Editors Reads

Best Satire Books

Satire uses humour, irony, and exaggeration to expose the absurdity of power and the failings of the societies that tolerate it. From Swift and Voltaire to Vonnegut, Heller, and Orwell, the best satirical fiction makes you laugh and then makes you uncomfortable about why you laughed.

67 expert-reviewed books — page 1 of 3

Editorial Top Picks

Night Watch book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pickfictionfantasy

Night Watch

by Terry Pratchett

4.6

Commander Sam Vimes of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch is thrown back in time to the days of his youth, forced to take the place of his old mentor and train his younger self during one of the city's defining revolutionary moments.

Candide book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pickliterary fiction

Candide

by Voltaire

4.5

Candide, raised on Pangloss's philosophy that all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds, is expelled from his castle and travels through earthquakes, Inquisitions, the Seven Years War, and El Dorado, finding nothing to support Pangloss's optimism. The sustained satirical assault on Leibnizian theodicy that made Voltaire famous.

Guards! Guards! book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pickfictionfantasy

Guards! Guards!

by Terry Pratchett

4.5

The eighth Discworld novel and first in the City Watch sub-series: a secret brotherhood summons a dragon to seize power in Ankh-Morpork, and the only thing standing between the city and a new dragon king is the most incompetent police force in fantasy history.

Gulliver's Travels book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

Gulliver's Travels

by Jonathan Swift

4.3

Lemuel Gulliver travels to four extraordinary lands — Lilliput (tiny people), Brobdingnag (giants), Laputa (flying island of abstracted philosophers), and the country of the Houyhnhnms (rational horses served by bestial humans). Each voyage is a systematic satirical assault on something Swift found contemptible in early eighteenth-century Europe.

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The White Tiger book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

The White Tiger

by Aravind Adiga

4.2

Balram Halwai, born into poverty in a Bihar village, writes a series of letters to the Chinese premier explaining how he became a successful entrepreneur — by murdering his employer. Adiga's debut is a savage, blackly comic account of what it actually takes to escape India's 'Rooster Coop.'

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The Master and Margarita book cover
Editor's Pick

The Master and Margarita

by Mikhail Bulgakov

4.8

Satan visits Stalinist Moscow, accompanied by a giant black cat, a hitman, and a naked witch — exposing Soviet bureaucracy's absurdities while a novelist's story of Pontius Pilate and Jesus unfolds within the novel.

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Good Omens book cover
Editor's Pick

Good Omens

by Terry Pratchett & Neil Gaiman

4.6

An angel and a demon who have grown rather fond of the Earth team up to prevent the Apocalypse, while a small boy in Tadfield may or may not be the Antichrist.

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Catch-22 book cover
Editor's Pick

Catch-22

by Joseph Heller

4.5

Joseph Heller's darkly comic masterpiece follows bombardier Yossarian through the absurdist bureaucracy of World War II, inventing the most important logical paradox of modern language.

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Don Quixote book cover
Editor's Pick

Don Quixote

by Miguel de Cervantes

4.5

The adventures of the deluded knight Alonso Quijano — who believes himself to be the knight-errant Don Quixote — and his earthy squire Sancho Panza across the plains of La Mancha.

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Small Gods book cover
Editor's Pick

Small Gods

by Terry Pratchett

4.5

A great god is reduced to living in the body of a small tortoise because no one truly believes in him anymore — only one novice monk does — and together they must reckon with what faith really means in a world dominated by the institution built in his name.

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Snow Crash book cover
Editor's Pick

Snow Crash

by Neal Stephenson

4.4

A pizza delivery driver who moonlights as a hacker navigates the Metaverse — Stephenson's invented virtual reality — to unravel a conspiracy involving a powerful new drug and ancient Sumerian linguistics.

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What a Carve Up! book cover
Editor's Pick

What a Carve Up!

by Jonathan Coe

4.3

Jonathan Coe's savage, inventive satire of Thatcher's Britain. Commissioned to write the history of the monstrous Winshaw family — whose members profit from banking, arms, factory farming, media, and politics — a struggling writer uncovers a web of greed that mirrors a nation's corruption, building to a darkly comic country-house climax.

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The Clown book cover
Editor's Pick

The Clown

by Heinrich Böll

4.2

Hans Schnier, a professional clown, calls everyone he knows to borrow money after his partner and only love, Marie, has left him for a good Catholic marriage. In one evening of phone calls, Böll dissects West German Catholic bourgeois society with devastating precision. His most bitter and his funniest novel.

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Life and Death Are Wearing Me Out book cover
Editor's Pick
4.1

A landlord executed in 1950 is reincarnated through a series of animals—donkey, ox, pig, dog, monkey—on the farm his family was forced to surrender during China's land reform, witnessing half a century of Chinese history from a uniquely non-human vantage point. Mo Yan considered this his finest novel.

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Adrift on the Nile book cover
Editor's Pick

Adrift on the Nile

by Naguib Mahfouz

4.0

A group of Egyptian intellectuals and civil servants gather nightly on a houseboat on the Nile for kif-smoking sessions that are at once a retreat from Nasser's Egypt and a symptom of its spiritual exhaustion. When a journalist who refuses to join their escapism enters the circle, the consequences are fatal.

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Blonde Roots book cover
Editor's Pick

Blonde Roots

by Bernardine Evaristo

4.0

A satirical counterfactual in which Africans enslaved Europeans — a white woman narrates her life in bondage in a world where the Atlantic slave trade ran in reverse, forcing a direct confrontation with the mechanics and logic of slavery.

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The Republic of Wine book cover
Editor's Pick
4.0

A special investigator is sent to a coal-mining region where there are rumours that officials are eating babies prepared as delicacies. His investigation collapses into drunkenness and corruption. Interpolated throughout are letters between 'Mo Yan' and an aspiring writer named Li Yidou, whose own stories appear in the novel. One of the most formally experimental works of Chinese fiction.

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The Stone Raft book cover
Editor's Pick

The Stone Raft

by José Saramago

4.0

The Pyrenees crack and the entire Iberian peninsula breaks off from Europe, drifting into the Atlantic. Five Portuguese and Spanish strangers—who each experienced a mysterious personal event just before the detachment—are drawn together as the peninsula sails toward an unknown destination. Saramago's most playful and politically charged novel.

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White Noise book cover
Editor's Pick

White Noise

by Don DeLillo

4.0

Jack Gladney, a professor of Hitler Studies at a Midwestern college, faces a toxic chemical disaster and an existential terror of death. DeLillo's National Book Award winner and a defining postmodern American novel.

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Yellowface book cover
Bestseller

Yellowface

by R.F. Kuang

4.1

A white female author steals the unfinished manuscript of her Chinese-American friend who has just died, publishes it as her own, and watches her carefully constructed lies unravel as the internet closes in.

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The Sellout book cover
Bestseller

The Sellout

by Paul Beatty

4.0

A young Black man in a small California city reinstates slavery and segregation as a social experiment, triggering a Supreme Court case that satirises American racial politics with savage wit.

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The Circle book cover
Bestseller

The Circle

by Dave Eggers

3.5

Mae Holland lands her dream job at the Circle — a technology company that has combined Google, Facebook, and Apple into one dominant platform — and becomes a true believer as the company pushes toward universal transparency and the erosion of all private life.

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A Handful of Dust book cover

A Handful of Dust

by Evelyn Waugh

4.7

Tony Last, owner of a crumbling Gothic pile called Hetton Abbey, loses his wife to a fatuous socialite and ends up imprisoned in the Amazon jungle, reading Dickens aloud forever to a mad old man. Waugh's darkest comedy — the ending is among the most horrifying in British fiction.

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