Editors Reads

Best Contemporary Fiction Books

99 expert-reviewed books — page 4 of 5

One Plus One book cover

One Plus One

by Jojo Moyes

4.1

Single mother Jess Thomas is struggling to get by when tech millionaire Ed Nicholls offers her and her mismatched family a ride to Scotland for a maths competition — a road trip that changes both their lives.

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Our Missing Hearts book cover

Our Missing Hearts

by Celeste Ng

4.1

In a near-future America consumed by anti-Asian sentiment and a PACT law criminalising anything deemed unpatriotic, twelve-year-old Bird's mother — a poet — has disappeared. Bird sets out to find her, following a trail of clues hidden in her mother's poems. A dystopian novel about the power of stories and what parents sacrifice for their children.

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After You book cover

After You

by Jojo Moyes

4.0

Lou Clark returns in the sequel to Me Before You, navigating grief, unexpected new connections, and the question of how to live fully after catastrophic loss — including a visit from someone from Will Traynor's past.

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American Wife book cover

American Wife

by Curtis Sittenfeld

4.0

Curtis Sittenfeld's acclaimed novel loosely inspired by Laura Bush. Alice Lindgren, a quiet Midwestern librarian, marries into a powerful, wealthy family and finds herself, improbably, the First Lady of the United States — a sympathetic, psychologically rich exploration of conscience, complicity, and a private woman in a public life.

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Apples Never Fall book cover

Apples Never Fall

by Liane Moriarty

4.0

Stan and Joy Delaney — retired tennis coaches and parents of four adult children — seem to have the perfect marriage. Then Joy disappears, and each of her children has a theory about what happened. Told across multiple perspectives over the year before and after Joy's disappearance, the novel dissects a family's myths about itself.

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Last Night in Montreal book cover

Last Night in Montreal

by Emily St. John Mandel

4.0

Lilia Albert has been disappearing her whole life — taken by her father as a child, re-disappearing every few years, leaving behind whoever has come to love her. Her most recent boyfriend follows her across the country trying to understand why. Mandel's debut shows the same intelligence as her later work applied to the same questions: identity, memory, the people who vanish.

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The Rosie Project book cover

The Rosie Project

by Graeme Simsion

4.0

Don Tillman, a brilliant but socially rigid genetics professor, designs the Wife Project — a rigorous questionnaire to identify the perfect partner — only to find himself derailed by Rosie, who fails every criterion.

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Us book cover

Us

by David Nicholls

4.0

David Nicholls's Booker-longlisted novel of a marriage in crisis. On the eve of a grand European tour, Douglas's wife Connie tells him she may be leaving him. Determined to win her back and reconnect with his estranged son, the buttoned-up Douglas embarks on a poignant, funny grand tour across the continent.

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Big Brother book cover

Big Brother

by Lionel Shriver

3.9

Pandora picks up her brother Edison from the airport and barely recognizes him — he has gained nearly two hundred pounds. What follows is her attempt to save him, and the question of how much we owe the people we love when they are destroying themselves.

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God Help the Child book cover

God Help the Child

by Toni Morrison

3.9

Bride, a beautiful dark-skinned young woman who has turned her blackness into a brand and a career asset, confronts her traumatic childhood—and the lie she told as a child that sent an innocent woman to prison—when her boyfriend suddenly vanishes. Morrison's final novel, set in contemporary California.

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South of the Border, West of the Sun book cover
3.9

Hajime, a successful jazz bar owner in Tokyo with a comfortable marriage, is reunited with Shimamoto — his only close childhood friend, with whom he spent hours listening to records. Their reunion opens something he cannot close. A quiet, compressed novel about the specific grief of the road not taken and the women who persist as figures of the unlived life.

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Sputnik Sweetheart book cover

Sputnik Sweetheart

by Haruki Murakami

3.9

K loves Sumire, who loves a married older woman named Miu. When Sumire disappears on a Greek island where she and Miu have been travelling, K is called to help. A quiet, triangular love story about people who orbit each other without connecting — Murakami's most explicitly about the loneliness of desire and the distances between people who want each other across unbridgeable gaps.

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Still Me book cover

Still Me

by Jojo Moyes

3.9

In the third Lou Clark novel, Louisa travels to New York City as a personal assistant to a wealthy family, navigating a new world, a complicated love triangle, and the ongoing question of what it means to live the life Will Traynor urged her toward.

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Telegraph Avenue book cover

Telegraph Avenue

by Michael Chabon

3.9

Michael Chabon's big-hearted novel of Oakland. Two friends, one Black and one white, run a beloved used-record store threatened by a new megastore, while their wives work as midwives and their families' secret histories surface — a maximalist comedy of race, friendship, music, and place.

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The Closed Circle book cover

The Closed Circle

by Jonathan Coe

3.9

The sequel to Jonathan Coe's The Rotters' Club. Reuniting its Birmingham schoolfriends in the New Labour Britain of the millennium, The Closed Circle follows them into disillusioned middle age, anatomizing the Blair years with Coe's trademark blend of social satire, comedy, and melancholy.

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Unsheltered book cover

Unsheltered

by Barbara Kingsolver

3.9

Barbara Kingsolver's dual-timeline novel set at the same New Jersey corner. A present-day family struggles with economic precarity and a crumbling house, while in the 1870s a science teacher defends Darwin against a hostile town — a meditation on upheaval, certainty, and what it means when our shelters fail.

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Wind/Pinball book cover

Wind/Pinball

by Haruki Murakami

3.9

The two novellas that launched Murakami's career — 'Hear the Wind Sing' (1979) and 'Pinball, 1973' (1980) — published together for the first time in English. The unnamed narrator and his friend 'the Rat' move through a coastal Japanese town, listening to music, drinking beer, and circling the losses of youth. Quieter and more elliptical than Murakami's later work, these novellas show the essential qualities of his sensibility in concentrated form.

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Without Merit book cover

Without Merit

by Colleen Hoover

3.9

A young woman living in a converted church with her deeply dysfunctional family falls for a boy hiding his own secrets while navigating depression and family dysfunction.

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A Week in December book cover

A Week in December

by Sebastian Faulks

3.8

Seven interconnected characters in contemporary London — a hedge fund manager shorting bank stocks before the 2008 financial crisis, a footballer's wife, a Muslim radicalisation plot, a reality TV contestant, a tube driver, a book reviewer. A state-of-England novel of pre-crash London.

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After Dark book cover

After Dark

by Haruki Murakami

3.8

One night in Tokyo, told in real time and in the second person plural — 'we' observe, as if a camera, the city between midnight and dawn. Mari, a student, sits in a Denny's with a book; her sister Eri sleeps in their apartment, apparently unable to wake. The night connects them to musicians, a Chinese woman beaten in a love hotel, and the city's insomniac underside. Murakami's shortest and most experimental novel.

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Beautiful World, Where Are You book cover
3.8

Alice, a novelist recovering from a breakdown, and Eileen, a literary editor in Dublin, exchange long emails about love, politics, art, and how to live ethically in the present. Meanwhile, their respective relationships — Alice with Felix, Eileen with Simon — test what they believe against what they actually do.

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Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage book cover
3.8

At twenty, Tsukuru Tazaki was suddenly cut off by his four closest friends without explanation. Sixteen years later, at his girlfriend's urging, he sets out to find out why. A quieter and more realist Murakami — a novel about the wounds that friendship inflicts and the years of recovery they require, structured around a pilgrimage to three countries.

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