Episode 44
10 Black Romance Novels That Feel Like a Soft Place to Land
Your heart isn’t broken. It’s just tired — and tired has a reading list.
This week on Culture Lit, Octavia shares 10 Black romance novels for healing your heart — stories where Black women are cherished, chosen, and loved well. From Kennedy Ryan’s new release Score to modern classics by Tia Williams, this is the soft-era reading list for anyone running on empty. Healing here doesn’t mean heavy. It means joy, tenderness, and a soft place to land.
Find these and other recommendations at The CultureLit online BookShop and support independent bookstores at Visit my bookshop!
Score — Kennedy Ryan
Honey & Spice — Bolu Babalola
Before I Let Go — Kennedy Ryan
By the Book — Jasmine Guillory
Highly Suspicious and Unfairly Cute — Talia Hibbert
A Love Song for Ricki Wilde — Tia Williams
Seven Days in June — Tia Williams
Real Men Knit — Kwana Jackson
Love Is a Revolution — Renée Watson
Black Girls Must Die Exhausted — Jayne Allen
Culture Lit is a community celebrating black women and black love, and a reminder that black women deserve joy, love success, second chances, and all the beautiful magic the world has to offer.
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Let me know what you’re reading, what you’re thinking, and what you’re thinking about what you’re reading.
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Music credit: Cool Jazz Beat by FASOL PROD
A Subito Media production
Transcript
Welcome back to Culture Lit, the podcast where Black love stories get
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:the spotlight they've always deserved.
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:I'm your host, Octavia Marie,
and I'm so glad you're here.
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:I wanna start somewhere
a little tender today.
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:I think a lot of us have been
quietly carrying a heaviness.
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:The world feels intense right now.
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:Life feels uncertain in ways that
make the news hard to watch and the
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:group chat hard to keep up with.
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:There's so much happening all at once that
sometimes it feels almost strange to let
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:yourself laugh in the middle of it, and I
don't think I'm the only one feeling that.
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:Like joy is something
you're supposed to earn.
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:Like staying worried all the time is
how you prove that you care I want
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:to gently push back on that today.
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:We're still allowed to live fully, to go
outside and feel the sun on your skin, to
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:laugh until your stomach hurts, to gather
with people you love and eat too much, to
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:dance in your kitchen, to rest, to flirt,
to travel, to create, to dream out loud.
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:None of that makes you shallow.
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:None of that means you don't see
what's happening in the world.
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:It makes you human, and it's how
Black people have always endured.
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:Joy has always been part of how we
survive, not a luxury we earn after the
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:work is done, a tradition, a practice, a
choice we make on purpose over and over.
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:Because if we only let ourselves
live inside stress and fear and
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:exhaustion, we stop feeling fully
alive, and I don't believe we're
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:here only to endure this life.
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:I believe we're here to experience
it, maybe especially now.
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:So if you've been denying yourself joy
because the world feels heavy, if you've
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:been postponing your own aliveness until
everything feels safe and settled and
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:perfect, let today be your reminder.
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:You don't have to choose.
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:Both belong in the same week.
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:Both belong in the same heart.
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:The heaviness out there and your
own deep aliveness in here, both can
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:exist at the same time, and both must.
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:And that's where today's episode comes in.
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:I want to take you back for a moment.
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:There was a year of my life when
I had no choice but to be soft.
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:I'd spent more than 20 years in corporate
communications becoming a woman who
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:didn't break, strong by training,
strong by reflex, strong as a survival
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:skill, and then I got sick, and being
unbreakable wasn't on the menu anymore.
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:I had to let people feed me,
sit with me, love on me when I
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:couldn't do one single thing back.
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:That was the year I learned
what I told you a moment ago.
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:Softness isn't weakness.
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:Softness is the medicine and
aliveness, the laughing, the
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:loving, the being held isn't a
betrayal of how serious things are.
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:It's the very thing that lets you
stay standing in serious times.
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:A lot of that medicine
for me came in book form.
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:Black love stories where the woman
gets cherished, where she gets chosen,
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:where she gets her aliveness back.
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:So today, I'm giving you 10 Black
romance gems for healing your heart.
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:And when I say healing, hear me.
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:I don't mean heavy.
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:I'm not handing you trauma
and calling it a gift.
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:I mean healing through joy, through
tenderness, through the radical, beautiful
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:act of watching a Black woman get loved
all the way well, even in a hard season.
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:These are the stories that feel like
a soft place to land, the ones that
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:feel like a deep breath you didn't
know you were holding, the ones
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:that say, "Yes, the world is what
it is, and you're still allowed."
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:So get cozy, bestie.
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:Grab your tea.
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:We've got 10 of them.
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:Let me start with the one
that's had me losing my whole
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:mind, Score by Kennedy Ryan.
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:Now, if you've been rocking with
me for a while, you already know
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:This is a Kennedy Stan podcast.
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:I don't apologize for it,
and I'm not taking questions.
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:The woman writes Black love
like it's sacred because it is.
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:Score came out on May 19th.
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:This book is fresh on the bookstore
shelves, and it's the second book
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:in her Hollywood Renaissance series.
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:I've been counting down to this one
since Can't Get Enough dropped last year.
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:So when I tell you I cleared the
calendar, child, I cleared the calendar.
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:Here's the setup.
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:Verity Hill and Wright Bellamy,
everybody calls him Monk, meet
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:at a Georgia HBCU and fall harder
than either of them planned on.
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:And that matters because both
of them grew up watching love
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:go wrong in their own homes.
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:They had every reason to keep
their hearts on lockdown.
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:They fell anyway.
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:The relationship only lasted a few
months, but some loves are short and
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:still rearrange your entire life.
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:Fast-forward more than ten years.
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:Verity is an award-winning
screenwriter now.
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:Monk is a musical prodigy
turned household name.
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:And a film pulls them back into the
same room, a Harlem Renaissance biopic.
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:If you read Real, you
know exactly the one.
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:Yes, Desi Blue.
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:Here's what wrecked me.
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:Back when they were young, their
love was fast and big and fearless
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:until Verity started moving
in a way that wasn't like her.
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:Things escalated, and she ended up hurting
Monk while she was deep in a mental health
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:crisis he knew nothing about, a crisis
she was facing for the first time herself.
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:My heart ached for this woman.
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:She's grieving the greatest love of
her life and learning how to live
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:with a new diagnosis at the same time.
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:And then this once in a lifetime project
lands in her lap, and the catch is
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:she has to do it with Monk, her Monk.
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:What stayed with me after
I closed this book was how
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:scared Verity was to be loved.
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:With her diagnosis, she decided she'd be
too much for somebody, so it felt safer to
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:keep everybody at arm's length until Monk.
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:I love so much in here.
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:Getting to read the Desi Blue
screenplay, seeing Canon and Neva from
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:a brand new angle, the creativity, the
artistry, the way Kennedy holds mental
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:health with such care, and the love.
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:Always the love.
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:This story will hold you if you're
living with a chronic illness.
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:It says, right out loud, you
still deserve a big love.
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:You still deserve your dreams.
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:You deserve care, and you deserve support.
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:Full stop.
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:Score is beautiful.
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:It's tender, and whew, it's spicy
The epilogue had me in real tears.
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:Verity and Monk fought for their love,
and I'm going to be thinking about
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:the two of them for a long, long time.
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:Let's switch the energy all the way up.
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:Honey and Spice by Bolu Babalola,
smart, funny, and so full of life.
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:Meet Kiki Banjo.
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:Kiki hosts a hit student radio show where
she hands out relationship advice to
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:everybody on campus while being dead set
on avoiding a relationship of her own.
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:Then she gets publicly humiliated,
her reputation is suddenly on the
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:line, and she ends up in a fake
relationship with the exact man she
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:warned every girl on campus about,
the charming, infuriating Malachi.
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:You already know where a fake
relationship goes, but here's why this
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:one earns its place on a healing list.
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:It's a love letter to Black
British culture set on a university
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:campus that feels so alive
you can practically hear it.
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:The chemistry between Kiki and
Malachi will have you grinning.
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:But the real medicine is the
friendship, the community.
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:A young woman slowly learning she doesn't
have to armor up against being known.
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:It's funny, it's warm, and
it leaves you feeling held.
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:And yeah, yes We're right
back with Kennedy Ryan.
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:I told you, Kennedy Stan podcast.
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:Before I Let Go is a second
chance romance, and it'll put
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:its whole hand around your heart.
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:Yasmin and Josiah are divorced, but
they're still tangled all the way up
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:in each other's lives, co-parenting
their kids, running a business together,
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:orbiting a love that technically
ended and somehow never died.
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:Their marriage broke after a string
of devastating losses, and what
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:Kennedy does here is so honest.
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:She doesn't rush their healing.
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:She sits in the grief with them.
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:She lets them do the real unglamorous
work, therapy, accountability,
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:learning how to trust hands
that have dropped you before.
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:Yes, this one carries some weight, but
what you walk away holding is hope.
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:It's restoration.
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:It's the reminder that the people
who broke can also rebuild,
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:sometimes with each other.
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:Now, every single book I'm naming
today you can find at my bookshop.
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:That's
bookshop.org/shop/culturelitpodcast.
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:When you buy there, you're supporting
independent bookstores and this
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:little show at the same time.
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:The link is sitting right
in the show notes for you.
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:If you want a romance that's charming and
few and easy on your spirit, By The Book
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:by Jasmine Guillory is calling your name.
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:This one is a modern Beauty and the
Beast retelling, and it's a delight.
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:Izzy is an editorial assistant at
a publishing house, hardworking,
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:underappreciated, burnt out, and
feeling completely invisible,
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:so she makes a bold move.
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:She volunteers to go out to a
mansion in Santa Barbara and pry
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:a long overdue manuscript out of
a famously difficult reclusive
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:celebrity author named Beau Towers.
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:And what she finds isn't a monster.
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:She finds a man who's as lost as she is.
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:You get the witty banter and the warm
chemistry Jasmine Guillory is known for.
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:It's a feel-good read that
loves books as much as you do.
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:Pick this one up when you need
something light, escapist, and soft.
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:Next up, pure unfiltered
joy, Highly Suspicious and
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:Unfairly Cute by Talia Hibbert.
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:Now, this one is technically a
YA romance, but trust me, the
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:charm is for grown women too.
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:It's a friends to enemies to lovers
story between Celine, a sharp-tongued
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:conspiracy theorist with a real online
following, and Bradley, a star athlete
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:who's quietly managing his OCD.
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:They used to be best friends.
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:Now they can't stand
the sight of each other.
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:Then they get forced together on an
outdoor survival course, competing
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:for the same scholarship, and they
have to face their history and the
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:feelings that clearly never left.
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:Talia Hibbert writes people who
are funny and flawed and so real.
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:She handles personal growth and
mental health with the gentlest touch.
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:This book feels like
sunshine, plain and simple.
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:All right, we're halfway home.
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:One question for you, is any
book on this list already
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:sitting on your to-be-read pile?
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:Tell me in the comments.
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:I wanna know which one
you're running to first.
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:And if this list is doing something
for you, go ahead and follow
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:the show so the next one finds
you without you having to look.
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:Now let me hand you something a
little magical 'A Love Song for
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:Ricky Wilde' by Tia Williams.
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:If Seven Days in June shows off the
sharp, sexy side of Tia Williams, and
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:we're getting to that one in a minute,
this book is the dreamy, atmospheric,
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:slightly enchanted other side of her.
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:Ricky Wilde is the artistic one, the
dandelion growing up in a family of roses.
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:So she leaves Atlanta behind and opens a
little flower shop in Harlem, and there
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:she meets a musician who feels like he
stepped out of another era entirely.
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:Their connection feels like it was
written in the stars long before
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:the two of them ever got there.
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:It's a modern fairy tale woven
through with the real history
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:of the Harlem Renaissance.
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:Two artists pulled together
by a kind of magic.
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:Read this one when you want
a love story that's elegant,
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:soulful, and a little enchanted.
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:And you can't make a list about healing
Black love without this one, Seven
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:Days in June by Tia Williams, a modern
classic, and I don't say that lightly.
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:Eva Mercy is a single mom and a
best-selling erotica author, and
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:one day she has a chance run-in
with Shane Hall, an award-winning
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:author she shared one whirlwind,
life-altering week with 15 years ago.
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:Over the next seven days, the two of
them reconnect, and they're forced to
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:face the secrets and the trauma that have
been trailing both of them ever since.
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:This book is smart and sexy and so witty.
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:But underneath all of that, it's a
deep look at generational trauma,
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:at living with chronic pain,
and at what forgiveness can do.
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:Two people who got broken
finding their way back to whole.
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:At its core, it's a love
letter to Black joy.
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:If your soul is craving something that
feels like a warm blanket and nothing
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:else, Real Men Knit by Kwana Jackson.
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:This one is comfort
reading in its purest form.
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:After the sudden death of the woman
who adopted them, Jesse Strong and his
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:brothers have to decide what happens
to her beloved Harlem knitting shop.
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:Jesse wants to keep it open.
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:The small problem?
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:He has no earthly idea how to run it.
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:Lucky for him, his part-time
employee, Carrie, who's had a
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:quiet crush on him for years, steps
up to help him save the store.
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:What you get is a slow burn wrapped
inside a tight-knit, big-hearted
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:community, found family, neighborhood
warmth, the quiet joy of building
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:something with people who love you.
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:You'll close this book
feeling completely restored.
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:Our ninth gem is a YA novel with a
message that lands hard at any age,
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:Love Is A Revolution by Renée Watson.
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:This book is built on one beautiful idea:
the most important love story you’ll
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:ever have is the one with yourself.
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:Nala meets Tai, a cute,
deeply community-minded boy.
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:He’s an activist, an organizer,
out there doing the work.
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:Nala?
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:Nala would honestly rather be home
on the couch watching a movie.
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:So to impress him, she tells a few small
lies, and then she has to keep performing
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:a version of herself that isn’t her.
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:As she falls for Tai, she figures out
the thing the whole book has been quietly
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:teaching her: real love can’t grow on top
of a person you’re only pretending to be.
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:It’s gentle, it’s affirming, and
it’ll remind you that loving yourself
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:exactly as you are is the most
revolutionary thing on this whole list.
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:And our tenth gem?
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:This one is more women’s fiction with
strong romance running through it, but
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:the theme sits so close to the heart
of healing that I had to bring it in.
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:Black Girls Must Die
Exhausted by Jayne Allen.
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:That title alone, right?
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:It speaks straight to the burnout, to
the impossible pressure on Black women
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:to carry it all and smile while we do it
Tabitha Walker is a successful broadcast
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:journalist whose whole life tilts sideways
when she gets a medical diagnosis that
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:threatens her dream of having a family.
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:From there, the story follows her
through her career, her friendships,
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:her love life, and the hard choices
she has to make about her future.
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:It’s honest.
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:It’s so relatable it almost stings.
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:And in the end, it’s a book about
resilience, about self-discovery,
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:and about the quiet power of choosing
yourself—the perfect read for anyone
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:healing from the sheer pressure
of being a woman in this world.
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:So there they are—ten soft,
healing Black romance gems.
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:Can we sit with one thing
before I let you go?
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:What I love most about these books
is how each one quietly redraws what
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:healing is even allowed to look like.
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:Because somewhere along the way, a lot of
us got taught that healing has to be hard.
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:That it only counts if it hurts.
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:That you have to earn your rest
by suffering correctly first.
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:These stories say something different.
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:They say healing can be joy.
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:It can be tenderness.
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:It can be a Black woman letting herself
be soft, letting herself be cared for,
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:letting herself be loved well—and not
having to bleed for the privilege.
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:I learned that the hard way.
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:I told you at the top of this
episode about the year I got sick.
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:The thing nobody warns you about is how
hard it is to be loved when you’ve spent
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:your whole life being the strong one.
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:Verity in Score was scared her diagnosis
made her too much for anybody I
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:understood that fear in my body, and
watching her get loved anyway, fully
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:on purpose, did something for me.
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:That's what the right book can do.
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:The right story at the right time
hands you permission you didn't
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:know you were allowed to ask for.
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:And remember what I said at the top?
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:Joy has always been
part of how we survive.
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:So picking one of these books up,
sinking into a love story while the
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:world is doing whatever it's doing
out there, that isn't you tuning out.
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:That's you tuning back in.
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:That's the practice.
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:That's the tradition.
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:That's choosing aliveness on purpose
on a Tuesday with a book in your lap.
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:So that's what I want
you to take with you.
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:You don't have to be strong every
hour of every day, especially now.
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:You're allowed to be soft.
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:You're allowed to be cherished.
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:You're allowed to be deeply
alive in a heavy season.
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:You're worthy of a love that feels
like a warm hug for your whole soul.
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:Romantic love, the love of your
community, the brave ordinary work of
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:finally being gentle with yourself.
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:So pick one, only one off this
list, and give your heart the soft
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:place to land it's been needing.
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:If this episode met you somewhere
today, do me a kindness.
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:Follow Culture Lit and leave a review
so the next tired heart can find us too.
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:Come find me on Instagram and
Threads at Becoming Octavia.
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:That's B-E-C-O-M-I-N-G Octavia.
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:And every book from today is
waiting for you at my bookshop,
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:bookshop.org/shop/culturelitpodcast.
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:All of it is linked in the show notes.
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:Thank you for spending this time with me.
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:I don't take it lightly.
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:Until next time, be soft, be bold, be
visible, and remember, your story matters.
