Read every pick from Dua Lipa's Service95 book club

When she’s not performing or practicing “Radical Optimism,” you might find Dua Lipa reading.

In June 2023, the “Dance the Night” singer launched the Service95 Book Club, an extension of her global editorial platform encompassing the Service95 blog site, a weekly newsletter, and Lipa’s podcast, “Dua Lipa: At Your Service.”

The Service95 Book Club “represent[s] diverse global voices, telling powerful stories spanning fiction, memoir and manifesto.”

The picks are a mix of best-selling fiction and new voices in literature. For each pick, Lipa facilitates a virtual Q&A with the author, plus Service95 shares recommendations from featured authors, reading guides, playlists, and more.

Below, we rounded up all of the Service95 Book Club picks so you can read along.

Service95 Book Club picks 2025:

September ’25: ‘The Trees’ by Percival Everett


September '25: 'The Trees' by Percival Everett
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.06/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Percival Everett

In the introduction to her September pick, Lipa wrote, “The scene: a white man in Money, Mississippi, is brutally killed, and the battered corpse of a long-dead but familiar young Black man is also left at the murder scene. Before long, a second white man is found beaten and mutilated, with the same Black figure by his side. As more and more men wind up killed, each with these eerily similar dead bodies beside them, local cops are left baffled – and mayhem ensues.

“It might sound like a grim tale – and, of course, the subject matter is harrowing. But as the story unfolds, author Percival Everett cleverly sends up all the usual tropes, from TV cop shows to classic detective stories, using satire to bring deep-rooted political issues to light in this masterful blend of horror and humor.  He even throws in zombies for good measure.

“Nobody puts it better than Herberta Hind, the book’s straight-talking (Black) FBI agent, when she says: ‘History is a motherfucker.’ And once you’ve read “The Trees,” you’ll understand why.”


August ’25: ‘This House of Grief’ by Helen Garner


August '25: 'This House of Grief' by Helen Garner
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.04/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Helen Garner

Lipa’s August pick is a nonfiction story of a murder trial. “On Father’s Day 2005, a recently divorced man in rural Victoria, Australia, drove his car off the road and into a dam. He swam to safety – but his three young boys drowned. When Helen Garner, a local resident who also happens to be perhaps Australia’s most celebrated living writer, saw it on the news, she thought: Oh Lord, let this be an accident. But was it a terrible accident? Or was it pre-meditated murder; a savage act of revenge against his ex-wife?

“In This House of Grief, Helen takes us inside the real-life trial of Robert Farquharson and invites us to join her as she sits through days of detailed evidence, weeks of witness testimony and years of appeals. What she reveals along the way is not simply a courtroom drama but a sharp and forensic analysis of the human condition.

“Although Helen has been writing for almost 50 years, her work is new to me and it’s a thrilling discovery. She’s one of the most fascinating writers I have come across in recent years, and I’m sure that, like me, you’ll find yourself diving into her back catalogue.”


July ’25: ‘Small Boat’ by Vincent Delecroix


July '25: 'Small Boat' by Vincent Delecroix
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.07/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Vincent Delacroix

Lipa opened the introduction to her July book pick with the novel’s opening line: “I didn’t ask you to leave.”

“The opening line of Vincent Delecroix’s masterful short novel “Small Boat” gains increasing significance as he spins together threads of a story which is as shocking as it is familiar.” The novel “fictionalizes events around the real-life drowning of 27 people in the English Channel in November 2021.”

“This book challenged me profoundly. It moved me, and stayed with me. It’s not an easy read – but as our politics descend into hate-mongering and point-scoring, it’s an essential story that needs to be told.”


June ’25: ‘Widow Basquiat: A Love Story’ by Jennifer Clement


June '25:  'Widow Basquiat' by Jennifer Clement
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.37/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Jennifer Clement

Lipa introduced her June pick, writing, “On one level, “Widow Basquiat” is a chaotic love story between the artist Jean-Michel Basquiat and his lover and muse, Suzanne Malouk.”

“Just 20 years old when they meet, we witness them hustling to make it in 1980s New York: a place where anything feels possible but that also hides a dark and sinister side of drugs, violence and racism. The book is also a remarkably deep, tender and, at times, disturbing study of these two young souls – their difficult childhoods, the clubs, bars and galleries they inhabit and the forces of ambition, jealousy and excess that ultimately lead to Basquiat’s death at the age of only 27.

“As much as anything, this is a love letter to an almost mythical New York City that no longer exists. To say I loved “Widow Basquiat” is an understatement. I’m sure you will too.”


May ’25: ‘Still Born’ by Guadalupe Nettel


May '25: 'Still Born' by Guadalupe Nettel
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.13/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Guadalupe Nettel

“Laura and Alina are friends in their early 30s, living in Mexico City. Both are determinedly childfree, believing that motherhood is a trap of the patriarchy,” Lipa wrote in a post introducing her May pick. Then, Alina changes her mind. You might think this is where their lives diverge, but the turning point in this book is a surprise for everyone. As Alina’s life is upended with a devastating medical diagnosis for her unborn daughter, Alina and Laura’s friendship becomes more vital than ever.”

“This book is both uplifting and gut-wrenching, often at the same time. If you are dealing with any of the issues tackled in the book, please explore this story at your own pace. At its heart, it is a story about the many different ways to be a family, and it made me reflect on what an honor it is to care for someone you truly love.”


April ’25: ‘Grief Is the Thing with Feathers’ by Max Porter


dua lipa // grief is the thing with feathers
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 3.82/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversations with author Max Porter

“Ever so occasionally, you pick up a book and it spins you around and turns you upside down. This is one of those books,” Lipa wrote in her introduction to the April pick. “In his debut novel, author Max Porter ripped up the rule book of what a novel should do and instead presents us with something so wild, so mind-bending and just so beautiful.”

“It might take you a second to get into the voice of Crow but once you are, you are in for a treat. “Grief Is The Thing With Feathers” is definitely a book where you really just have to surrender to the story — take it from me, let yourself go and enjoy the wild ride.”


March ’25: ‘There There’ by Tommy Orange


dua lipa // there there book
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 3.98/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Tommy Orange

In her introduction to the March pick, Lipa wrote, “Tommy Orange starts with a brief but sharp history lesson in the prologue of There There, dispelling 400 years of slurs and stereotypes against Native people in 10 fiery pages – almost too painful to bear, but essential to start his story.”

“The connections between the cast reveal themselves bit by bit as events spiral towards a violent and horrific crescendo in the Big Oakland Powwow, an occasion that holds a desperate significance for each of them. Among the tragedies foreshadowed throughout, there is also redemption and humanity. It’s a stunning book.”


February ’25: ‘The Bee Sting’ by Paul Murray


the bee sting
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 3.92/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Paul Murray

In an email introducing the book, Lipa wrote that it “absolutely nails the loneliness of childhood and teenage years, and the ways in which acting normal on the surface can conceal the darkest of secrets. Every character is flawed but no one is judged – in fact, there is an abundance of empathy in this novel.”

She continued, “As the book builds pace, it sucks you into a whirlpool of tension, where all escape routes are cut off. The result: a grand finale that will leave you sweating. It’s genius!”


January ’25: ‘Drive Your Plow Over The Bones Of The Dead’ by Olga Tokarczuk


Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 3.95/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Olga Tokarczuk

“The hardest thing about Olga Tokarczuk’s amazing genre-defying novel Drive Your Plow Over The Bones Of The Dead is knowing how to describe it,” Lipa wrote, introducing her first pick of the new year. “It’s a crime novel, but much more than a mere whodunnit. It’s also a call to arms, a philosophical interrogation that’s peppered with surreal mediations on astrology, and a story that will make your blood boil while simultaneously warming your heart.”

“Darkly humorous, deadly serious, and with a quirky cast of characters that will stay with you forever, this is definitely not to be missed. The author won the Nobel Prize in Literature, and when you read this novel you’ll see why.”


Service95 Book Club picks 2024:

December ’24: 5 Books Dua Is Gifting This Year


books dua is gifting this year
Service95

Rather than a traditional pick for December, Lipa shared a list of five books she’s planning on gifting this holiday season:

  • “Brightly Shining” by Ingvild Rishøi, translated by Caroline Waight – “This small but mighty Norwegian Christmas story is like a modern retelling of Hans Christian Andersen’s ‘The Little Match Girl’ (spoiler: expect tears). The perfect stocking filler.”
  • “James” by Percival Everett – “By taking the simple concept of retelling ‘The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn’ from the point of view of the enslaved Jim, Everett subverts and reclaims the original story. It’s so skillfully done.”
  • “Tenth Of December” by George Saunders – “No Christmas list is complete without a George Saunders book. I love his short story collections, and ‘Tenth Of December’ is perhaps my favourite. ‘The Semplica Girl Diaries’ is an absolute standout.”
  • “In The Distance” by Hernan Diaz – “I’m currently reading this strange and evocative western by Diaz. There’s a lot I want to discuss, so friends of mine can expect to find it under their tree this Christmas.”
  • “The Last Dream” by Pedro Almodóvar, translated by Frank Wynne – “I’m an Almodóvar evangelist in whatever form he comes to me – films, interviews, and now short stories. I’m so excited to read this; I want everyone to read along.”

November ’24: ‘On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous’ by Ocean Vuong


On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.0/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Ocean Vuong

“This beautiful book had me hooked right at the title. And while it is a novel, Ocean Vuong’s poetic language dances on every page,” Lipa wrote, introducing the pick.

“As much as it is a commentary on the dark side of the American Dream, it is also a tender testament to the unbreakable love between a mother and son. Little Dog’s mother tells him: ‘You have a bellyful of English. You have to use it.’ And my goodness, does he use it.”


October ’24: ‘Lincoln in the Bardo’ by George Saunders


Lincoln in the Bardo
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 3.8/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author George Saunders

Lipa wrote, “I loved this unique, bold and compassionate book. At its heart, this is a story of one of the most famous men in history – President Abraham Lincoln – grieving for his dead son Willie, whose death foreshadows the hundreds of thousands of lives that are about to be lost in the American Civil War.

“There is no one writing today who can match George Saunders for compassion and empathy. The very last page still replays in my mind. The voices of these spirits – the wretched and the brave, and the dead boy Willie Lincoln – will stay with me forever.”


September ’24: ‘Bad Habit’ by Alana S. Portero (translated by Mara Faye Lethem)


Bad Habit
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.5/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Alana S. Portero

“I got actual chills when I read the opening scenes of this book. Beginning with her fallen angels – the boys who become junkies on the streets of San Blas – Alana S Portero’s vivid portrait of a young Trans girl growing up in 1980s Madrid had me hooked from the very first page,” Lipa wrote.

“You’ll delight in the fiendishly wicked sisterhood of the city’s street queens, outcasts and misfits while singing your heart out to the sounds that spill out of the clubs and into the plazas. This is a book to savor. Enjoy every word.”


July ’24: ‘Noughts & Crosses’ by Malorie Blackman


Noughts and Crosses
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.2/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Malorie Blackman

Lipa introduced July’s pick by saying, “Like many people my age, I was partly raised by Malorie Blackman. She creates worlds you want to carry with you and each story encourages its young readers to ask the important questions in life.”

“It’s pacey, romantic, tortured, and enlightening. What more could a young reader ask for?”


June ’24: ‘Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland’ by Patrick Radden Keefe


Say Nothing
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.5/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Patrick Radden Keefe

“‘Say Nothing’ is a masterclass in the art of the ‘non-fiction novel.’ It has all the elements of great fiction – mesmerizing characters, intrigue and plot twists,” Lipa wrote. “And it also happens to be true.”

“This is a big book in every sense of the word, about a terrible and tragic war in the United Kingdom that many people today are too young to even remember. I guarantee you will be hooked from beginning to end.”


May ’24: ‘Swimming in the Dark’ by Tomasz Jedrowski


Swimming in the Dark
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.3/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Tomasz Jedrowski

“Taking the form of a love letter from Ludwik to Janusz, reading “Swimming In the Dark” is a bit like peering into someone’s most intimate moments of self-discovery,” Lipa wrote, introducing her May pick, a coming-of-age love story set against the brutal political backdrop of Communist Poland in the 1980s.

“It’s poetic and tender, burning with a quiet rage at the persecution the LGBTQ+ community in Poland has suffered for decades and continues to fight against today. It’s a beautiful story – I hope you love it as much as I do.”


April ’24: ‘Crying in H Mart’ by Michelle Zauner


Crying in H Mart
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.3/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Michelle Zauner

“Some of you may already know Michelle [Zauner] as the uber-cool singer and guitarist of the American cult indie band Japanese Breakfast,” Lipa wrote. “With this book, she also proves herself to be a first-class memoirist, writing with raw honesty about her difficult teenage relationship with her mother and the grief that follows her mother’s death from cancer.”

“This is a book about loss that is also about love; it’s a book about South Korea that is also about West Coast small-town America; it’s a story that is both beautiful and heartbreaking; it is as raw as it is precious. I bawled my eyes out, but I also loved it and I hope you do too.”


March ’24: ‘Trust’ by Hernan Diaz


Trust by Hernan Diaz
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 3.8/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Hernan Diaz

Introducing the pick, Lipa wrote, “This book made my head spin! Set in New York City in the 1920s and ’30s, the story of a Manhattan financier and his high society wife is told through four ‘books’ – a novel, a manuscript, a memoir and a journal. But which version should you trust? Is there even one true reality?”

“While each reader will draw their own conclusion when they reach the end of this complex and thrilling book, what is never disputed is the ease with which money and power can bend reality itself. I was obsessed and you might just be too.”


February ’24: ‘A Thousand Splendid Suns’ by Khaled Hosseini


A Thousand Splendid Suns
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.4/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Khaled Hosseini

“I first read “A Thousand Splendid Suns” just after the return of the Taliban in 2021 when Afghanistan dominated headlines around the world,” Lipa reflected. “If we need any reminder of why we should stand in solidarity with Afghan women now more than ever, this book is surely it. It’s a really intense story of a world we all hoped was far behind us – and yet it’s more relevant than ever to understand the lives of women under the Taliban.”

“If that sounds heavy, don’t be put off. With Khaled Hosseini’s great gift for storytelling, this book soars on many levels. It’s an illuminating story of the cultural and political history of Afghanistan, rich with the textures of daily life. What stood out for me as much as the oppression it details is that this story is infused with love – between fractured families, teenage lovers, and the heroic characters of Mariam and Laila, whose friendship resonated with me so deeply.”


January ’24: ‘The Guest’ by Emma Cline


The Guest
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 3.3/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Emma Cline

“Every page of this book raised so many questions for me!” Lipa wrote in the introduction for her January pick. “The story takes place over just one week, during which we learn almost nothing about the young protagonist, Alex. We never leave a small affluent area of what we assume is Long Island. No one dies (or do they?), no major world events take place. And yet… the strange atmospheric pace of the novel doesn’t let up, and I found myself literally on the edge of my seat from beginning to end.”

“Just like the infinity pools and the crystal calm sea that serve as metaphors throughout, under the surface, this book shimmers with tension, flirts with danger, and begs questions about class, privilege, excess and survival. I can’t wait to dive into this with you.”


Service95 Book Club picks 2023:

November ’23: ‘The Vanishing Half’ by Brit Bennett


The Vanishing Half
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.1/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Brit Bennett

In a post about the pick, Lipa wrote, “This book brilliantly surfaces a multitude of questions about race, class and gender, told through a family drama that spans three generations in 20th-century America.

“I was struck by how the novel so cleverly raises questions of heritage and identity while remaining non-judgmental, empathetic and full of heart. I raced through this book, and I’m sure you will too.”


September ’23: ‘Just Kids’ by Patti Smith


Just Kids
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.2/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Patti Smith

“This month, we are doing something a little different… our September Monthly Read is the memoir
“Just Kids” by Patti Smith. Patti is an absolute rock and roll icon and a personal hero of mine, so I am beyond excited to dive into this book,” Lipa wrote.

“It’s hard to define Patti – she is a singer, a songwriter, a poet, a painter and, of course, an author. It’s safe to say that we get something of all of these personas through this beautiful book. Prior to being at the heart of the New York City punk scene, Patti was pushing boundaries in the art world with her lover and best friend, the controversial photographer Robert Mapplethorpe. Their enduring love story – which navigates both romantic and platonic love – forms the warm heart of this book, and along the way, we meet artists and musicians such as Andy Warhol and Janis Joplin, literary giants including William Burroughs and Allen Ginsberg, to say nothing of the drag queens and socialites that pass through the doors of the Chelsea Hotel.”


August ’23: ‘Half of a Yellow Sun’ by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie


Half of a Yellow Sun
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.3/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Lipa wrote of her August 2023 pick, “This isn’t just a story of war. I guarantee you will be totally absorbed by the parallel love stories between Olanna and Odenigbo, and Kainene and Richard. I found their different outlooks on relationships fascinating, including how they each dealt with love, jealousy, infidelity and forgiveness.”


July ’23: ‘Pachinko’ by Min Jin Lee


Pachinko
Service95, Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.3/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Min Jin Lee

“I could not put this book down… it’s quite long, but I promise you will race through it,” Lipa wrote. “It’s a sweeping saga set in Korea and Japan that follows the fortunes of a Korean family across four generations and eight decades. It’s a story of the search for identity in a hostile country, of what immigrant parents sacrifice for their children, and of the choices women must make in a man’s world.”

“I learned so much about the annexation of Korea and early 20th-century Japanese colonialism. If that makes it sound like a heavy lift – don’t worry, it’s not. I was totally absorbed by the characters and, in fact, it’s so readable it will leave you wanting more.”


June ’23: ‘Shuggie Bain’ by Douglas Stuart


Shuggie Bain
Amazon

Goodreads rating: 4.3/5 stars | Watch Lipa in conversation with author Douglas Stuart

Lipa’s inaugural Service95 book club pick is “an intimate study of the tenderness that survives the ravages of alcoholism in a mother-son relationship.”

She wrote, “I clearly have a thing for heart-breaking books, and this is no exception. Yet there is so much love within the pages of this book, particularly between Shuggie and his mother Agnes.”



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