Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together.
Previous Top Ten Tuesday Topics
- March 1: Books I Enjoyed, but Have Never Mentioned On My Blog
- March 8: Books With Your Favourite Trope/Theme
- March 15: Books On My Spring 2022 TBR
- March 22: Books With an Adjective in the Title
- March 29: 21st Century Books I Think Will Become Classics Someday
- April 5: YA Books I Think Will Become Classics Someday
This week’s theme is courtesy of Deanna @ A Novel Glimpse and is a great opportunity to remind myself of some of the great books and authors out there that I have not had a chance to read yet, and perhaps to edge some of them further up my TBR pile.
And for once, let’s focus on the author rather than the books, with their Wikipedia biographies, where available.

























Ocean Vuong
Vuong was born in Hồ Chí Minh City, Vietnam…A two-year-old Vuong and his family eventually arrived in a refugee camp in the Philippines before achieving asylum and migrating to the United States, settling in Hartford, Connecticut, United States with six relatives. His father abandoned his family after that. Vuong was reunited with his paternal grandfather later in life. Vuong, who suspects dyslexia runs in his family, was the first in his family to learn to read, at the age of eleven.



Benjamin Alire Sáenz
Sáenz was raised near Las Cruces, New Mexico.[1] He earned a BA in Humanities and Philosophy from St. Thomas Seminary in Denver, Colorado and a MA in Creative Writing from the University of Texas at El Paso. He continues to live and work in El Paso, Texas. After 15 years of marriage to his wife, an El Paso family court judge, he came out as gay, and they filed for divorce in 2009.


Rivers Solomon
Solomon is non-binary and intersex and states that they use fae/faer and they/them pronouns. They describe themselves as “a dyke, an anarchist, a she-beast, an exile, a shiv, a wreck, and a refugee of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade.”
As of 2018, Solomon lives in Cambridge, UK, with their family.


Tade Thompson
Thompson was born in London to Yoruba parents. His family left the United Kingdom for Nigeria around 1976, when Thompson was about seven. He grew up in Nigeria, where he studied medicine and social anthropology. He went on to specialise in psychiatry. He returned to the UK in 1998, where he has remained except for a year spent working in Samoa. He now lives on the south coast of England.


Walter Mosley
Mosley was born in California. He was an only child and ascribes his writing imagination to “an emptiness in my childhood that I filled up with fantasies”. For $9.50 a week, Walter Mosley attended the Victory Baptist day school, a private African-American elementary school that held pioneering classes in black history.
Mosley started writing at 34 and has written every day since, penning more than forty books and often publishing two books a year. He has written in a variety of fiction categories, including mystery and afrofuturist science fiction, as well as nonfiction politics.


Namina Forna
Namina Forna was born and grew up in Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone. After her parents divorced, Forna’s mother moved to Atlanta. However, due to the looming civil war and general political instability in Sierra Leone, her father decided to also send his 9-year-old daughter to live with her mother.
Forna loved reading as a child. In an interview with Elle, she explained that reading was her way of escaping the atrocities of the civil war.


Eloghosa Osunde
Eloghosa Osunde is a Nigerian writer and artist. An alumna of the Farafina Creative Writing Workshop, the Caine Prize Workshop, and the New York Film Academy, she has been published in The Paris Review, Gulf Coast, Guernica, Catapult, and other venues. Winner of the 2021 Plimpton Prize for Fiction and the recipient of a Miles Morland Scholarship, she is a 2019 Lambda Literary Fellow and a 2020 MacDowell Colony Fellow.



Tomi Adeyemi
Tomi Adeyemi was born on August 1, 1993 in the United States to parents who emigrated from Nigeria. Adeyemi wrote her first story when she was five years old, and continued to write throughout her teenage years. Adeyemi went on to graduate from Harvard University with an honors degree in English Literature, then studied West African mythology and culture in Salvador, Brazil, on a fellowship. It was this experience that inspired her to write Children of Blood and Bone, the breakthrough novel that would launch her career.


Elodie Harper
Elodie Harper is a journalist and prize-winning short story writer. Her story ‘Wild Swimming’ won the 2016 Bazaar of Bad Dreams short story competition, which was judged by Stephen King.
She is currently a reporter at ITV News Anglia, and before that worked as a producer for Channel 4 News. Her job as a journalist has seen her join one of the most secretive wings of the Church of Scientology and cover the far right hip hop scene in Berlin, as well as crime reporting in Norfolk where her first two novels were set – The Binding Song and The Death Knock.

Before I sign off, I will quickly give a shout out to the author who I am currently reading, who was also new to me when I started:

Violet Kupersmith
Violet Kupersmith was born in central Pennsylvania in 1989 and later moved with her family to the Philadelphia suburbs. Her father is a white American and her mother is from Da Nang, Vietnam.
Her mother’s family fled the country by boat following the fall of Saigon in 1975, and were resettled in Port Arthur, Texas.

As always, please do let me know your thoughts and whether you have read any of these authors – which should I really push up my TBR pile? Add comments below and I’ll try to reply
Upcoming Top Ten Tuesday Themes
April 19: Bookish Merchandise I’d Love to Own
April 26: Books with [___] On the Cover (Pick a thing (a color, an item, a place, an animal, a scripty font, a sexy person, etc.) and share covers that have that thing on the cover.)
May 3: One-Word Reviews for the Last Ten Books I Read (submitted by Susan @ Bloggin’ ’bout Books)
May 10: Bookish Characters (these could be readers, writers, authors, librarians, professors, etc.)
May 17: Books I Was SO EXCITED to Get, but Still Haven’t Read (bonus points if you tell us how long it’s been since you got them!)
May 24: Book Quote Freebie (Share your favorite book quotes that fit a theme of your choosing! These could be quotes about books/reading, or quotes from books. Some examples are: quotes for book lovers, quotes that prove reading is the best thing ever, funny things characters have said, romantic declarations, pretty scenery descriptions, witty snippets of dialogue, etc.)
May 31: Comfort Reads (Share which books or kinds of books you turn to when you need to escape. You can either share specific titles if you love to re-read, or you could share qualities of books you look for in a comfort read.)
I enjoyed The Wolf Den but not as much as a lot of others did. Ocean Vuong’s writing really impressed me when I read On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous.
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I also love that Ocean Vuong’s mum called him Beach, until someone told her that she was pronouncing it as ‘Bitch’ do she changed it – Ocean is a great name!
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This is a great list! Several of these authors are still on my TBR pile, too. I’ve read a few things by Nghi Vo and Tade Thompson, though, and enjoyed both of their work. Vo’s was more to my taste than Thompson’s, though that is entirely personal preference.
My TTT: https://bookwyrmknits.com/2022/04/12/top-ten-tuesday-authors-i-havent-read-but-want-to/
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Violet Kupersmith’s book looks interesting, I be looking it up 🙂
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I have not read any of these. I hope you enjoy them when you get a chance to read them.
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What a great list! I hope you get the chance to meet all these authors’ works soon.
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The thing I love most about your list of authors is that all but one are POC. It makes my heart happy to see so many POC authors when even just 10 years ago it wasn’t as prominent.
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Until I did the post, and searched out the pictures, I had no idea that some of these authors were POC! There are quite a few LGBTQIA+ authors there too.
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It’s so refreshing to see a list with authors from such a rich variety of cultural backgrounds. The writing that is coming from Nigeria and some of the other African nations is wonderful.
This is the first time I’ve visited your blog and am bowled over by the creative use of images. It must take you a long time to get them so well aligned.
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Thank you so much for your kind words – the writing from Nigeria is so rich, I love it, but there is so much richness from round the globe that I often feel overwhelmed and humbled….
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I’ve read Tomi Adeyemi’s books, loved the first one, was only so-so on the second but hoping that third book will end the trilogy with a bang!
My TTT: https://jjbookblog.wordpress.com/2022/04/12/top-ten-tuesday-363/
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Book 2 in trilogies are often tricky, though, aren’t they? Looking forward to reading it and disc0vering a new world!
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They do seem to be! I hope you enjoy it 🙂
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The only author I’ve read on this list is Ocean Vuong, but you have a lot of books I want to read! Violet Kupersmith’s book is on my TBR list, as is Rivers Solomon.
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Oooh excellent list! I’ve had Ocean Vuong on my radar for a while now. I really enjoyed both Aristotle and Dante and also The Gilded Ones. I own Children of Blood and Bone but haven’t gotten around to reading it yet.
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I haven’t read any of these but I think The Wolf Den sounds interesting.
Hope you enjoy when you get around to reading some of them.
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A wonderful list of authors! The Gilded Ones was a great read, and I am looking forward to reading The Merciless Ones.
Pam @ Read! Bake! Create!
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Nice list! I love how diverse your authors are!
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Great post! It’s nice to focus on the authors this week, isn’t it? I’ve only read Aristotle and Dante, but I enjoyed it! I hope you get to some of these soon. 🙂
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Thanks for visiting! I have Vuong on my list as well and I know many of these authors will land on my list of authors to read
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I finally read Namina Forna and Rivers Solomon this year and I really enjoyed their books so I’m keen to read more by them soon. I totally forgot about Kupersmith but I added her book to my TBR after seeing it on one of your other TTTs—it looks/sounds so good and I can’t wait to read it. I hope you click with all these authors/books!
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