Editors Reads

Best Literary Fiction Books

777 expert-reviewed books — page 7 of 33

Young Mungo book cover
Editor's Pick

Young Mungo

by Douglas Stuart

4.3

Mungo Hamilton, fifteen, grows up in a Glasgow housing estate in the early 1990s — caught between his Protestant gang community and a secret relationship with a Catholic boy named James.

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Zorba the Greek book cover
Editor's Pick

Zorba the Greek

by Nikos Kazantzakis

4.3

An intellectual writer goes to Crete to manage a mine and encounters Zorba — a broad-chested, life-devouring man who teaches him what it means to live fully and without fear.

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A Lost Lady book cover
Editor's Pick

A Lost Lady

by Willa Cather

4.2

Marian Forrester, wife of a retired railroad pioneer in Nebraska, is observed across years by Niel Herbert — first as a boy who worships her, later as a young man who watches her adapt to reduced circumstances after her husband's financial ruin. A novel about idealism and its loss.

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A Shining book cover
Editor's Pick

A Shining

by Jon Fosse

4.2

A man walks into the forest and loses his way — a short prose work that moves between the literal and the spiritual as he encounters a presence in the darkness and finds his way back.

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A Sport and a Pastime book cover
Editor's Pick

A Sport and a Pastime

by James Salter

4.2

An American photographer in France narrates — and partly invents — the affair between Philip Dean, a young American, and Anne-Marie Costallat, a French shop girl. The narrator is unreliable; the affair may be partly or wholly imagined. The prose is among the most beautiful in American fiction.

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Brighton Rock book cover
Editor's Pick

Brighton Rock

by Graham Greene

4.2

Brighton, the 1930s. Pinkie Brown is a seventeen-year-old gang leader, a Catholic who believes in damnation and acts accordingly. After a murder, he marries Rose, a waitress who could testify against him, intending to kill her after she can no longer be called as a witness. Ida Arnold, a cheerful hedonist, pursues him. Greene's darkest and most theologically exact novel.

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Burger's Daughter book cover
Editor's Pick

Burger's Daughter

by Nadine Gordimer

4.2

Rosa Burger is the daughter of Lionel Burger, a white South African Communist who died in prison for the anti-apartheid cause. What does it mean to be a martyr's daughter? To inherit a political identity you did not choose? To leave, as Rosa does, for Europe? Gordimer's most personal and most psychological novel, banned in South Africa upon publication.

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Cancer Ward book cover
Editor's Pick

Cancer Ward

by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

4.2

A Soviet cancer ward in 1955, two years after Stalin's death. Oleg Kostoglotov, a former political prisoner with cancer, argues about history, morality, and medicine with his fellow patients—Communist functionaries, doctors, nurses—in a hospital that becomes a miniature of the Soviet state. The novel Solzhenitsyn was prevented from publishing in the USSR.

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Cousin Bette book cover
Editor's Pick

Cousin Bette

by Honoré de Balzac

4.2

Bette Fischer, a poor seamstress humiliated by her beautiful cousin Adeline's superior life, quietly engineers the destruction of Adeline's family — through the Hulot family's weakness for women, and through her own secret alliance with the courtesan Valérie Marneffe. Balzac's greatest study of revenge and female power.

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Effi Briest book cover
Editor's Pick

Effi Briest

by Theodor Fontane

4.2

Effi Briest, seventeen, marries the older Baron von Instetten and follows him to a posting in Pomerania. Lonely and frightened, she has a brief affair with Major Crampas. Years later, her husband discovers the letters, challenges Crampas to a duel, kills him, divorces Effi, and separates her from her daughter. Effi dies of illness and grief.

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Fatelessness book cover
Editor's Pick

Fatelessness

by Imre Kertész

4.2

Fourteen-year-old Gyuri Köves is deported from Budapest to Auschwitz, then Buchenwald, narrating his experience in a tone of bewildered, almost clinical detachment that refuses the expected moral outrage — one of the most formally radical choices in all of Holocaust literature.

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Go Down, Moses book cover
Editor's Pick

Go Down, Moses

by William Faulkner

4.2

Seven interconnected stories spanning a century of the McCaslin family, both its white and Black branches, culminating in 'The Bear'—one of the greatest long stories in American fiction—in which Ike McCaslin confronts the ledgers of his grandfather's crimes against enslaved people and repudiates his inheritance.

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Going After Cacciato book cover
Editor's Pick

Going After Cacciato

by Tim O'Brien

4.2

A soldier named Cacciato walks away from the Vietnam War, heading west toward Paris. His squad is ordered to follow him. The novel weaves between three time-streams: the observation post where Paul Berlin sits on watch, the actual past of the war, and the fantasy of following Cacciato from Vietnam to Paris.

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Kaddish for an Unborn Child book cover
Editor's Pick
4.2

A Holocaust survivor—a translator, like Kertész—explains to his unborn child why he refused to have children. The child is not born because the father cannot bring a child into a world that produced Auschwitz. A monologue addressed to an absence, Kaddish is one of the most formally intense works of Holocaust literature.

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Light in August book cover
Editor's Pick

Light in August

by William Faulkner

4.2

Three interlocking stories in Jefferson, Mississippi: Joe Christmas, a man who may or may not be partly Black, whose ambiguous racial identity will destroy him; Lena Grove, a pregnant young woman walking toward her lover; and Reverend Hightower, disgraced and retired, watching from his window. Faulkner's most humanely accessible major novel.

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Malone Dies book cover
Editor's Pick

Malone Dies

by Samuel Beckett

4.2

Malone lies in bed dying, telling himself stories to pass the time. He will be dead before the end of the book. The stories keep dissolving and beginning again; the characters merge; the pencil keeps getting lost. Middle volume of Beckett's great prose trilogy, and for many readers the most haunting.

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MANIAC book cover
Editor's Pick

MANIAC

by Benjamin Labatut

4.2

Three movements: Paul Ehrenfest's suicide, John von Neumann's life and legacy, and AlphaGo's 2016 defeat of Lee Sedol — a meditation on mathematical genius, the bomb, and what artificial intelligence means for human cognition.

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Midaq Alley book cover
Editor's Pick

Midaq Alley

by Naguib Mahfouz

4.2

A dead-end alley in wartime Cairo is home to a cast of characters — a beautiful girl who dreams of escaping, a wise poet, a corrupt barber, a philosophical beggar — whose lives Mahfouz follows with the compassion and precision of a naturalist.

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Miguel Street book cover
Editor's Pick

Miguel Street

by V.S. Naipaul

4.2

Seventeen linked stories set on a single street in Port of Spain, Trinidad, where the narrator grows up watching the men and women of Miguel Street construct extravagant identities to compensate for their circumstances—the failed poet, the would-be engineer, the boxer, the prostitute's pimp—before he escapes to England on a scholarship.

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Missing Person book cover
Editor's Pick

Missing Person

by Patrick Modiano

4.2

A private detective named Guy Roland discovers he has no past—his memory was erased, and even his name is a fiction. He begins investigating his own identity, tracing himself through prewar and wartime Paris to discover who he was before the amnesia. Winner of the Prix Goncourt. Modiano's most emblematic novel.

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Motherless Brooklyn book cover
Editor's Pick

Motherless Brooklyn

by Jonathan Lethem

4.2

Lionel Essrog has Tourette's syndrome and works for a small Brooklyn detective agency run by Frank Minna. When Frank is murdered, Lionel — compelled by tics, verbal eruptions, and the inability to leave a pattern unresolved — investigates his mentor's death. A genre novel about the detective impulse as a form of neurological necessity.

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On Chesil Beach book cover
Editor's Pick

On Chesil Beach

by Ian McEwan

4.2

Edward and Florence are married in 1962 and arrive at their hotel on the Dorset coast. The wedding night goes catastrophically wrong. In the final pages, McEwan shows the fifty years that follow from a single, irreversible misunderstanding.

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Riders in the Chariot book cover
Editor's Pick

Riders in the Chariot

by Patrick White

4.2

Four misfits in postwar suburban Australia each have visions of the chariot of God: an eccentric spinster, an Aboriginal painter, a German Jewish refugee, and a simple-minded washerwoman. The novel weaves their stories together toward a Good Friday ritual of suburban violence. White's most explicitly religious and most savage novel.

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Septology book cover
Editor's Pick

Septology

by Jon Fosse

4.2

An aging Norwegian painter named Asle contemplates his paintings and his life. He has a neighbor also called Asle—a fellow painter, a drinker, his double—who may or may not represent who he could have been. Over seven parts (the complete trilogy in one volume), Fosse's prose moves in long, recursive, comma-linked sentences that spiral around identity, faith, creativity, and death.

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