In her bold and provocative debut, Raven Leilani tells the story of Edie, a young Black woman navigating art, sex, and identity in New York City. When Edie enters into an open relationship with an older white man and becomes entangled with his family, she’s thrust into a web of power dynamics and emotional complexity. Luster is a raw and sharply observed novel about millennial disillusionment, racial tension, and precarious womanhood. Leilani’s prose is electric—darkly funny, intimate, and piercing. The novel captures the chaos of early adulthood and the search for meaning in a world of instability and inequity.
Raven Leilani is an American author whose debut novel Luster was met with widespread critical acclaim. Born in the Bronx and raised in a religious household, Leilani studied fine arts and later pursued writing, earning her MFA from NYU. Luster, published in 2020, is a sharp, intimate, and often darkly humorous exploration of race, sexuality, art, and millennial disillusionment. Leilani’s writing is noted for its vivid prose, emotional candor, and unflinching honesty. Her work marks her as a distinctive and powerful new voice in contemporary fiction, earning her several literary awards and inclusion on numerous "best of the year" lists.
by Kiran Desai
Set in the Himalayas during a time of political unrest, this Booker Prize winner follows a retired judge, his orphaned granddaughter, and their cook as they navigate personal and societal change. Interwoven with the cook’s son’s immigrant struggles in the U.S., The Inheritance of Loss examines colonial legacy, cultural dislocation, and fractured identities with lyrical poignancy.
This is the story of Sam and Sadie. It's not a romance, but it is about love. When Sam catches sight of Sadie at a crowded train station one morning he is catapulted straight back to childhood, and the hours they spent immersed in playing games. Their spark is instantly reignited and sets off a creative collaboration that will make them superstars. It is the 90s, and anything is possible. What comes next is a decades-long tale of friendship and rivalry, fame and art, betrayal and tragedy, perfect worlds and imperfect ones. And, above all, our need to connect: to be loved and to love.
by J.M. Coetzee
J. M. Coetzee's Booker Prize-winning novel Disgrace, set in post-apartheid South Africa, takes us into the disquieting mind of twice-divorced university teacher David Lurie as he loses his job and his honour after engaging in an ill-advised affair with a susceptible student. When he retreats to his daughter's farm, a brutal attack highlights their fractured relationship. Is it only through intense suffering and shame-his own as well as that of others-that David can begin to change, to understand his country and what it means to be human? In Disgrace, this Nobel-Prize winning writer examines ideas of evil, violence, dignity and redemption in a country dominated by the power dynamics of race.
by Yaa Gyasi
Yaa Gyasi’s Transcendent Kingdom follows Gifty, a Ghanaian-American neuroscientist grappling with her family's suffering and her own search for meaning. As she researches addiction and depression, she reflects on her brother’s opioid overdose, her mother’s depression, and her evangelical Christian upbringing. The novel explores the intersection of science, faith, grief, and the immigrant experience. With intimate prose and intellectual depth, Gyasi reveals how trauma and cultural identity shape one’s understanding of the world and the self.