Editors Reads

Best Literary Fiction Books

777 expert-reviewed books — page 18 of 33

Go Tell It on the Mountain book cover
4.6

Baldwin's first and most autobiographical novel follows fourteen-year-old John Grimes on his birthday in 1935 Harlem, moving between his stepfather's fierce Pentecostal faith and the sins and suffering that faith is meant to redeem. The novel interweaves three generations of a Black family in the American South and Harlem in prose of extraordinary lyrical power.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Labyrinths book cover

Labyrinths

by Jorge Luis Borges

4.6

The essential Borges collection for English readers: twenty-three stories and ten essays, including 'The Garden of Forking Paths,' 'Pierre Menard Author of the Quixote,' 'The Library of Babel,' 'Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius,' and 'The Lottery in Babylon.'

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Tenth of December book cover

Tenth of December

by George Saunders

4.6

Saunders's most celebrated story collection brings together ten pieces including the title story — a dying man and a boy converge on an icy pond — and 'Escape from Spiderhead.' Winner of the Story Prize, called 'the best book you'll read this year' by the New York Times. The best introduction to what Saunders does: satirical surfaces, genuine moral feeling, linguistic invention that earns its sentiment.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
The Things We Cannot Say book cover
4.6

When Alice's grandmother, Babcia, has a stroke and starts whispering names that no one recognises, Alice travels to Poland to uncover the truth. Alternating with the story of a young woman in Nazi-occupied Poland who made impossible choices to protect those she loved.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Underworld book cover

Underworld

by Don DeLillo

4.6

DeLillo's masterwork begins with a legendary 1951 baseball game between the Giants and the Dodgers — the 'shot heard round the world' — and traces the fate of the ball hit for the home run through fifty years of American history: the Cold War, nuclear anxiety, the waste stream, art, crime, and the interconnected lives of ordinary Americans. It is the great American novel of the second half of the twentieth century.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
A Little Princess book cover

A Little Princess

by Frances Hodgson Burnett

4.5

When Sara Crewe's father dies, she is stripped of her privileged status at Miss Minchin's Seminary and reduced to a servant in the attic she once occupied as a princess. But Sara refuses to surrender her imagination or her sense of herself — and her story becomes one of children's literature's most powerful studies of dignity under humiliation.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Doctor Faustus book cover

Doctor Faustus

by Thomas Mann

4.5

A German composer of genius makes a Faustian bargain — syphilitic infection in exchange for twenty-four years of musical creativity — as Germany makes its own bargain with Nazism. Told through the biography of his lifelong friend, Mann's most ambitious novel.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Erasure book cover

Erasure

by Percival Everett

4.5

Thelonious 'Monk' Ellison, a Black literary novelist whose experimental work is dismissed as 'not Black enough,' writes a savage parody of the ghetto-lit novels the publishing industry craves — and watches in horror as it becomes a bestseller.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Ficciones book cover

Ficciones

by Jorge Luis Borges

4.5

Jorge Luis Borges's most celebrated collection of stories — including The Garden of Forking Paths, The Library of Babel, Pierre Menard Author of the Quixote, and The Lottery in Babylon — stories that read like philosophical thought experiments and have influenced nearly every significant fiction writer since.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Gilead book cover

Gilead

by Marilynne Robinson

4.5

John Ames, a seventy-six-year-old Congregationalist minister in Gilead, Iowa in 1956, knowing he is dying, writes a long letter to his young son — a letter about faith, memory, his father and grandfather, and the complicated situation of his old friend's son John Ames Boughton.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Half of a Yellow Sun book cover

Half of a Yellow Sun

by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

4.5

Set during the Nigerian-Biafran War of the late 1960s, the novel follows three characters — twin sisters and a British writer — through one of Africa's most devastating postcolonial conflicts.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Housekeeping book cover

Housekeeping

by Marilynne Robinson

4.5

Two sisters, Ruth and Lucille, grow up in the small lakeside town of Fingerbone after their mother drives into the lake, looked after by a succession of unsuitable relatives, until their drifting aunt Sylvie arrives.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
If Beale Street Could Talk book cover
4.5

Tish Rivers, nineteen years old and pregnant, narrates the story of her fiancé Fonny, a sculptor falsely accused of rape and imprisoned in the Tombs. Baldwin's most tender novel is also his most explicitly political — a love story told inside an indictment of American racial injustice that is both heartbreaking and precise.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Libra book cover

Libra

by Don DeLillo

4.5

DeLillo's fictional account of Lee Harvey Oswald — the conspiracy theorists who recruited him, the forces that shaped him, and the day in Dallas — is the most formally rigorous of the many Kennedy assassination novels. DeLillo is not interested in whether Oswald did it but in what kind of person could be shaped into such an act: a man made entirely of images, ideologies, and other people's narratives.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Lila book cover

Lila

by Marilynne Robinson

4.5

The third Gilead novel tells the story of John Ames's young wife — the drifter Lila, who grew up in poverty on the American roads, cared for by the woman Doll who stole her as an infant — and how she came to arrive in Gilead and sit down in the back of an old preacher's church.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Pale Fire book cover

Pale Fire

by Vladimir Nabokov

4.5

A 999-line poem by fictional American poet John Shade, followed by an obsessive commentary by his neighbour Charles Kinbote — who may be the exiled king of a fictional country called Zembla. One of the most formally inventive novels ever written.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Stoner book cover

Stoner

by John Williams

4.5

The quiet, ordinary life of William Stoner — Missouri farm boy, English professor, failed husband and father — told with such precision and compassion that it becomes a meditation on what makes a life worth living.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Tender Is the Night book cover

Tender Is the Night

by F. Scott Fitzgerald

4.5

Dick Diver, a brilliant American psychiatrist on the French Riviera in the 1920s, has married his former patient Nicole and constructed a life of exquisite social grace — which we watch unravel across the novel.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
The Aleph and Other Stories book cover

The Aleph and Other Stories

by Jorge Luis Borges

4.5

The title story — in which the narrator discovers a point in space that contains all other points simultaneously — is Borges's most ambitious and most affecting piece, alongside 'The Zahir,' 'The Dead Man,' 'The Theologians,' and other stories engaging with infinity, identity, and the impossibility of complete knowledge.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
The Heart of a Dog book cover

The Heart of a Dog

by Mikhail Bulgakov

4.5

A Moscow street dog is given a human pituitary gland and testicles by a surgeon, transforms into a crude, politically useful Soviet citizen, and must eventually be returned to his original state. Bulgakov's suppressed novella is the most precise literary satire of Soviet ideology ever written — the experiment of creating the New Soviet Man literalized as a surgical procedure with predictable results.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
The Labyrinth of the Spirits book cover

The Labyrinth of the Spirits

by Carlos Ruiz Zafón

4.5

The fourth and final Cemetery of Forgotten Books novel follows Alicia Gris, a secret police operative in Franco's Spain, as she investigates a missing government official whose disappearance connects to a network of Barcelona's literary and intellectual life across decades — resolving the mysteries of the entire series.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Things Fall Apart book cover

Things Fall Apart

by Chinua Achebe

4.5

Set in the Igbo village of Umuofia in pre-colonial Nigeria, Things Fall Apart follows the warrior Okonkwo whose rigid commitment to traditional masculine strength ultimately destroys him — and whose world is irrevocably transformed by the arrival of British missionaries and colonial administrators.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Anathem book cover

Anathem

by Neal Stephenson

4.4

On the world of Arbre, scholars called avout live cloistered in mathic communities called concents, their contact with the outside world restricted to once every year, decade, century, or millennium — until an alien object enters orbit and changes everything.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Arrow of God book cover

Arrow of God

by Chinua Achebe

4.4

Chief priest Ezeulu of the Umuaro clan navigates the arrival of British colonial authority while maintaining the traditional religious structures that give meaning to his community. Achebe's most complex novel examines how traditional power and colonial power interact and corrupt each other, and how a community can destroy itself by holding too firmly to what it is.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)

Disclosure: Amazon links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

Skip to main content