Discover your next favorite author with these buzzworthy new releases – the perfect historical fiction stories to get lost in during Black History Month!
In the Upper Country by Kai Thomas
– Canada, Civil War, Underground Railroad
In the 1800s in Dunmore, a Canadian town settled by people fleeing enslavement in the American south, young Lensinda Martin works for a crusading Black journalist. One night, a neighboring farmer summons Lensinda after a slave hunter is shot dead on his land by an old woman who recently arrived via the Underground Railroad. When the old woman refuses to flee before the authorities arrive, the farmer urges Lensinda to gather testimony from her before she can be condemned for the crime. But the old woman doesn’t want to confess. Instead she proposes a barter: a story for a story. And so begins an extraordinary exchange of tales that reveal an interwoven history of Black and Indigenous peoples in a wide swath of what is called North America.
– Good Morning America Book Club pick, Caribbean plantations, 1830s
Wade in the Water by Nyani Nkrumah
– Mississippi, 1960s to 1980s alternating narrative
Eleven-year-old Ella lives in the racially divided town of Ricksville, Mississippi, not far from where the Freedom Summer Murders occurred. Too smart for her own good, she loves God, Mr. Macabe, and Nate, the tough owner of the local diner. To her perpetually irritated Ma, and Leroy, her mother’s lover, Ella is an unwanted nuisance. But Ella pays them no mind. She has a precious secret, and she isn’t telling. One day, a sharply dressed, well-to-do white woman appears on Ella’s street, looking for the girl. Like Ella, Ms. St. James has secrets–knowledge she keeps in a black notebook filled with scribbled pages. Secrets that will ultimately come out with devastating consequences.
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