Collection:
England
Queen Bee
In Such Tremendous Heat
In Case of Emergency
Yinka, Where Is Your Huzband?
Dog Hearted
Raven Smith's Men
Africana
We Move
It's Not That Radical
20 Fragments of a Ravenous Youth
The Dark Lady
The List
The Twilight Garden
Darling
Twelve Words for Moss
All I Said Was True
A Visible Man
Death of a Lesser God (Malabar House #4)
To Fill a Yellow House
The Changing Man
Illuminated
Is Artificial Intelligence Racist?
The Forty Rules of Love
The Great Crashes
The Heart of Summer
Elsewhere
The Three of Us
Only a Monster
Never A Hero (Only a Monster #2)
In the Shadow of the Wolf Queen (Geomancer #1)
The Hive
Cosmogramma
Empireland
Exit West
Ana María and The Fox
Afterlives
Now I Am Here
Your Story Matters
The Revels
Best of Friends
Calypso in London
Burning My Roti
Waves Across the South
The Sleep Watcher
African Europeans
Looking for something super specific?
Have a scroll through our tag directory to help direct your search and bring you to curated collections. They're grouped by subgenres, identity markers, and more!
Amplify is an antiracist social enterprise bookshop dedicated to books by BIPOC authors. It was born out of a frustration with the structural racism in the publishing industry and a desire to tangibly make a change in a rigid industry.
We started as an online bookstore in 2020 and expanded into our Peel St shopfront in November 2024. There, you can browse our curation in person and attend bookish events.
After being online-only for four years we opened our physical shopfront in November 2025. The bricks-and-mortar shop allows us to showcase the collection in full for leisurely browsing, chats, and holds a third space offering in our reading room.
We host a wide range of bookish and community-oriented events at Amplify. They are cosy, affordable, alcohol-free, and a great, low-stakes way to meet new people.
We offer various community events including speed dating, book swaps, crafting workshops, book launches, and author salons. Our in-house book club is held once a month in our reading room.
Publishing has a diversity problem. There are less diverse books being published which limits the discoverability and reach of those authors.
We give BIPOC authors a space where they don't have to fight to be seen.