Oh, I love this kind of gossip-adjacent literary digging. From what I pieced together, she seemed to be reading 'The Vanishing Half' by Brit Bennett earlier this year—not exactly a new release, but maybe a catch-up. There was also a whisper about 'The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida' floating around her circle.
But honestly, her public list feels intentionally curated toward activism and classics now. The real juicy stuff might be the contemporary fiction she doesn't post about. I'd kill to know if she's into any of the weird, hype-y BookTok books like everyone else, or if she stays firmly in the literary prize-winner zone.
Genuine question—has anyone actually seen a confirmed, up-to-date list? I feel like every article about celebrity book clubs recycles recommendations from years ago. 'Emma Watson's Reading List' usually points to her 'Our Shared Shelf' picks from ages back, like 'The Handmaid's Tale' or 'Women & Power'. If there's something new this year, it's probably buried in an Instagram story she deleted after 24 hours.
I did notice a photo from months ago where the corner of a Sally Rooney paperback was visible, but that's hardly a list. Maybe the whole idea of a 'celebrity reading list' is just a PR cycle—publishers benefit, books get a boost, but the actual reading habits are more scattered and private. I'd trust a regular booktuber's monthly wrap-up more.
She shared a photo with 'Small Things Like These' by Claire Keegan on a table back in spring. Slim novel, huge impact. Fits her pattern of picking precise, morally layered stories. Beyond that, it's all speculation unless she revives the official club.
2026-07-13 12:08:13
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I stumbled across that list a while back when I was in a real reading rut. Honestly, some of the choices felt a bit expected, like 'The Handmaid's Tale'—a classic, obviously, but I feel like everyone cites that one for feminist reading now. What actually stuck with me was 'Half the Sky' by Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn. It's non-fiction, super heavy, and not a breezy 'empowerment' pick in a feel-good way. It's about global oppression of women and it left me feeling furious and motivated more than anything else. That's a different kind of power, I guess.
She also had 'The Vagina Monologues' by Eve Ensler on there, which makes total sense given her work with UN Women. I reread it after seeing it on her list, and the stage directions alone hit differently now. The list is a good starting point, but it's very 'solid, canonical feminist works.' I wish it had more obscure or genre-bending titles that explore power in weirder ways.
The correlation is fascinating. It's not a prescriptive syllabus but a thematic trail you can follow. Her public picks often amplify intersectional voices or explore structural oppression from unexpected angles. 'The Argonauts' by Maggie Nelson isn't a standard feminist text, but its deconstruction of language, gender, and family fits perfectly with a modern, questioning feminism. Similarly, championing 'Women & Power' by Mary Beard connects ancient history to today's silencing of women's voices—a very Watson move, linking academia with popular discourse.
Sometimes her choices feel like quiet rebuttals to expectations. Recommending 'The Handmaid's Tale' is almost obvious, but following it with something like 'Mom & Me & Mom' by Maya Angelou shows a focus on personal reconciliation and legacy, not just dystopian warning. It reflects a feminism concerned with healing and intergenerational dialogue, not just theory. The list seems curated to start conversations where you least expect them, which is probably the point.
That request is oddly specific. Emma Watson's 'Our Shared Shelf' book club from a few years back is probably the closest thing to an official list, but it's not really maintained anymore. The Goodreads group archives are still up, I think. Some fan sites compile the monthly picks she announced.
But honestly, the summaries there were often just the publisher's blurbs. You'd get more from looking up the actual books she championed, like 'The Handmaid's Tale' or 'Mom & Me & Mom'. The context was in her interview snippets about why she chose them, not in any pre-packaged summary. Trying to find a neatly organized list with her personal notes seems like a dead end; it was always more about the discussion than a curated checklist.