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B Side, Culture

15 Must-Read African Novels Coming in 2025

Expect exciting new books from Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Abdulrazak Gurnah, Nnedi Okorafor, Eloghosa Osunde, Akwaeke Emezi Ben Okri, and more.

  • Daniella Damilola
  • 19th February 2025
15 Must-Read African Novels Coming in 2025

For those who have always been paying attention, African literature has never been static. It evolves, innovates, and refuses to be boxed in by limiting expectations. The books slated for release in 2025 are proof of this: stories that marry folklore and futurism, that grapple with history’s long shadow, that refuse neat moral resolutions. From speculative fiction to tightly wound stories on identity, culture, and more, here are 15 novels to look forward to this year from African authors:

 

Dream Count – Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (Knopf, March 4)

 

Dream Count

 

After a decade-long fiction hiatus, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie returns with Dream Count, a novel that tells the story of four women navigating the terrains of love, ambition, and societal expectation. Through the lenses of a travel writer, her confidante, a prosperous cousin, and a devoted housekeeper, Adichie dissects the multifaceted experiences of womanhood in contemporary Nigeria and the diaspora.

 

Necessary Fiction – Eloghosa Osunde (Riverhead Books, July 22)

 

Necessary Fiction – Eloghosa Osunde

 

Eloghosa Osunde, whose Vagabonds! broke form and expectation in the best way possible, returns with Necessary Fiction, an exploration of queer life in contemporary Nigeria. Osunde doesn’t write for comfort; they write to unsettle, to upend, to force a reckoning. Through a  cast of characters — artists, hustlers, and dreamers — Osunde imagines a world where the boundary between reality and self-created illusions is razor-thin.

 

She Who Knows: One Way Witch – Nnedi Okorafor (DAW, April 25)

 

She Who Knows: One Way Witch – Nnedi Okorafor

 

If there is a single author who has mastered the art of making Africanfuturism feel like both prophecy and memory, it is Nnedi Okorafor. She Who Knows, the second in a new trilogy, continues the story of Najeeba. As a teen, Najeeba mastered the beast of wind, fire, and the kponyungo until it cost her too much, including her father’s life. She let it go and found peace, but years later, the quiet life she built was violently shattered.

Now in her forties, mourning her daughter Onyesonwu, who saved the world though the world doesn’t know it, Najeeba turns to Aro, her daughter’s old teacher. She needs to learn the Mystic Points, the core of sorcery, for there is something she must kill. With Aro’s help, Najeeba is ready to shape her future. But first, she must face her past because some memories refuse to stay buried.

 

African Stories – Edited by Ben Okri (Everyman’s Library, February 18)

 

African Stories – Edited by Ben Okri

 

A literary event in its own right, this anthology curated by Booker Prize winner Ben Okri is an essential addition to any bookshelf. Spanning the 20th and 21st centuries, it gathers together the works of Chinua Achebe, Ngugi wa Thiong’o, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Tayeb Salih, J.M. Coetzee, and other giants of African literature, offering a sweeping look at African storytelling across generations.

 

The Lives and Deaths of Véronique Bangoura – Tierno Monénembo (Schaffner Press, March 4)

 

The Lives and Deaths of Véronique Bangoura – Tierno Monénembo

 

Monénembo, one of the most essential voices in Francophone African literature, turns his attention to a woman haunted by exile and the brutal legacy of Sekou Touré’s Guinea. Moving between France and West Africa, The Lives and Deaths of Véronique Bangoura refuses sentimentality, instead offering an unflinching look at the personal cost of dictatorship.

 

Everything Is Fine Here – Iryn Tushabe (House of Anansi Press, April 22)

 

Everything Is Fine Here – Iryn Tushabe

 

Set against the backdrop of Uganda’s oppressive anti-homosexuality laws, Everything Is Fine Here is a searing coming-of-age novel about courage and resistance. When 18-year-old Aine’s older sister, Mbabazi, brings her girlfriend home, their religious mother reacts with devastating finality, forcing Mbabazi out. But Aine, unwilling to accept her mother’s version of morality, chooses to leave, too. As she navigates life in Kampala’s underground queer community, Aine must reckon with love, faith, and the cost of choosing oneself over family.

 

The Tiny Things Are Heavier – Esther Ifesinachi Okonkwo (Bloomsbury USA, June 24)

 

The Tiny Things Are Heavier - Esther Ifesinachi

 

In her evocative debut, Esther Ifesinachi Okonkwo explores themes of displacement, mental health, and the intricate dance of cross-cultural relationships. Sommy, a Nigerian graduate student in the U.S., grapples with the isolation of her new environment and the haunting guilt of leaving behind a brother in crisis. Her entanglement with Bryan, a biracial American, adds layers of complexity as they journey to Lagos, confronting familial estrangement and the chasms between worlds. Okonkwo’s narrative is a delicate examination of the ties that bind and the distances that separate.

 

Somadina – Akwaeke Emezi (Knopf Books for Young Readers, April 15)

 

Somadina – Akwaeke Emezi


Emezi doesn’t just write; they conjure.
Somadina follows a girl in search of her missing twin, journeying through the spirit world. It’s a premise that could so easily fall into cliché, but in Emezi’s hands, it will almost certainly be something far more transgressive and haunting.

 

The Dream Hotel – Laila Lalami (Pantheon, March 4)

 

The Dream Hotel – Laila Lalami (Pantheon, March 4)

 

Lalami writes a chilling, prescient novel about a future where corporations don’t just track your data, they predict your crimes. Protagonist Sara Hussein, a Moroccan American scientist, finds herself ensnared by the Risk Assessment Administration upon returning to Los Angeles. Accused of a pre-crime based on data extracted from her dreams, Sara is detained in a facility where the boundaries between reality and surveillance blur ominously. Lalami’s narrative is a gripping exploration of technology’s overreach and the erosion of personal freedoms.

 

The Catch – Yrsa Daley-Ward (June 2025)

 

The Catch – Yrsa Daley-Ward (June 2025)

 

Yrsa Daley-Ward makes her fiction debut with The Catch. Estranged twin sisters Clara and Dempsey have spent years avoiding each other, their relationship fractured by their mother’s mysterious disappearance into the Thames. But when Clara, now a famous writer, sees a woman who looks exactly like their mother, unchanged, unaged, everything unravels. A novel about grief, identity, and the fluid nature of memory, The Catch is set to be an unsettling, hypnotic read.

 

Grace – Chika Unigwe (April 2025)

 

Grace – Chika Unigwe (April 2025)

 

In Grace, Unigwe presents a gripping domestic drama about secrecy, forgiveness, and the weight of past choices. The eponymous Grace has built a picture-perfect life: a thriving career, a loving husband, twin daughters. But when her estranged mother reappears, demanding answers about a pregnancy Grace hid 26 years ago, the carefully constructed facade begins to crack. Unigwe’s prose is sharp and intimate, peeling back the layers of what it means to be a mother, a daughter, and a woman who has spent her life running from herself.

 

Theft – Abdulrazak Gurnah (Riverhead Books, March 18)

 

Theft – Abdulrazak Gurnah (Riverhead Books, March 18)

 

Gurnah’s first novel since winning the Nobel Prize in 2021, Theft follows three young Tanzanians: Karim, an ambitious university returnee; Fauzia, desperate to escape her claustrophobic home; and Badar, a boy uncertain about his future. Gurnah excels at portraying lives in transition, the moments where history and personal ambition collide.

 

Salutation Road – Salma Ibrahim (Available now)

Salutation Road – Salma Ibrahim (Available now)

 

Salma Ibrahim’s Salutation Road is a debut that immediately marks her as a writer of note. Immigration novels tend to follow predictable beats: nostalgia, displacement, the yearning for home — but Ibrahim sidesteps the usual tropes, crafting a narrative that understands the immigrant experience is as much about what is imagined as what is left behind.

 

Harmattan Season – Tochi Onyebuchi (May 27)

 

Harmattan Season – Tochi Onyebuchi (May 27)

 

Tochi Onyebuchi, whose work straddles speculative fiction and searing social commentary, delivers Harmattan, a hard-boiled fantasy noir that reads like The Big Sleep if it had been imagined by P. Djèlí Clark and filtered through the dust-laden streets of a postcolonial West African city. At its center is Boubacar, a weary veteran-turned-private investigator who prefers to keep his head down, until a bleeding woman stumbles onto his doorstep and disappears just as quickly, pulling him into the city’s tangled underworld.

 

This Kind of Trouble – Tochi Eze (August 5)

 

This Kind of Trouble – Tochi Eze (August 5)

 

Some love stories unravel gently. Others explode on impact. Tochi Eze’s This Kind of Trouble falls firmly into the latter category. A sweeping, propulsive tale of forbidden love and generational inheritance, it digs deep into the tensions between tradition and modernity, revealing how history, both personal and political, refuses to loosen its grip.

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