Editors Reads

Best Literary Fiction Books

898 expert-reviewed books — page 35 of 38

Cosmopolis book cover

Cosmopolis

by Don DeLillo

3.9

Eric Packer, a 28-year-old billionaire currency trader, crosses midtown Manhattan in his stretch limousine on a day when his bet against the yen is going catastrophically wrong, the city is gridlocked by a presidential motorcade, and someone — possibly himself — is trying to kill him.

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Dangling Man book cover

Dangling Man

by Saul Bellow

3.9

Chicago, 1942. Joseph, waiting to be drafted, keeps a journal for seven months. He has left his job; he cannot do anything else; he hangs in suspension. Bellow's first novel—written under the influence of Dostoevsky and Kafka—is the purest statement of the anxious intellectual that would define his career.

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Eleven Minutes book cover

Eleven Minutes

by Paulo Coelho

3.9

Maria, a young Brazilian woman, travels to Geneva dreaming of fame and fortune. Instead, she becomes a high-end prostitute, all while searching for — and philosophising about — the nature of love, desire, and the sacred in the profane.

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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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In Evil Hour book cover

In Evil Hour

by Gabriel García Márquez

3.9

A small Colombian town is disturbed by anonymous pamphlets—lampoons—that appear overnight on doors and walls, revealing private scandals. As the town's mayor tries to suppress them and violence escalates, García Márquez creates his most purely political early novel.

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Jude the Obscure book cover

Jude the Obscure

by Thomas Hardy

3.9

Jude Fawley, a Dorset stonemason, dreams of university and an intellectual life. His marriage, his passion for his unconventional cousin Sue Bridehead, and society's refusal to accommodate either his ambitions or his love, grind him down. Hardy's final and darkest novel caused a scandal on publication.

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Killing Commendatore book cover

Killing Commendatore

by Haruki Murakami

3.9

A portrait painter, after his wife leaves him, retreats to a house in the Odawara mountains once owned by the painter Tomohiko Amada. In the attic he finds a canvas of an obscure Japanese-style painting titled 'Killing Commendatore'. Soon a mysterious bell begins ringing from a sealed pit in the woods, and a faceless figure called the Idea emerges to set the narrator's world in motion. Murakami's most art-focused novel.

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Let It Come Down book cover

Let It Come Down

by Paul Bowles

3.9

Nelson Dyar, a bored New York bank teller, moves to Tangier hoping to escape his life — and descends into a world of currency smugglers, drug dealers, and nihilistic expatriates that ends in catastrophe.

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Machines Like Me book cover

Machines Like Me

by Ian McEwan

3.9

An alternative 1980s London where Alan Turing survived and the first synthetic humans have just been manufactured. Charlie buys one — Adam — and shares custody of it with Miranda, his upstairs neighbour. A love triangle and the questions it raises about consciousness and moral status.

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Mathilda book cover

Mathilda

by Mary Shelley

3.9

Written in 1819 but suppressed by Shelley's father and unpublished until 1959, Mathilda is a harrowing gothic novella about a young woman destroyed by her father's incestuous obsession and her subsequent withdrawal into grief. Autobiographical in its emotional truth, it is among the most painfully honest works Shelley ever wrote.

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Memories of My Melancholy Whores book cover

Memories of My Melancholy Whores

by Gabriel García Márquez

3.9

On his ninetieth birthday, a lifelong bachelor and mediocre newspaper columnist in a Colombian port city resolves to give himself the gift of a night with a young virgin. Instead he falls into a chaste, obsessive, late-life love with the sleeping girl he names Delgadina — a love that quietly rewrites the meaning of his long, hollow life.

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Men Without Women book cover

Men Without Women

by Haruki Murakami

3.9

Seven stories united by a single condition: men who have lost women — through departure, death, separation, or the gradual erosion of connection. A doctor whose wife has had an affair; a man who receives a phone call from the husband of a woman he loved twenty years ago. Murakami's most emotionally concentrated story collection.

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Nine Perfect Strangers book cover

Nine Perfect Strangers

by Liane Moriarty

3.9

Nine stressed, broken, or otherwise lost people arrive at Tranquillum House — a boutique wellness retreat run by the enigmatic Masha. Over ten days, Masha's radical approach to healing crosses lines they didn't know existed. A satirical thriller about the wellness industry, grief, and what people will try when conventional living has failed them.

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No Bones book cover

No Bones

by Anna Burns

3.9

Amelia Lovett grows up in a Catholic enclave of North Belfast from the 1960s through the 1990s, in a family shaped by proximity to violence — the novel follows her through fifteen vignette chapters, each presenting a distinct moment in the Troubles and its effects on ordinary family life.

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One August Night book cover

One August Night

by Victoria Hislop

3.9

The sequel to The Island, set fifty years after the events of the original novel. The island of Spinalonga has been empty since the leper colony was closed; the families of Plaka on the Cretan shore have rebuilt their lives. But one August night, a violent act resurfaces history and forces the characters — and their descendants — to confront what was never fully resolved. A companion piece to Hislop's most famous novel.

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Orlando book cover

Orlando

by Virginia Woolf

3.9

Orlando lives for centuries, transforming from an Elizabethan nobleman into a woman in the eighteenth century, and waking finally in 1928. Woolf's joyful fantasy — a love letter to Vita Sackville-West — is her most accessible novel and an enduring meditation on gender, identity, and literary tradition.

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Selection Day book cover

Selection Day

by Aravind Adiga

3.9

Two brothers from rural India are brought to Mumbai by their obsessive father to become cricket stars — but Manju, the more talented of the two, is not sure he wants what his father wants for him.

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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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Southern Mail book cover

Southern Mail

by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

3.9

Saint-Exupéry's debut novel follows a mail pilot flying routes over the Sahara and a narrator's meditation on love, duty, and the life of aviation against the backdrop of a woman waiting on the ground.

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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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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 Children's Book book cover

The Children's Book

by A.S. Byatt

3.9

A vast Edwardian panorama following several interconnected families from the Arts and Crafts movement of the 1890s through the catastrophe of the First World War, centred on Olive Wellwood, a writer of fairy tales for children who uses her stories to contain what she cannot say to her family directly.

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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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The Dean's December book cover

The Dean's December

by Saul Bellow

3.9

Saul Bellow's brooding novel of two cities. Albert Corde, a Chicago dean, travels to communist Bucharest to attend his mother-in-law's deathbed, and finds himself contemplating the moral decay of both his American city and the gray totalitarian one — a meditation on civilization, conscience, and ruin.

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