Editors Reads

Best Literary Fiction Books

777 expert-reviewed books — page 20 of 33

Anxious People book cover

Anxious People

by Fredrik Backman

4.3

A failed bank robber takes a group of apartment hunters hostage at an open house. When police arrive, the hostage-taker has vanished and no one in the group is talking. Told across multiple perspectives and timelines, Anxious People is a comedy-mystery about failure, loneliness, and the quiet kindnesses people extend to strangers when no one is watching.

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Carol book cover

Carol

by Patricia Highsmith

4.3

Therese Belivet, a young woman working in a New York department store, meets Carol Aird — older, wealthy, in the midst of a difficult divorce. A love story told with Highsmith's characteristic precision, remarkable for its time because it ends happily. Originally published in 1952 under the pseudonym Claire Morgan as 'The Price of Salt', it was the first novel in American publishing to portray a lesbian relationship without punishment or renunciation. Filmed in 2015 with Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara.

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Chronicle of a Death Foretold book cover

Chronicle of a Death Foretold

by Gabriel García Márquez

4.3

Everyone in the town knows that Santiago Nasar is going to be killed. The Vicario brothers announced it. The narrator reconstructs the hours before the murder, interviewing survivors years later to understand how a community can know a man is about to die and do nothing to stop it. García Márquez's most formally precise work.

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Cities of the Plain book cover

Cities of the Plain

by Cormac McCarthy

4.3

The conclusion of the Border Trilogy — John Grady Cole and Billy Parham are both working on a New Mexico cattle ranch in the early 1950s when John Grady falls in love with Magdalena, an epileptic prostitute across the border in Juárez.

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Family Matters book cover

Family Matters

by Rohinton Mistry

4.3

Nariman Vakeel, an elderly Parsi professor with Parkinson's disease, is moved from his stepchildren's large apartment to his daughter's small one — a shift that tests every relationship in the family and exposes the accumulated debts and resentments of decades.

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Franny and Zooey book cover

Franny and Zooey

by J.D. Salinger

4.3

Two stories: 'Franny,' in which a young woman has a breakdown at a Yale football weekend while clutching a book about the Jesus Prayer, and 'Zooey,' in which her brother attempts to help her recover. The Glass family — seven exceptionally intelligent siblings raised on comparative religion — are Salinger's sustained meditation on the problem of being too smart for the ordinary world.

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Galatea 2.2 book cover

Galatea 2.2

by Richard Powers

4.3

A novelist named Richard Powers returns to the university where he once studied and becomes involved in a bet: can a neural network be trained to pass a master's examination in English literature? As he trains the AI called Helen on the canon of Western literature, he finds himself examining his own failed relationships, his writing life, and what it means for a machine to truly understand.

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Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World book cover
4.3

Two narratives alternate in strictly separate chapters: in one, a 'Calcutec' data processor in near-future Tokyo is drawn into a conspiracy involving encrypted information and subterranean creatures; in the other, a nameless man enters a walled town where residents have no shadow and unicorn skulls must be read at dusk. The two stories converge on questions about consciousness, identity, and what it means to lose the self. Murakami's most structurally ambitious novel.

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I Am the Messenger book cover

I Am the Messenger

by Markus Zusak

4.3

Ed Kennedy, an underage cab driver with no real ambitions, accidentally stops a bank robbery and begins receiving mysterious playing cards that send him on missions to help — and sometimes confront — strangers in his city.

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Jack book cover

Jack

by Marilynne Robinson

4.3

Jack Boughton and Della Miles, a Black schoolteacher, meet in St. Louis in the late 1940s and fall in love in a state where their relationship is illegal.

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Lie Down in Darkness book cover

Lie Down in Darkness

by William Styron

4.3

The Loftis family of Port Warwick, Virginia, is disintegrating: the father drinks, the mother is cold, the beautiful daughter Peyton has been driven mad by the love and hatred of both parents. Styron's first novel — written in the shadow of Faulkner but not trapped by it — is the most accomplished American debut novel of the postwar period, and its account of Peyton's stream-of-consciousness interior monologue rivals the master's best.

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MaddAddam book cover

MaddAddam

by Margaret Atwood

4.3

The conclusion of the MaddAddam Trilogy — survivors of the waterless flood, including the Crakers (Crake's genetically engineered humans), form an uneasy community. Toby must tell the Crakers stories about the old world as they all try to build something new.

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My Ántonia book cover

My Ántonia

by Willa Cather

4.3

Jim Burden looks back on the Bohemian immigrant girl who defined his Nebraska childhood and shaped everything he has become.

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Night Flight book cover

Night Flight

by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

4.3

Three mail pilots fly dangerous night routes over South America while their director, Rivière, drives them beyond human limits in service of a vision of what aviation can be — a meditation on duty, mortality, and the cost of achievement.

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No One Writes to the Colonel book cover

No One Writes to the Colonel

by Gabriel García Márquez

4.3

An elderly colonel waits, every week, for a pension that has been promised but never arrives. He has waited for fifteen years. His wife is ill, their money is nearly gone, and their only valuable possession is a fighting rooster that may be their last chance at financial survival. García Márquez's most restrained and most heartbreaking novella.

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Pnin book cover

Pnin

by Vladimir Nabokov

4.3

Timofey Pnin, a Russian émigré professor at a small American college, navigates American life with earnest incomprehension and frequent misfortune — Nabokov's most warm and compassionate novel.

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Sophie's Choice book cover

Sophie's Choice

by William Styron

4.3

Narrated by Stingo, a young Southern writer who moves to Brooklyn in 1947, Sophie's Choice tells the story of his friendship with Sophie Zawistowski — a Polish Catholic Holocaust survivor — and her volatile lover Nathan Landau, and the secret at the heart of Sophie's experience in Auschwitz.

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Sula book cover

Sula

by Toni Morrison

4.3

The friendship between Nel Wright and Sula Peace, two Black women in the Bottom — a hilltop community in Ohio — over five decades, and what Sula's freedom costs both of them.

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Swann's Way book cover

Swann's Way

by Marcel Proust

4.3

The first volume of Marcel Proust's seven-volume In Search of Lost Time, Swann's Way begins with the narrator's memory of childhood in Combray, triggered by the taste of a madeleine dipped in tea, and extends into a long account of Charles Swann's consuming love for Odette de Crécy.

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The Amber Spyglass book cover

The Amber Spyglass

by Philip Pullman

4.3

The conclusion of His Dark Materials — Lyra and Will descend into the land of the dead, the war against the Authority reaches its climax, and the full theological argument of the trilogy is made explicit. The first children's book to win the Whitbread Prize.

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The Angel's Game book cover

The Angel's Game

by Carlos Ruiz Zafón

4.3

In 1920s Barcelona, struggling writer David Martín is commissioned by a mysterious publisher to write a book that will make people believe anything — and finds himself drawn into a labyrinthine conspiracy involving the Cemetery of Forgotten Books and forces he cannot understand.

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The Bee Sting book cover

The Bee Sting

by Paul Murray

4.3

An Irish family — parents, teenage daughter, and young son — each narrate their version of the secrets and crises that are simultaneously destroying and revealing them.

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The Book of Laughter and Forgetting book cover
4.3

Seven loosely connected stories meditate on memory, forgetting, laughter, and totalitarianism — opening with a Communist official literally erased from a photograph by the regime that once celebrated him. Kundera's most formally experimental novel blurs fiction, essay, autobiography, and music theory into a structure that mirrors what it describes: the way history is rewritten, forgotten, laughed away.

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The Farthest Shore book cover

The Farthest Shore

by Ursula K. Le Guin

4.3

Magic is draining out of Earthsea. Wizards are forgetting their spells. Ged and the young prince Arren must sail to the farthest reaches of the world to find the source of the wound in the world — and the entity responsible for it. The concluding volume of the original Earthsea trilogy is Le Guin's meditation on death, courage, and the limits of power.

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