Don’t Touch My Hair by Emma Dabiri (Penguin Books, May 2, 2019, audio only)

From pre-colonial Africa to today’s Natural Hair Movement, this book is an exploration of all the ways that black hair matters. From styles that served as secret code to lead enslaved Africans to freedom to an exploration of cultural appropriation, Emma Dabiri shows us how “black hairstyling culture can be understood as an allegory for black oppression and, ultimately, liberation”.

Bonnie and Stan by Anna Stuart (Trapeze, May 23, 2019)

This sounds like such a lovely, if bittersweet book – and great for anyone else out there who loved Now Let’s Dance by Karine Lambert. Bonnie and Stan tells the story of a marriage that began in the Swinging Sixties and is nearing its end as Stan knows his days are numbered. As a final act of love for his wife, he sets out to find her a new man so that she is not alone when he is gone. On the day when I’m writing this, this book has a Goodreads score of 4.29 – which is glowing praise.

 The Flatshare by Beth O’Leary (Flatiron Books, May 28, 2019)

This book is one of the buzziest of the year in the UK and sits firmly in the currently popular “up lit” genre – so if you need some feel good fiction in your life, you could do worse than picking up The Flatshare. Tiffy and Leon have never met, but the only way Tiffy can afford to live in London is by agreeing to an unusual arrangement: her apartment is shared by a guy who works nights and is only there when she isn’t. Complications ensue, and, I’m guessing, probably some romantic shenanigans too.

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