2025 books to catch up on
Need a reading list? From time-slipping fantasies to sharply observed immigrant tales, 2025’s release slate is already stacked. Here are a few new titles to catch up on in the second half of the year. Grab one, steal an afternoon, and let me know which title kept you up past midnight.
Nothing beats the thrill of cracking open a brand-new book. If your bookshelf needs a little shake-up, start here. We’ve rounded up the latest releases making literary noise. And yes, they’re totally worth the hype.
Nnedi Okorafor
Zelu loses her job, her book deal, and her patience, then pours everything into a wild sci-fi manuscript about post-human androids. When the draft goes viral, fame crashes into reality and fiction starts rewriting itself. Blending meta-sci-fi, family drama and biting satire in a page-turner about art, fame, and unintended consequences, Okorafor’s latest novel asks the question: what if the story you created began creating you?
Akwaeke Emezi
Twin bond, twin magic: Jayaike’s gifts dazzle, Somadina’s terrify. When Jayaike vanishes, Somadina braves the spirit-choked Sacred Forest to rescue him, mastering powers that could destroy her village or save it. Emezi crafts a luminous West-African fantasy about otherworldly journeys, outsiderhood, and the ferocity of sibling love.
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Four women — travel writer Chiamaka, heartbroken lawyer Zikora, powerhouse cousin Omelogor, and immigrant housekeeper Kadiatou — navigate pandemic-era reckonings across two continents. Regret, ambition and tangled loyalties collide as Adichie probes love, honesty, and self-knowledge with her trademark wit and emotional clarity.
Lola Akinmade Åkerström
Gambia, 1978: scholarship student Nancy falls for charming Swedish academic Lars, unaware of the darkness beneath his brilliance. Stockholm, 2006: pop-princess Tina digs into her mother’s guarded past to understand her own identity. Spanning four decades and three continents, this sweeping novel explores race, ambition, and the price of buried secrets.
Olufunke Grace Bankole
A prophecy warns Amina’s mother that America will endanger her daughter, yet Amina still leaves Lagos for New Orleans, only to be upended by a devastating hurricane. Years later, Amina’s child searches for the lost pieces of their lineage. Folklore, faith and migration entwine in Bankole’s haunting debut about sacrifice and survival.
Lawretta Egba
Homesick and restless, a young Nigerian writer lands in Paris armed with journal, camera, and a stubborn need to reinvent herself. Think café musings, metro-car flashbacks, and city lights that double as therapy sessions. Perfect for anyone who’s ever wanted to walk off their map.
M.H. Ayinde
In the war-torn Nine Lands, only nobles summon ancestral spirits. That is until slum-born Temi calls forth something far older and deadlier. Her forbidden power could end centuries of bloodshed or unleash horror. Ayinde’s debut is an adrenaline-fuelled epic of revenge, class uprising, and spectral warfare.
The tiny things are heavier
Esther Ifesinachi Okonkwo
June 2025
Two weeks after her brother’s suicide attempt, Sommy starts grad school in the US, burdened by guilt and rootlessness. A tangled romance and a return trip to Lagos force her to confront family fractures and self-worth. Okonkwo delivers a tender, incisive portrait of migration, mental health and messy love.
Recommended Articles
Jazz is cool this summer at Tilles Center, the Hamptons and more - Newsday
Get in the groove with the Tilles Jazz Fest and Hamptons JazzFest and more jazz offerings.
Uti Prince Chiejine: Shaping The Visual Mastery Of Wura

Wura, a bold adaptation of South Africa’s The River, set against the backdrop of the gold mining industry in the Iperind...
Durbar Festivals In Nigeria: How Jigawa, Ilorin Are Rising Beyond Kano's Shadows

AS an academic with a strong focus on African art history and cultural symbolism, I am pleased to provide this critique ...
2025 books to catch up on

Need a reading list? From time-slipping fantasies to sharply observed immigrant tales, 2025’s release slate is already s...
Looted art: the battle for looted treasures

Centuries after Europe’s colonial scramble, the fight to reclaim looted masterpieces, from West African “talking drums” ...
Soyinka: 'I missed my parents when I won Nobel Prize'

The Nation Newspaper Soyinka: ‘I missed my parents when I won Nobel Prize’
You may also like...
Diddy's Legal Troubles & Racketeering Trial

Music mogul Sean 'Diddy' Combs was acquitted of sex trafficking and racketeering charges but convicted on transportation...
Thomas Partey Faces Rape & Sexual Assault Charges

Former Arsenal midfielder Thomas Partey has been formally charged with multiple counts of rape and sexual assault by UK ...
Nigeria Universities Changes Admission Policies

JAMB has clarified its admission policies, rectifying a student's status, reiterating the necessity of its Central Admis...
Ghana's Economic Reforms & Gold Sector Initiatives

Ghana is undertaking a comprehensive economic overhaul with President John Dramani Mahama's 24-Hour Economy and Accelera...
WAFCON 2024 African Women's Football Tournament

The 2024 Women's Africa Cup of Nations opened with thrilling matches, seeing Nigeria's Super Falcons secure a dominant 3...
Emergence & Dynamics of Nigeria's ADC Coalition

A new opposition coalition, led by the African Democratic Congress (ADC), is emerging to challenge President Bola Ahmed ...
Demise of Olubadan of Ibadanland

Oba Owolabi Olakulehin, the 43rd Olubadan of Ibadanland, has died at 90, concluding a life of distinguished service in t...
Death of Nigerian Goalkeeping Legend Peter Rufai

Nigerian football mourns the death of legendary Super Eagles goalkeeper Peter Rufai, who passed away at 61. Known as 'Do...