Editors Reads

Best Fiction Books

1517 expert-reviewed books — page 49 of 64

The Dharma Bums book cover

The Dharma Bums

by Jack Kerouac

4.2

Ray Smith and the poet Japhy Ryder climb mountains, attend rucksack parties, and discuss Buddhism — embodying the 'rucksack revolution' Kerouac imagined for young Americans who had dropped out of the postwar dream. More focused and more spiritually serious than On the Road.

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The Family Remains book cover

The Family Remains

by Lisa Jewell

4.2

A sequel to The Family Upstairs: Rachel Rimmer goes to France to attend the funeral of a woman who may have been her mother — and discovers connections to the dark Chelsea house of her past. Simultaneously, Detective Inspector Samuel Owusu investigates a body found in the Thames. Two investigations converge on the same terrible story.

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The Ghost Brigades book cover

The Ghost Brigades

by John Scalzi

4.2

The Special Forces soldiers of the Colonial Defense Forces are the Ghost Brigades — created from the DNA of the dead, with no memories of previous lives. When a traitor's consciousness is inserted into one of them, Scalzi explores identity and loyalty in a worthy sequel to Old Man's War.

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The Grass Harp book cover

The Grass Harp

by Truman Capote

4.2

Two elderly cousins and a boy go to live in a treehouse in a chinaberry tree rather than conform to the small town's expectations, and the town decides to bring them down. Capote's most gentle novel is a celebration of eccentricity, chosen family, and the prose is some of the most beautiful he ever wrote.

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The Guardians book cover

The Guardians

by John Grisham

4.2

Quincy Miller has spent twenty-two years on death row for the murder of a small-town Florida lawyer, a crime he insists he did not commit. When a handwritten letter reaches a small innocence organisation, its director takes on the case — knowing that the real killer is still out there and still dangerous.

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The Hollow Hills book cover

The Hollow Hills

by Mary Stewart

4.2

The second Merlin novel covers Arthur's childhood in hiding, his education, and his discovery of Excalibur — following Merlin as he watches over the boy who will become High King from a careful, loving distance. Less structurally ambitious than The Crystal Cave but emotionally rich.

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The House of Mirth book cover

The House of Mirth

by Edith Wharton

4.2

Lily Bart, beautiful, brilliant, and financially precarious, navigates New York society's marriage market and slowly loses ground in a game she was not born to win.

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The House on the Strand book cover

The House on the Strand

by Daphne du Maurier

4.2

Dick Young, staying at his friend's house in Cornwall, takes an experimental drug that sends him back to fourteenth-century Cornwall — where he becomes obsessed with the lives of a long-dead woman and her circle.

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The Joke book cover

The Joke

by Milan Kundera

4.2

Ludvik Jahn writes a postcard joking about the Party to impress a girl; the Party expels him, sends him to a labour battalion, and destroys his life — for a joke. Kundera's first novel is his most political: a study of totalitarianism's inability to tolerate irony, and of revenge as a futile response to power.

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The Last Battle book cover

The Last Battle

by C.S. Lewis

4.2

A false Aslan, an ape called Shift, and the Calormenes threaten Narnia in its final days. The seventh and final Narnia chronicle is Lewis's Revelation — an apocalyptic ending to a children's fantasy that is also a theological argument about the nature of reality.

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The Last Letter from Your Lover book cover
4.2

Two love stories set forty years apart — Jennifer Stirling in 1960s London, trapped in a loveless marriage, and journalist Ellie Haworth in the present day — are connected by a cache of passionate letters discovered in a newspaper archive.

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The Last Murder at the End of the World book cover
4.2

On an island that is the last refuge of humanity after an apocalyptic fog killed the rest of the world, someone has murdered the scientist maintaining the barrier that keeps the fog at bay. If the murderer isn't found in 107 hours, the barrier falls and everyone dies. Turton's most structurally inventive mystery: a closed-room that is an entire civilisation.

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The Music of Chance book cover

The Music of Chance

by Paul Auster

4.2

Jim Nashe, a former firefighter driving aimlessly through America with his inheritance, picks up a young gambler named Pozzi — and after losing everything in a card game against two eccentric millionaires, they find themselves building a medieval wall in a Pennsylvania field to pay off their debt.

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The Mysterious Affair at Styles book cover
4.2

When Emily Inglethorp is found dead at Styles Court, her stepson calls in his Belgian refugee friend Hercule Poirot to investigate. Christie's debut novel introduces one of fiction's most beloved detectives and establishes the country-house mystery template.

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The Other Wind book cover

The Other Wind

by Ursula K. Le Guin

4.2

The sixth and final Earthsea novel revisits the question that has haunted the series since The Farthest Shore — the nature of death and the afterlife in the world of the Archipelago. A sorcerer haunted by the dead comes to Roke, and the answer found will transform Earthsea's understanding of what comes after.

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The Pale King book cover

The Pale King

by David Foster Wallace

4.2

Wallace's unfinished posthumous novel follows IRS agents in a Midwest tax processing centre, examining boredom, attention, and the ethical weight of choosing to care about something the world deems worthless.

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The Red Pyramid book cover

The Red Pyramid

by Rick Riordan

4.2

Carter and Sadie Kane discover they are descended from the most powerful magicians in ancient Egypt. When their father accidentally unleashes the chaos god Set, the siblings must master Egyptian magic fast enough to prevent Set from destroying the world — and find out why their family has been lying to them.

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The Restaurant at the End of the Universe book cover
4.2

Arthur Dent and his improbable companions dine at Milliways — the restaurant at the literal end of the universe — while continuing to flee Vogons, encounter the man who rules the universe, and discover the deeply unsatisfying truth about the planet Earth.

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The Runaway Jury book cover

The Runaway Jury

by John Grisham

4.2

In a landmark tobacco liability trial in Mississippi, a mysterious juror named Nicholas Easter appears to be manipulating the outcome from inside the jury box — while his accomplice outside works both sides of the case for an enormous payout.

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The Silmarillion book cover

The Silmarillion

by J.R.R. Tolkien

4.2

The mythological history of Middle-earth, from the creation of the world by the god-like Ainur through the ages of the Elves, the forging of the Silmarils, and the great wars of the First Age — assembled posthumously by Christopher Tolkien from his father's lifelong writings.

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The Stolen Heir book cover

The Stolen Heir

by Holly Black

4.2

Set eight years after The Queen of Nothing, a new protagonist — Oak, the young prince of Elfhame — ventures into the north to recover a kidnapped human girl. What he finds is Suren, the former Queen of the Unseelie Court, living as an exile with a power she cannot control. A new duology in the Elfhame world begins.

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The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch book cover
4.2

In an overcrowded future Earth, colonists escape their misery through illegal hallucinations mediated by a corporate drug called Can-D. When the magnate Palmer Eldritch returns from Proxima Centauri with a new drug called Chew-Z, reality itself becomes uncertain — because Chew-Z hallucinations may not be hallucinations at all. Dick's most theologically disturbing novel.

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The Tin Drum book cover

The Tin Drum

by Günter Grass

4.2

Oskar Matzerath, narrating from a mental institution, recounts how at age three he decided to stop growing, and how he witnessed the rise of Nazism, World War II, and the collapse of Danzig through the perspective of a child in an adult world — beating his tin drum and shattering glass with his voice.

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The Turn of the Key book cover
4.2

Rowan Caine writes a letter from prison, claiming to be innocent of the child's death she is accused of. She was a nanny at a remote Scottish smart-house — a high-tech home that watched her every move, recorded every conversation, and whose previous nannies kept leaving without explanation. A locked-room thriller for the surveillance age.

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