Editors Reads
Non-FictionMemoirEssay

Ta-Nehisi Coates

American · b. 1975

3 books reviewed Avg rating 4.4 / 5Top rating 4.5 / 5

National Book Award (2015), MacArthur Fellowship (2015), NAACP Image Award

Ta-Nehisi Coates is an American journalist and author whose Between the World and Me is a searing letter to his son about the history and lived reality of Black life in America.

Ta-Nehisi Coates rose to national prominence through his long-form essays at The Atlantic, where his explorations of race, history, and American political culture established him as one of the most significant voices in contemporary journalism. Between the World and Me, published in 2015, distils that work into a book-length letter to his teenage son — a form consciously chosen in dialogue with James Baldwin’s The Fire Next Time. It is an account of what it means to inhabit a Black body in America: the specific vulnerability, the history of theft and violence, the vigilance required, and the grief of watching that inheritance pass to another generation.

The book is lyrical and unsparing. Coates writes beautifully, and the letter format allows him to be simultaneously intimate and analytical — to move between the personal (his Baltimore childhood, his years at Howard University, the death of a friend at the hands of police) and the structural without losing emotional coherence. He is explicit about his rejection of hope as a rhetorical device; unlike much writing about race in America, Between the World and Me does not end with redemption or a path forward, and this refusal has been both its most praised and most contested quality.

Some critics, including Black scholars and writers, have argued that Coates’s framework is too deterministic, that it leaves too little room for Black agency and joy. These are legitimate challenges. But as a document of what structural racism feels like from the inside — of the specific weight it places on a body and a life — the book is essential reading.

3 Books Reviewed

Between the World and Me book cover
Bestseller

Between the World and Me

by Ta-Nehisi Coates

4.5

Written as a letter to his teenage son, Ta-Nehisi Coates examines the history and present reality of anti-Black racism in America — its origins in the destruction of Black bodies, its persistence through white supremacy — with unsparing intellectual force.

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We Were Eight Years in Power book cover

We Were Eight Years in Power

by Ta-Nehisi Coates

4.4

A collection of Ta-Nehisi Coates's most important essays from the Obama years, each introduced with a new personal reflection, tracing both the trajectory of his thinking about race in America and the arc from Obama's election to Trump's — arguing that white supremacy was the connective tissue between both.

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The Water Dancer book cover

The Water Dancer

by Ta-Nehisi Coates

4.2

Ta-Nehisi Coates's debut novel follows Hiram Walker, a enslaved young man in antebellum Virginia who discovers he possesses a mysterious power called Conduction — a magical ability linked to memory and loss — and who becomes involved with the Underground Railroad.

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