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Brit Bennett’s long-awaited sophomore book sits in the number one spot on The New York Times Best Sellers list as several prominent book clubs make it a monthly selection.
The Vanishing Half explores racial identity among twin sisters who flee their Southern Black community and lead separate lives after one starts passing as White. Spanning generations from the South to the West between the 1950s to the 1990s, the themes in the novel may resonate more with readers as anti-racism awareness rises after the Memorial Day police killing of George Floyd.
In nonfiction, many Black authors are seeing their works soar on the best-selling lists as well, including So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo, Me and White Supremacy by Layla F. Saad, and The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander.
Brit’s novel, coming out four years after her memorable debut The Mothers, is the only piece of fiction touching on race in the list’s top 10.

On top of topping the charts, The Vanishing Half has been chosen for the following book clubs:
Arian Simone recently announced the inspirational book she self-published earlier this year earned a spot on Barnes & Noble bookshelves, producing a book tour and an author event later this year.
The media and marketing entrepreneur is known for her Hollywood public relations game with coordinating events for musicians Lil Wayne, Chris Brown, and Ne-Yo, but she became an author first in 2015 with the self-published My Fabulous & Fearless Journey: From Homeless to Hollywood. She released another self-help book, Fearless Faith + Hustle: 21 Day Devotional Journey, in January. This book, according to Arian Simone’s Instagram, had Barnes & Noble knocking on her door via an email through her website.
In 2016, Barnes & Noble started a self-service program supporting self-published authors with Nook Press that enables them to create hardcover and paperback books for purchase at stores and online. Some authors even qualify to participate at in-store events like book-signings and discussions based on print and e-book sales.
But Arian Simone didn’t go that route, so it’s rare—in comparison to the number of self-published authors with books on the market—to hear of an author being contacted by a major bookseller. She said Barnes & Noble reached out to her after noticing her book sales.
Arian Simone completed her Barnes & Noble book tour in late June with hitting six cities after headlining a public speaking workshop at the Girlboss Rally in Los Angeles. She’s planning an Oct. 19 event for authors in Atlanta under her Fearless brand to showcase their work, which she said will be free to the public.