
A Little Life
by Hanya Yanagihara
Four college friends build lives in New York City over decades, but the story centers on Jude St. Francis, whose horrific childhood secrets gradually emerge.
Check Price on Amazon (paid link)American · b. 1974
Man Booker Prize finalist (2015), National Book Award finalist (2015)
Hanya Yanagihara is an American novelist whose second novel A Little Life became one of the most debated literary events of the decade for its extreme emotional ambition and unrelenting darkness.
Hanya Yanagihara published A Little Life in 2015 to an immediate and polarising critical reception. The novel is 736 pages long and follows four college friends — JB, Malcolm, Willem, and Jude — across decades of life in New York, but it is really the story of Jude St. Francis: a man of extraordinary professional accomplishment and devastating hidden suffering, whose backstory of abuse is revealed slowly and without mercy across the novel’s length. The book operates at an emotional intensity that is unusual in literary fiction and has generated both fierce devotion and equally fierce objections.
Yanagihara’s prose is beautiful — controlled, precise, capable of sustaining both the ordinary textures of friendship and professional life and the extreme psychological territory the novel inhabits. Her portrait of male friendship, particularly in the earlier sections, is one of the most tender and specific in contemporary fiction. The world she creates — New York artistic and professional life over several decades — is drawn with real authority.
The criticism directed at A Little Life is substantial and worth taking seriously. Many readers and critics argue that the book’s relentless accumulation of trauma crosses a line into exploitation, that the suffering functions as spectacle, and that the novel’s darkness is not in service of any claim about actual human experience but exists as an aesthetic end in itself. Others find this critique to be its own kind of refusal — an unwillingness to sit with the real consequences of abuse. The novel remains one of the most argued-over books of the 2010s, which is itself a kind of testament to its power.

by Hanya Yanagihara
Four college friends build lives in New York City over decades, but the story centers on Jude St. Francis, whose horrific childhood secrets gradually emerge.
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by Hanya Yanagihara
A Nobel-winning scientist convicted of sexual abuse writes his memoir from prison, describing the 1950 expedition that discovered a remote jungle tribe — and a population of apparently immortal humans.
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by Hanya Yanagihara
Three novellas set in the same New York apartment in 1893, 1993, and 2093, connected by recurring names and the theme of freedom — what it means, what it costs, and whether it is ever truly available.
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Where to start with Hanya Yanagihara — whether to begin with A Little Life, The People in the Trees, or To Paradise. A complete reading guide to her novels.
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All Hanya Yanagihara books in publication order — The People in the Trees, A Little Life, and To Paradise. Where to start with one of the most discussed literary novelists of her generation.
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If A Little Life's portrait of trauma and friendship left you gutted, these novels share its emotional ambition, literary depth, and unflinching honesty.
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