The best new books arriving in February offer something for everyone. Memoirs from Rebecca Carroll and Randa Jarrar explore questions of identity and belonging. New fiction from Brandon Hobson and Chang-rae Lee follow characters as they navigate how the past has impacted their present. And Henry Louis Gates, Jr. weaves together over 400 years of history in his sweeping account of the Black church in America. These books are accompanied by dazzling short story collections, heartbreaking debuts and more. Here, learn more about the 14 new books you should read in February.
Milk Fed, Melissa Broder (Feb. 2)
Surviving the White Gaze: A Memoir, Rebecca Carroll (Feb. 2)
Buy Now: Surviving the White Gaze on Bookshop | Amazon
The Low Desert: Gangster Stories, Tod Goldberg (Feb. 2)
Buy Now: The Low Desert on Bookshop | Amazon
The Removed, Brandon Hobson (Feb. 2)
In his devastating new novel, Brandon Hobson dissects a Cherokee family’s grief over the loss of their teenage son. It’s been 15 years since police fatally shot Ray-Ray, and his parents, older sister and younger brother are achingly reminded of his loss as the anniversary of the tragedy is just days away—and coincides with their annual family bonfire. Flipping between the voices of the family members, Hobson depicts the lingering effects of trauma, and the way grief informs memory and love.
Buy Now: The Removed on Bookshop | Amazon
Love Is An Ex-Country: A Memoir, Randa Jarrar (Feb. 2)
Buy Now: Love Is An Ex-Country on Bookshop | AmazonHow the One-Armed Sister Sweeps Her House, Cherie Jones (Feb. 2)
Buy Now: How the One-Armed Sister Sweeps Her House on Bookshop | Amazon
Four Hundred Souls: A Community History of African America, 1619-2019, Ibram X. Kendi and Keisha N. Blain (editors) (Feb. 2)
Beginning in 1619, Four Hundred Souls charts 400 years of African American history—with Black voices at the center. The anthology features 90 writers, with each taking on a different five-year period to provide a kaleidoscopic and impressive approach to retelling history. Their various pieces—written as essays, short stories, poems and more—showcase the enormous range of Black experiences in America, underlining that Blackness, and the history of Black people in America, can’t be defined by a singular narrative.
Buy Now: Four Hundred Souls on Bookshop | Amazon
My Year Abroad, Chang-rae Lee (Feb. 2)
Buy Now: My Year Abroad on Bookshop | Amazon
Milk Blood Heat, Dantiel W. Moniz (Feb. 2)
Fake Accounts, Lauren Oyler (Feb. 2)
How to Not Die Alone, Logan Ury (Feb. 2)
Kink: Stories, R.O. Kwon and Garth Greenwell (editors) (Feb. 9)
The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song, Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (Feb. 16)
Buy Now: The Black Church on Bookshop | Amazon
Appropriate: A Provocation, Paisley Rekdal (Feb. 16)