10 Best-Selling Books by Black Authors


Posted on Feb 28, 2021

Stories are important. They carry the history and the memories of the people who wrote them and reveal the struggles and triumphs of different people. The support of books only allows more of them to be written and more stories to be told. Here are 10 best sellers by black authors, who will hopefully get you in the habit of reading more.


  1. Concrete Rose by Angie Thomas


  2. Concrete Rose
    Photo Credit: takemeawayyy.com


    Released last month, this third novel by Angie Thomas takes place years before the events of The Hate U Give, during the teenage years of her parents, Maverick and Lisa. The story begins with the couple finding out that they are about to have a child. With all these upcoming responsibilities, he takes a chance at leaving behind his checkered past, which is not easy when you’re the son of a gang legend.



  3. The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett


  4. The Vanishing Half

    This novel follows the Vigne sisters, who are identical twins growing up in a Southern black community. At age 16, the twins run away. Years later, they have gone down different paths. One sister has returned to the town she once ran away from and lives with her black daughter. The other sister secretly passes as a white woman and lives with her white husband who knows nothing of her past.



  5. Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi


  6. Homegoing
    Photo Credit: i0.wp.com


    This book is the debut novel of Ghanaian American writer Yaa Gyasi. It won the Hemingway Award and was on the list of Oprah’s Best Books of the Year. Set in 18th-century Ghana, the story follows two half-sisters born in different villages, unaware of the other’s existence. One of them marries an Englishman, and the other gets captured and sold into slavery.



  7. The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin


  8. The Fire Next Time
    Photo Credit: 1.bp.blogspot.com


    This book contains two of Baldwin’s essays during the segregation between black and white Americans. The first essay, My Dungeon Shook, is Baldwin’s letter to his nephew, in which he challenges him to have a better outlook on the African American experience. The second essay, Down at the Cross, discusses the negative effect of Christianity on the black community based on his experience of being a teen pastor but eventually breaking away from the church.



  9. The Autobiography of Malcolm X by Alex Haley


  10. The Autobiography of Malcolm X
    Photo Credit: www.made-magazine.com


    Published in 1965, this book was based on taped interviews by the author with activist Malcolm Little before his assassination that year. It tells his life story, from having to face racism as a young child to becoming a drug dealer, to his conversion to Islam, and to his years as an activist.



  11. Song of Solomon by Toni Morrison


  12. Song of Solomon
    Photo Credit: assets.fontsinuse.com


    Morrison’s third novel follows the life of Macon “Milkman” Dead III, from his birth to his adulthood in Michigan. The story begins when a man in Milkman’s neighborhood jumps off a building in an attempt to fly. This becomes a recurring theme throughout the story as Milkman tries to challenge his origins, eventually learning to embrace them.



  13. Becoming by Michelle Obama


  14. Becoming
    Photo Credit: img1.od-cdn.com


    This memoir by the former first lady of the United States chronicles her experiences, from growing up in the South Side of Chicago to living in the White House. In the book, she tells both private and public stories from her point of view, in her own terms.



  15. Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler


  16. Parable of the Sower
    Photo Credit: imgix.bustle.com


    Set in the future, this novel by Butler is led by an 18-year-old black woman named Lauren, who has the gene of hyperempathy, which makes her feel other people’s pain as her own. In this future, California has fallen into ruin and divides itself into walled communities. A drug is on the loose in the streets, which causes people to have a desire to commit violent crimes. When a community becomes overrun by scavengers and people are addicted to the drug, Lauren travels on foot northward.



  17. Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde


  18. Sister Outsider
    Photo Credit: assets.teenvogue.com


    This book is a collection of essays and speeches by black lesbian poet and feminist writer Audre Lorde. Containing works from 1976 to 1984, it discusses topics such as sexism, racism, homophobia, and class.



  19. The Water Dancer by Ta-Nehisi Coates


  20. The Water Dancer
    Photo Credit: static01.nyt.com


    This surrealist novel set in pre–civil war south tells the story of Hiram, who was born into slavery. When his mother is sold away, he loses all memory of her but gains a superpower where he is able to transport people over long distances. This becomes a motivation for him to escape his own bondage, at the same time leaving behind the only home he’s ever known.



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