AARP Hearing Center
What better way to celebrate Black History Month than by reading stories by some of today’s best African American authors? Below are 13 of our favorite novels released in the past several years. A few are humorous; some offer brilliant cultural commentary; all are smart and thought-provoking. Dive in and enjoy.
Let Us Descend
by Jesmyn Ward
A two-time National Book Award winner (for 2017’s Sing, Unburied, Sing and 2011’s Salvage the Bones), Ward takes us inside the mind of Annis, a young woman — enslaved by the white man who fathered her — who is separated from her mother and the woman she loves and forced to travel from the Carolinas to a new enslaver in Louisiana. Annis is strengthened by stories of her warrior ancestors as she struggles to retain her sense of self through the pain and terror of her grueling journey. The novel was a finalist for the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence, presented annually by the American Library Association.
The Reformatory
by Tananarive Due
This truly scary story arrived just in time for Halloween last year. Described by Library Journal as “a masterpiece,” it’s about a boy in Jim Crow-era (1950) Florida who’s sent to a frightening, haunted reform school. Due told Publishers Weekly that she spoke with many survivors of such punishing schools to inform her novel, and she dedicates it to “Robert Stephens, my great-uncle who died at the Dozier School for Boys in Marianna, Florida, in 1937. He was fifteen years old.”
The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store
by James McBride
A 2023 bestseller from the author of 2013’s National Book Award winner The Good Lord Bird, McBride’s latest is set in the 1920s and ’30s in the fictionalized neighborhood of Chicken Hill, Pennsylvania, where Jewish and Black Americans live side by side. When a skeleton is found at the bottom of a well, the investigation that follows reopens wounds and uncovers a long-held secret. It’s a murder mystery, of sorts, but also a warmhearted portrait of a community described with humor and compassion. Barnes & Noble chose it as its Book of the Year, and it was one of Barack Obama’s favorites of 2023.
The House of Eve
by Sadeqa Johnson
In this absorbing 2023 novel (a Reese’s Book Club pick), the author of 2021’s award-winning Yellow Wife focuses on the challenges of two young Black women in 1950s Philadelphia and Washington. Working-class Eleanor from Ohio falls in love with a wealthy Howard University student and struggles to be accepted into his elite world; and Ruby, from Philly, hopes to be the first in her family to go to college, but a taboo affair jeopardizes that dream.
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