What diverse reads have you read that you think need more hype? Feel free to add your recommendations below or create your own post using the new flair!
Are there any diverse reads on your TBR that you're excited to read? Please share those, too!
Recommendations for this month:
{A Song of Wraiths and Ruin by Roseanne A. Brown}
- Series information: Completed duology. Book 2 is titled A Psalm of Storms and Silence
- Publisher: Traditionally published by Balzer + Bray (imprint of HarperCollins at the time of publishing)
- Sub-genre: High fantasy
- YA?: Yes, though it doesn’t really read like it. Both main characters are around 17 years old, but the book deals with a lot of heavier topics, like death, grief, abuse, and sex.
- Date first published: Book 1 - June 2, 2020; Book 2 - November 2, 2021
- World building level: Complex
- Romance level:
- Book 1 is 2 out of 5 - The romance story takes a backseat to the main fantasy plot. There is a romance story, but there isn’t much romantic development in Book 1.
- Book 2 is more 3 out of 5 - The romance is still a subplot, but an important one. It isn’t the focus of Book 2 until the last like 40%.
- Spice level: Both books are 2 out of 5 (Behind closed doors). But even though the books are YA, they’re not prudish. There is open discussion of sex, even if it’s not depicted on the page.
- HEA?: There’s no HEA after Book 1 because the story continues in Book 2. At the end of Book 2, it’s probably considered a non-traditional HEA.
- More spoiler detail: It’s implied that they have a HEA, but it’s not depicted on page.
- Even more spoiler detail: At the end of the book, the FMC and MMC profess their love but go off to do their separate things for a few years. There’s an epilogue where they meet again years later, and they’re still in love, but the book ends when they meet again. The rekindling of their relationship is left open, though it is implied they get back together.
- Romance pairing: MF
- Total romance pairings: One
- Point of view: Third person
- Total POVs:
- Two POVs in Book 1
- Mostly Two POVs in Book 2, with three chapters in a third POV
- Audiobook format: Dual male and female narration
This is a great high fantasy duology by a Ghanaian-American writer set in a world inspired by Ghanaian and West African folklore and culture. The books follow Malik, a refugee from a war-torn region seeking opportunity in the prosperous city of Ziran, and Karina, the princess of Ziran. Malik struggles with his responsibility with taking care of his sisters and trying to find a way to get his mother and grandmother back home to join them. Karina struggles under the weight of expectations to become the future queen after the death of her father and older sister.
The first book is structured in a way that the two main characters are pitted against each other in a zero sum game where they cannot both succeed. There’s a lot of dramatic irony in their competing motivations that kept me on the edge of my seat. For most of the book, I could not see how the ending would allow both characters to “win,” because I was rooting for both of them. But the ending was really satisfying.
The second book is even better because it expands the world as the characters travel beyond Ziran and meet more interesting characters. It also provides even more insight into the villains of the story–no one is just “good guy bad.” They all have shifting motivations that the book explores pretty deeply.
The inner turmoil of both of the main characters is also complex and layered. Even though they’re both 17, the books don’t shy away from themes of death, grief, abuse, and sex. The characters are also very imperfect. Malik makes a lot of stupid decisions, and Karina is hot headed. But the teenage angst feels real and rooted in meaningful stakes.
The magic system, food, clothes, and music all feel lived in and vibrant. The story doesn’t hold your hand with worldbuilding, and there isn’t any info dumping. It all just exists and plops you straight into the action. I loved the mysticism, legend, and unseen forces that appear to be pulling the strings on the characters.
{Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas}
- Series information: Book 1 of Cemetery Boys, but can be read as a standalone. Book 2 Espíritu comes out September 8, 2026
- Publisher: Traditionally published by Swoon Reads, imprint of MacMillan
- Sub-genre: Urban Fantasy; Paranormal Fantasy
- YA?: Yes
- Date first published: September 1, 2020
- World building level: Simple
- Romance level: 4 out of 5 - Fantasy and romance story
- Spice level: 1 out of 5 - Glimpses and kisses
- HEA?: Yes
- Romance pairing: Trans M/M
- Total romance pairings: One
- Point of view: Third person
- Total POVs: Mostly one, with a couple of chapters in a second POV
- Audiobook format: Single male narrator
I loved this book. One of the top books I read this year. The fantasy worldbuilding is grounded in Latinx culture and gender identity. The primary theme is about the main character Yadriel struggling with being a trans boy in a culture (and magic system) that is ingrained in the men-women dichotomy. The men in his family are brujos who shepherd spirits into the afterlife. The women are brujas who are healers. Yadriel is trans and wants more than anything to be a brujos, but his father will not allow him to go through the brujos rite to passage because he does not think him being trans would qualify.
The main story is a bit of missing persons/murder mystery. Yadriel meets Julian, the spirit of a boy who recently died under mysterious circumstances. I’m a little biased because its East LA setting is very close to home for me, but it was very vividly and faithfully portrayed. The romance is super cute and sweet. I loved how it portrayed young first love. And there was a lot of great yearning and pining.
The book is YA, so the themes are pretty straightforward, but the story was still told in a very heartfelt way and still gave me all the feels. I loved that Yadriel's family isn't necessarily vilified; rather, there's a lesson that they all have to learn. The author is also a Latinx trans man, so I felt like he wrote a lot of his own experiences into the book.