WITH THE TAGLINE, “Reading Material for the Homies,” Noname Book Club is putting its mission of connecting Black and Brown people with radical books front and center. The project was founded in 2019, after Chicago rapper Noname, now 30, tweeted, “Tryna see something: Retweet this if you would be a member of Noname’s Book Club.” After receiving over 5,000 retweets, she saw it was a project people would get behind, and she got to work.
BOOKS OF THE MONTH✨✨✨
Rifqa by @m7mdkurd, and Anarchism And The Black Revolution by Lorenzo Kem’boa ErvinHappy reading ? pic.twitter.com/5bjuCAuC6U
— Noname Book Club (@NonameBooks) May 2, 2022
Each month, two different titles by BIPOC authors are chosen for members of the group’s 12 digital chapters around the U.S. to read and discuss. In April 2021, the collective also started offering books to incarcerated communities. And in October of last year, the club went IRL, opening its very own HQ, the Radical Hood Library, in L.A. Get connected, get involved, and get reading at nonamebooks.com. –NIESHA DAVIS
Photo: Courtesy of Noname Book Club
This piece originally appeared in BUST’s Spring 2022 print edition. Subscribe today!