Join Her Book Club to Find Out? Want to Know What Dua Lipa Is Reading

If you've ever wished you could get book recommendations from the 'Dance the Night' and 'Levitating' singer, dream no further Dua Lipa isn’t just one of today's buzziest performers but also a dedicated bookworm

Published Time: 17.03.2024 - 16:31:14 Modified Time: 17.03.2024 - 16:31:14

If you've ever wished you could get book recommendations from the 'Dance the Night' and 'Levitating' singer, dream no further

Dua Lipa isn’t just one of today's buzziest performers but also a dedicated bookworm.Earlier this year, the "Dance The Night" and "Levitating" singer launched a book club through her editorial platform Service95. Each month, Lipa picks a new book to read; one that highlights the club’s belief that literature can “represent diverse global voices, telling powerful stories spanning fiction, memoir and manifesto,” per the platform’s website.Lipa also includes an abundance of bonus material with each selection, including author interviews, playlists and discussion guides. Service95 Recommends, an additional resource on the site, includes even more of Lipa’s favorite reads, along with picks from guests like Lisa Taddeo and Monica Lewinsky.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human-interest stories.Lipa's book club choices and bonus material can be accessed on the Service95 site. See all of her picks below:

Diaz’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel follows a wealthy Manhattan couple throughout the 1920s and ‘30s, and is told through a variety of formats: a novel, a memoir and a journal, to name a few. “I was obsessed and you might just be too,” Lipa says of the book.

The author of The Kite Runner pens “an illuminating story of the cultural and political history of Afghanistan” with this novel, says Lipa. The book follows two Kabul women whose lives become connected through war and fate.

While chosen for Lipa’s January read, Emma Cline’s second novel is the perfect addition to your beach bag this summer. The novel follows the misadventures of a young woman, and her relationship with an older man, leading up to a Labor Day party. It “shimmers with tension” and “flirts with danger,” according to Lipa.

Bennett’s acclaimed second -

novel follows the Vignes twins — two sisters who are Black, one of which is White-passing, and the lives they live as adults. Lipa says the book “brilliantly surfaces a multitude of questions about race, class and gender.”

Lipa calls this classic family saga “irresistible.” Bonus material for the book includes a conversation with the late author’s son and more information about the 1928 Colombia Banana Massacre, which inspired scenes in the sprawling, seminal novel.

A musician’s memoir feels fitting for Lipa, who announced Just Kids, her only nonfiction pick so far, as her September book. Legendary punk singer and poet Patti Smith details her life as a young artist in 1960s and 1970s New York City, as well as her treasured friendship with photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, in this National Book Award-winning autobiography.

This 2006 novel, which takes place during the Nigerian Civil War (also known as the Biafran War) follows multiple characters as they navigate love and relationships during a time of political unrest. Lipa calls this book one of “love, jealousy, infidelity and forgiveness,” and author Adichie also wrote an exclusive essay about the importance of Igbo culture and language in writing.

Set in both Korea and Japan, Pachinko follows four generations of a Korean family, as well as their experiences with identity, womanhood and colonialism. Author Min Jin Lee was interested in the history of Koreans in Japan, as well as the popular game Pachinko, and writes about how these inspirations helped inform her novel.

Lipa has “a thing for heartbreaking books,” she said about her June pick. Shuggie Bain, set in Thatcher-era, working-class Scotland, focuses on the relationship between young Hugh (nicknamed Shuggie) and his alcoholic mother, Agnes. Bonus book club material includes a playlist inspired by the book’s Glasgow setting, which is also author Douglas Stuart’s hometown.