two political prisoners and his tireless efforts to seek justice for them.

    โ€œDaydreamerโ€ by Rob Cameron (August 6)

    Image: Amazon.com Image: Amazon.com

    โ€œDaydreamerโ€ is a beautiful debut novel for young readers ages 10 and up. The story centers around an 11-year-old boy who deals with the challenges of being isolated and bullied by escaping into a magical fantasy world of dragons and trolls. But when the two worlds collide, heโ€™s forced to use his creativity to save them both.

    โ€œAfriCali: Recipes From My Jikoniโ€ by Kiano Moju (August 13)

    Photo: Amazon.com Photo: Amazon.com

    Born to a Kenyan mother and a Nigerian father and raised in California, Kiano Moju has lots of culinary influences. In her debut cookbook โ€œAfriCali.โ€ Moju uses recipes like Lentil Nuggets and Coconut and Cardamom Mandazi to marry the African flavors of her upbringing and the fresh produce of her California home.

    โ€œThe Empire Warsโ€ by Akana Phenix (August 6)

    Image: Amazon.com Image: Amazon.com

    โ€œThe Empire Warsโ€ is described as โ€œa fast-paced dystopian tale with a bit of magic and a lot of action.โ€ The story follows a girl trying to save her family in a world that has been taken over by a tyrannical empire.

    โ€œThe Rich People Have Gone Awayโ€ by Regina Porter (August 6)

    Image: Amazon.com Image: Amazon.com

    Set in 2020 Brooklyn, โ€œThe Rich People Have Gone Awayโ€ tells the story of a young couple who leave the city in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic. But when the manโ€™s pregnant wife disappears after an argument, the husband becomes a prime suspect in her disappearance.

    โ€œNot What She Seemsโ€ by Yasmin Angoe (August 1)

    Image: Amazon.com Image: Amazon.com

    โ€œNot What She Seemsโ€ follows Jacinda, a woman returning to the small South Carolina town she left at age 22 after a family tragedy. But being home forces her to face demons she thought she left behind and a new danger that threatens her life and her familyโ€™s safety.

    โ€œBlack Crossword: 100 Mini Puzzles Celebrating the African Diasporaโ€ by Juliana Pache (August 20)

    Image: Amazon.com Image: Amazon.com

    If you like crossword puzzles (and who doesnโ€™t?) this book is for you. Based on the popular website blackcrossword.com, โ€œBlack Crosswordโ€ is a book of more than 100 puzzles covering the history, literature and culture of the African diaspora.

    โ€œEvery Where Alienโ€ by Brad Walrond (August 13)

    Image: Amazon.com Image: Amazon.com

    โ€œEvery Where Alienโ€ is described as a โ€œdazzling afro-futuristic, afro-surrealist journey through New York Cityโ€™s underground art movements.โ€ Through poetry and black and white illustrations, Brad Walrond looks at the impact Black and queer underground art movements of the 1990s and early 2000s have had on our culture.

    โ€œKingdom of Dustโ€ by Lisa Stringfellow (August 20)

    Image: Amazon.com Image: Amazon.com

    โ€œKingdom of Dustโ€ is a beautiful West African โ€“ inspired fantasy about a young girl who sets out on her own to save her kingdom and its people from a dangerous threat.

    โ€œThe Unicorn Womanโ€ by Gayl Jones (August 20)

    Image: Amazon.com Image: Amazon.com

    Set in the early 1950s, โ€œThe Unicorn Woman,โ€ tells the story of a Black American soldier and his search for religion, purpose and love in a Jim Crow South after World War II.

    โ€œBrown Girls Do Ballet: Celebrating Diverse Girls Taking Center Stageโ€ by TaKiyah Wallace-McMillan and JaNay Brown Wood (August 27)

    Image: Amazon.com Image: Amazon.com

    From the creators of the popular Instagram account of the same name, โ€œBrown Girls Do Balletโ€ is a beautifully inspirational childrenโ€™s picture book featuring stunning photographs of young dancers of color. Talk about cuteness overload!

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