Six essential summer reads by Black authors.

Summer sizzlers: six must-read books by Black authors | The Guardian

Support the Guardian

Fund independent journalism

The Long Wave - The Guardian
From left: William Rayfet Hunter, Yrsa Daley-Ward, Bolu Babalola, Rob Franklin, Issa Quincy, Eloghosa Osunde
16/07/2025

Summer sizzlers: six must-read books by Black authors

Jason Okundaye Jason Okundaye
 

Hello and welcome to The Long Wave. Amid an already bumper year of literary wins for Black authors, with the Sudanese writer Leila Aboulela’s Pen Pinter prize among the most recent, there is no better time to beef up your summer reading list. In this week’s newsletter, I’ll talk you through some of my favourite page-turners – from a romcom about old flames to stories about queer life in Nigeria and a debut coming-of-age novel about class, affluence and grief. That’s after the roundup.

Weekly roundup

Crowd in front of a market in Niamey, Niger
camera Colonial wrongs … France is is yet to acknowledge responsibility for atrocities in Niger. Photograph: Danita Delimont/Alamy

Countries continue push for reparations | More than 100 years after troops destroyed villages and seized cultural artefacts to add Niger to its west African colonial portfolio, France has hinted at restitution. Meanwhile, at a summit last week, Caribbean leaders backed Jamaica’s petition to King Charles on reparations for the region.

Sudan’s RSF accused of village raids | The Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group has killed almost 300 people in North Kordofan, including children and pregnant women, according to a Sudanese rights group. The UN reports that more than 3,400 people were forced to flee after attacks that began on Saturday.

Support to fight gang crime in Haiti | The Caribbean Community (Caricom) group of 15 countries has promised to help tackle violence in Haiti, saying that crime and security “is one of the most significant existential threats facing the region”. The UN said Haiti continued to be “paralysed” by gangs.

US deportees arrive in South Sudan | The US border tsar, Tom Homan, has said he does not know what happened to eight men deported to South Sudan after the Trump administration resumed sending migrants to countries that were not their place of origin. The Trump administration has reportedly also approached Costa Rica, Panama and Rwanda about accepting migrants.

Jamaicans aim to take back their beaches | There are almost 150 miles of recreational sandy beaches in the country, but only five miles of it are accessible to ordinary Jamaicans. Neelam Tailor reports on how descendants of enslaved Africans were not given land after slavery was abolished, and speaks to those who are fighting to take it back.

In depth: Your summer reading list starts here

Book covers
camera The ultimate six-pack … our top reads. Composite: Guardian Pictures

Sweet Heat by Bolu Babalola
Bolu Babalola has become one of the foremost romcom writers – her short story collection Love in Colour was a bestseller and her debut novel, Honey & Spice, was picked for Reese Witherspoon’s book club. Honey & Spice charted the fake-to-real romance of university students Malakai and Kiki. Now, the much anticipated follow-up, Sweet Heat, picks up three years after their explosive breakup, as Kiki finds that her ex is to be the best man at a wedding at which she is the maid of honour. Babalola expertly captures the frustration and tension that emerges when we encounter old flames, and asks us to consider how love can be equally transformative and disruptive. It’s exactly the kind of book you need this summer.
Sweet Heat is published by Headline Review (£18.99). To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

Great Black Hope by Rob Franklin
This debut novel centres on Smith, a young Black gay man who has been raised in a bourgeois family in Atlanta, and who is looking to escape his grief after discovering the body of his roommate, who had overdosed. Returning to Atlanta, the expectations of his family – a cabal of doctors and lawyers – only deepen his despair, and he soon finds himself again drawn once again to the tragic and glamorous New York underworld that claimed his friend’s life. This book is a timely examination of the limits to which class can insulate Black people, and an antidote to respectability politics. Franklin was the son of an HBCU president during the Obama era, and it appears that he has gone through a significant journey while grappling with the pitfalls of affluence and shedding the false promises of exceptionalism.
Great Black Hope is published by Simon & Schuster (£16.99). Order your copy at guardianbookshop.com.

Absence by Issa Quincy
In Quincy’s novel, the narrator is charmed by a poem first read to him as a child by his mother, which then follows him through his life. He’s stirred by memories and emotions as he is confronted by letters and photographs, phantoms and secrets, all of which make up a life that has been affected by generations of profound familial tragedy. Quincy’s prose is deftly lyrical and imaginative; I’ve had the pleasure of hearing him read from Absence at a literary salon in London and it was entrancing. He observes the fragility of memory, and what remains after our encounters, however fleeting, with people, say a schoolteacher or an estranged aunt; you might think of him as a counterpart to the novelists Rachel Cusk and Teju Cole.
Absence is published by Granta Books (£14.99). Order your copy at guardianbookshop.com.

Picture of a woman in a swimsuit laying on a sandy beach reading a book
camera Fun in the sun … read yourself happy this summer. Photograph: Martin Lee/Rex Features

Necessary Fiction by Eloghosa Osunde
I loved Osunde’s book Vagabonds!, so I am excited to get stuck into Necessary Fiction, which explores cross-generational queer life in Nigeria. The action is set in Lagos, a dynamic but chaotic 24-hour city, and against this buzzing backdrop Osunde’s characters balance their sexuality and the demands of their lives: negotiating relationships with their parents, building chosen families, embracing and risking romance, and considering desire, death and religion. Lagos is a repository of dreams and aspirations that are often beaten down by the difficulties of the city – yet art, music and creativity have helped define it beyond the mismanagement and corruption it has suffered. “Necessary fiction” is what Osunde’s Lagosians must carry with them for survival. I look forward to getting to know them – and their stories.
Necessary Fiction is published by Harper Collins (£16.99) on 31 July. Order your copy at guardianbookshop.com.

The Catch by Yrsa Daley-Ward
This hotly anticipated novel by the eminent writer and poet has been described as “dark and lyrical” by the author Yomi Adegoke. You can certainly glean that from the synopsis. Twin sisters Clara and Dempsey became estranged after their mother vanished into the River Thames. But when, as adults, they notice a woman called Serene, who looks exactly like their mother at the time of her disappearance, their lives are thrown into confusion. Is Serene their mother? The originality of the plot is compelling, and so is Daley-Ward’s exploration of familial absence and estrangement.
The Catch is published by Cornerstone (£16.99). To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com.

Sunstruck by William Rayfet Hunte
Billed as Saltburn seen through the prism of race, Hunter’s gay mixed-heritage narrator is down bad for the terrible and terribly wealthy Felix Blake, the brother of his university friend Lily. A romance develops during the summer when the unnamed narrator visits the Blake family in the south of France, but when they return to London, they are assailed by race and class tensions. Both men are haunted by past traumas, and the narrator also faces the sisyphean task of trying to fit into the Blake’s world. In Sunstruck, Notting Hill in London is depicted as a site of great privilege and wealth (the Blake family’s residence is there) and also a place where Caribbean culture is celebrated at the Notting Hill carnival.
Sunstruck is published by Cornerstone (£16.99). Order your copy at guardianbookshop.com.

What we’re into

Pusha T and Malice of Clipse perform in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
camera Clipse comeback … rappers Pusha T and Malice perform in Pennsylvania. Photograph: Taylor Hill/Getty Images for Live Nation Urban

Clipse’s new album, Let God Sort Em Out, their first since 2009, is a masterpiece. Pusha T and Malice’s reunion has been rumoured since a track was debuted at Pharrell Williams’s Louis Vuitton show in 2023, and though the wait has felt agonising, the record hasn’t disappointed. POV with Tyler, the Creator is a particular standout, as is FICO with Stove God Cooks. Jason

This interview with three of the cast of The Gilded Age, a rare depiction of Black American high society in the 19th century, features a deep exploration of how actors relate to historical characters alongside a series of stunning portraits. Feast your eyes. Nesrine Malik

Burna Boy surprised commuters in London on Tuesday with a dazzling free concert outside King’s Cross station, excitingly just up the road from the Guardian’s London HQ. Hundreds of people crowded the streets for the performance by the Afrobeats sensation during a high-energy set by DJ AG Online. The self-professed African giant is on his No Sign of Weakness world tour. Janise Elie, production editor

I’ve been moved by LL Cool J’s solidarity with striking workers in Philadelphia, as he pulled out of a Fourth of July festival saying: “There’s absolutely no way that I can perform, cross a picket line and pick up money when I know that people are out there fighting for a living wage.” Maybe he’ll make a picket line strike song next? Jason

 

The Guardian is a reader-funded news organization that answers to no one other than the public. You can support us here – it’s quick, and any amount helps. Thank you.

 

Black catalogue

Meteor Man actors
camera Shooting stars … the cast of the 90s cult classic Meteor Man. Photograph: Cinetext Collection/SportsPhoto/Allstar

The Meteor Man, released in 1993, is one of the earliest superhero films to feature a Black actor in the starring role. Robert Townsend, who also wrote and directed the film, stars as the mild-mannered teacher Jefferson Reed, who gains superpowers, including otherworldly strength and X-ray vision, when he is struck by a meteorite after helping a woman who is being harassed by a gang. The film, which features James Earl Jones and Luther Vandross, is available to watch in its entirety on the Internet Archive.

Tap in

Do you have any thoughts or responses to this week’s newsletter? Share your feedback by replying to this, or emailing us at thelongwave@theguardian.com and we may include your response in a future issue.

 

… there is a very good reason why not to support the Guardian

Not everyone can afford to pay for news. That is why our website is open to everyone.

But – if you can afford to do so – here are three good reasons why you might consider becoming a Guardian supporter today:

1

Your funding means we can be completely independent

2