Meet 5 Brilliant Latine Authors to Keep Your Eye on

Graphic design featuring 5 Latine Authors: Isabel Allende, Tehlor Kay Mejia, Matt de la Peña, Angie Cruz, and Lilliam Rivera
Luz Media

Created in partnership with Penguin Random House.

There’s no denying screens take up a lot of our time and attention every single day. We need them for virtually everything, so it’s easy to forget that there are plenty of other things we could and should be doing to feed our brains. One thing we can all agree on is that spending time with a good book can replenish the heart and soul. The trick is to keep our reading diverse by exploring a whole spectrum of great authors.

No conversation about great writers is complete without mentioning these 5 brilliant Latine authors. These gifted storytellers have provided compelling narratives for people of all ages across a variety of genres. Not only do they bring Latino culture to the forefront, but they also make us feel, wonder, and think.


Isabel Allende

Portrait of Latina Author Isabel Allende

Photo by allendeisabel on Instragram

Starting her career in 1967, Isabel Allende is one of the most prolific Latina authors out there. This Chilean writer is known for her fiction novels and the way she blends magical realism into her stories. Some of her most well-known novels include “The House of the Spirits,” “City of the Beasts,” and “Evaluna,” though there are many other titles to explore.

Allende continues writing to this day, at 81 years old, and her stories resonate with people of all ages. Some of her most recent work includes “The Wind Knows My Name,” a historical and contemporary fiction story that focuses on love, sacrifice, loss, and self-discovery, and “Perla the Mighty Dog,” Allende’s very first children’s book with illustrations by the talented Chicana artist Sandy Rodríguez.

In “Perla the Mighty Dog,” Allende explores the unbreakable bond between a child and their pet. The story follows Nico Rico and his dog Perla. Like many kids unfortunately experience, Nico is being bullied at school. But Perla isn’t standing by and letting it happen. No, no! She will use her superpowers of making people love her and roaring like a lion to help Nico find his own superpowers and stand up for himself.

What we love about this story is that it’s heartwarming, charming, and poignant, with vibrant and whimsical illustrations. It can be the perfect read for kids, but it’s also easy for adults to enjoy the message of kindness at the core of this story.

Tehlor Kay Mejia

Portrait of Latine Author Tehlor Kay Mejia

Photo by tehlorkay on Instagram

When it comes to middle-grade and young adult fiction, Tehlor Kay Mejia is one of the Latine names that stand out. They’re a third-generation Mexican-American, transgender, bestselling, and award-winning author who came out of the gate swinging. Their debut novel, “We Set the Dark on Fire,” received the Oregon Spirit Book Award for debut fiction, the Neukom Institute Literary Arts Award runner-up honor for debut speculative fiction, and it was featured in several best book lists in 2019. Including Seventeen, Cosmopolitan, and O, the Oprah Magazine.

Then, their debut middle-grade novel, “Paola Santiago and the River of Tears,” found similar success. It was one of Amazon’s best books of 2020 in the 9-12 age range and a TV adaptation has been in development since 2022 on Disney, produced by Eva Longoria. Themes like community, radical inclusion, and abolitionist values can be found in Mejia’s stories, no matter what the intended audience is, and it’s part of what makes their books so compelling.

Mejia’s latest works include the contemporary LGBT romance “Sammy Espinoza's Last Review,” Mejia’s adult debut, and the YA LGBT fantasy duology “Lucha of the Night Forest,” which are both great options. You should go with “Sammy Espinoza’s Last Review” if you want a swoon-worthy romance with delicious banter surrounded by music and family issues. If you love fantasy, “Lucha of the Night Forest” offers a story full of adventure, sapphic love, strong and nuanced characters, and beautiful prose. The best part is that you won’t have to wait terribly long for the conclusion of this duology since “Lucha of the Forgotten Spring” will hit the shelves in 2025.

Matt de la Peña

Portrait of Latine Author Matt de la Pe\u00f1a

Image Credit: Matt de la Peña

Matt de la Peña is a Newbery Medal-winning author of Mexican descent and he specializes in children’s books and YA novels, some of which you’ve definitely heard of before. De la Peña started his career in 2005 with his debut novel, “Ball Don’t Lie,” which was named ALA-YALSA Best Book for Young Adults and later adapted into a movie in 2011.

In 2008, de la Peña published his second novel, “Mexican WhiteBoy,” combining his passion for sport and Mexican heritage into an engaging story of friendship, coming of age, acceptance, and identity. It was one of the top 10 picks for the ALA-YALSA Best Books for Young Adults and it was named a Notable Book for a Global Society in 2009, to mention a few achievements.

De la Peña’s latest work is the children’s picture book “The Perfect Place,” and it’s the uplifting story of young Lucas, a boy with perfect grades but a not-so-perfect home life. His dad is always dealing with his broken-down truck, his mom works long hours, and he shares a small room with his baby sister. One night, a strange light wakes him and guides him to a place where perfect people love.

The longer Lucas spends in that place, the more he wonders if he really knows what perfection means and what’s so great about it. It’s a wonderful picture book about learning to feel at home with yourself, a message children can definitely connect with (and adults too)!

Angie Cruz

Portrait of Latina Author Angie Cruz

Image Credit: Angie Cruz

Dominican award-winning author Angie Cruz is known for her fiction work, which explores themes of gender, race, displacement, home, and the working-class experience. Her career started in 2001 with the publication of her first novel, “Soledad,” which tells the journey of a young Latina woman confronting her and her mother’s past as they try to save their relationship.

One of Cruz’s most well-known works is “How Not to Drown in a Glass of Water,” published in 2022. This book won the Gold Medal of the Latino Book Award/The Isabel Allende Most Inspirational Book Award and is a finalist for the 2024 Neustadt International Prize for Literature.

The novel is ambitious in its concept and very moving in its execution. It follows Cara Romero, a Dominican woman living in NYC who’s going through a rough patch due to the 2008 recession. She goes through an agency in hopes of finding a job after getting fired from her old one, and the agency interview turns into a therapy session. Cruz creates characters readers can root for and enjoy getting to know, this is no exception.

More recently, Cruz published a children’s book in 2024, “Angélica and la Güira,” and it’s the story about a Dominican girl who learns to harness the power of music to bridge the gap between Washington Heights, where she lives, and the Dominican Republic. It explores themes like community while capturing the spirit of these locations. It’s a fun tribute to music, home, and Dominican culture!

Lilliam Rivera

Portrait of Latina Author Lilliam Rivera

Image Credit: Lilliam Rivera

Lilliam Rivera is a versatile award-winning author of Puerto Rican descent who has dabbled in middle-grade, young adult, and a graphic novel for DC comics. She will also be adding horror to her list of genres with the forthcoming novel, “Tiny Threads.” Her books have received a Pura Belpré Honor and they have been featured in many “best of” lists, including publications like NY Times, Los Angeles Times, The New Yorker, and NPR. Her personal essays have also been published in The New York Times, Buzzfeed Books, and The Washington Post, to name a few.

Rivera debuted in 2016 with the YA, contemporary novel “The Education of Margot Sánchez,” a coming-of-age story exploring dysfunctional families, identity, finding yourself, and the difference between making good and bad choices. Other YA novels include the graphic novel “Unearthed: A Jessica Cruz Story,” a reimagining of DC’s Jessica Cruz, one of the greatest Green Lanterns.

Her middle-grade work includes titles like “Goldie Vance: The Hotel Whodunit” and “Goldie Vance: The Hocus-Pocus Hoax,” and her most recent book, “Barely Floating,” which tells the story of twelve-year-old Nat, who fell in love with synchronized swimming. The issue is that her activist parents don’t think it’s a worthwhile sport, with its emphasis on looks, but Nat knows what she wants and is willing to fight for it. It’s a story with a lot of heart, focused on building community and what it means to be resilient.

If you’re a Latino, you will find yourself in these works, and if you’re not, you’ll be exposed to nuanced and fascinating perspectives. Isn’t that what reading is all about; learning, connecting, and broadening our minds?

As an added bonus, Penguin Random House is making it extremely easy for readers to snag amazing books by Latine authors with their summer sweepstakes. Register for a chance to snag a grand prize of 10 summer reads, $1,000 to organize a poolside retreat, and a dual chaise pool float, or to become one of fifty winners to get a 3-book bundle of must-reads. Enter the Meet Us Poolside sweepstakes for a chance to win!

two young women looking at their phone and smiling

This article republished from the 19th News with permission.

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