Literary Fiction · Racial Identity · Social Commentary

6 hand-picked literary fiction, racial identity, and social commentary books curated by NextBookAfter.

Literary FictionRacial IdentitySocial Commentary
Cover of Erasure

Erasure

If Ellison's Invisible Man hit you with that raw fury of being unseen in a white-dominated world, where racial stereotypes and institutional absurdities crush the soul, get ready for more. Dive into satirical twists on identity politics and commodified Black experiences that echo the nameless hero's rebellious odyssey. It's the intellectual depth and dark humor you crave, refusing easy answers in a fractured society.

Cover of Open Water

Open Water

Normal People's raw emotional honesty in depicting the turbulent push-pull of young love, flawed protagonists navigating anxiety and self-sabotage, and subtle class commentary resonated deeply with readers craving authentic millennial struggles. Open Water echoes this with its unflinching portrayal of a tender romance between Black artists, delving into racial dynamics, mental health insights, and unspoken desires in minimalist, poetic prose. It's the intimate, ambiguous ache you can't shake, layered with sharp societal critique on identity and vulnerability.

Cover of Real Americans

Real Americans

If The Tokyo Suite hooked you with its unflinching dissection of class warfare and morally messy protagonists navigating exploitation in chaotic urban sprawls, Rachel Khong's Real Americans amps up that intensity by tracing economic divides across generations and borders. Fans loved Madalosso's dark humor slicing through privilege's absurdities without easy outs—Khong delivers the same satirical edge on racial identity and the American Dream's illusions. Dive into this for characters as flawed and cities as oppressively alive, challenging your complacency with zero moral hand-holding.

Cover of Red at the Bone

Red at the Bone

If Sing, Unburied, Sing pulled you through Mississippi dirt with its lyrical ferocity and unflinching look at intergenerational trauma, you need its spiritual twin. The same blues-infused rhythm, the same refusal to sanitize Black pain or joy, the same emotional archaeology that rewards patient readers who crave authenticity over easy answers—all wrapped in a Brooklyn brownstone haunted by the Tulsa Massacre and family secrets that span decades.

Cover of The Other Black Girl

The Other Black Girl

This sharp satirical thriller echoes the dark humor and moral ambiguities of sibling loyalty in 'My Sister, the Serial Killer' by shifting the focus to workplace rivalries and racial tensions, offering a fresh take on toxic relationships and societal pressures through the lens of two ambitious Black women in a cutthroat industry.

Cover of The Other Black Girl

The Other Black Girl

For fans of the intricate racial tensions and female rivalries in Passing, this modern tale explores identity and jealousy in a cutthroat corporate world, blending sharp social commentary with subtle unease.