Editors Reads

Best Bestsellers Books

814 expert-reviewed books — page 8 of 34

About a Boy book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

About a Boy

by Nick Hornby

4.2

Will Freeman is 36, wealthy from his father's royalties, and has constructed a life entirely free of obligation or development. He invents a fictional son, Ned, in order to meet single mothers at SPAT (Single Parents Alone Together). Through this deception he meets Marcus, a twelve-year-old who is relentlessly uncool and whose mother is suicidally depressed. Their unlikely friendship changes both of them.

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Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick
4.2

An older Polish woman who teaches English, translates Blake, and keeps astrological charts becomes the prime suspect when hunters in her village start dying in mysterious circumstances. A murder mystery narrated by a woman who believes animals are taking revenge. One of the most surprising and original novels of recent decades.

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Istanbul: Memories and the City book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick
4.2

Part memoir, part urban history, Pamuk's portrait of Istanbul through his own childhood and adolescence explores the concept of hüzün—the melancholy that permeates the city's self-understanding after the fall of the Ottoman Empire—through family photographs, street scenes, and the Western writers who tried to capture Istanbul from the outside.

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My Name Is Red book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

My Name Is Red

by Orhan Pamuk

4.2

Istanbul, 1591. A master miniaturist has been murdered, and his killer remains hidden among the sultan's circle of illuminators. Told through multiple voices—including a corpse, a dog, a gold coin, and the color red itself—Pamuk's novel is simultaneously a murder mystery, a meditation on art and perspective, and a portrait of the Ottoman world at the threshold of modernity.

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Rabbit Is Rich book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

Rabbit Is Rich

by John Updike

4.2

Harry 'Rabbit' Angstrom is 46, co-owner of a Toyota dealership, a member of the country club, comfortable and bored in the Pennsylvania suburb he once tried to escape. It is 1979: the gas crisis, Carter's malaise speech, Iran. His son Nelson has come back with a pregnant girlfriend. Updike's Pulitzer Prize winner — middle-class American contentment as its own form of dissatisfaction.

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Shantaram book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

Shantaram

by Gregory David Roberts

4.2

An escaped Australian convict arrives in Bombay with a false passport, becomes a slum doctor, makes friends and enemies among the city's criminals, and discovers a city that unmakes and remakes him completely.

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The Accidental Tourist book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick
4.2

Macon Leary writes travel guides for people who hate to travel — guides on how to find the familiar in the foreign, how to minimise the discomfort of being elsewhere. After his son is murdered and his wife leaves, he moves back in with his eccentric siblings and their dog. The dog trainer, Muriel Pritchett, enters his life uninvited and changes it. Tyler's most beloved novel.

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The Adventures of Augie March book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick
4.2

Augie March grows up poor and Jewish in Depression-era Chicago and refuses to be defined by it. Picaresque, exuberant, and crammed with characters from every class and corner of American life, this is Bellow's most ebullient novel—the one that announced an entirely new way of writing American English.

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The English Patient book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

The English Patient

by Michael Ondaatje

4.2

In an Italian villa at the end of World War II, a burned and dying man is cared for by a Canadian nurse, visited by a Sikh sapper and a former thief; the mystery of the patient's identity, and what the North African desert did to him, forms the novel's slow-burning centre.

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The Island book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

The Island

by Victoria Hislop

4.2

A young British woman visits Crete and discovers her family's connection to Spinalonga — the island across the bay that served as Greece's last functioning leper colony until 1957 — uncovering four generations of love, stigma, and survival.

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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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Breathing Lessons book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

Breathing Lessons

by Anne Tyler

4.1

Maggie and Ira Moran have been married for twenty-eight years. On a single day in 1988 they drive from Baltimore to a friend's funeral in Pennsylvania and back. What happens in the car, at the funeral, at an old friend's house along the way, illuminates the whole shape of their marriage — its compromises, its small deceptions, its persistent stubbornness of love. Tyler's Pulitzer Prize winner.

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Demian book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

Demian

by Hermann Hesse

4.1

Emil Sinclair grows up in two worlds: the 'bright' world of his bourgeois family and the 'dark' world he senses underneath. Max Demian—strange, self-possessed, seemingly ageless—appears as his guide, leading him through Jungian psychology, Gnostic Christianity, and Nietzsche toward his own self-realization. Written in 1917, published in 1919.

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Disgrace book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

Disgrace

by J.M. Coetzee

4.1

David Lurie, a twice-divorced Cape Town professor, has an affair with a student, loses his position, and retreats to his daughter Lucy's smallholding in the Eastern Cape, where an attack changes both their lives irrevocably and forces a reckoning with what white South Africans are owed and owe.

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Possession book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

Possession

by A.S. Byatt

4.1

Two contemporary academics discover evidence of a secret love affair between two Victorian poets — the eminent Randolph Henry Ash and the lesser-known Christabel LaMotte — and the double narrative that follows, moving between the Victorian and contemporary stories, is a meditation on love, scholarship, and possession in all its senses.

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The Golden Notebook book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

The Golden Notebook

by Doris Lessing

4.1

Anna Wulf, a blocked writer and communist, keeps four notebooks — black for her African novel, red for politics, yellow for fiction, blue for her diary — and a fifth golden notebook in which she attempts to bring them together: a formally radical portrait of a woman trying to hold her fractured self in one place.

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The Museum of Innocence book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick
4.1

Istanbul, 1975. Kemal, a wealthy man engaged to a suitable woman, falls obsessively in love with his poor distant cousin Füsun. Their affair ends; she marries another; he spends eight years visiting her family's apartment, collecting objects she has touched. He eventually builds a museum to house these objects. Pamuk has also built the actual museum in Istanbul.

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Under the Banner of Heaven book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick
4.1

A double narrative: the murder of a Mormon woman and her infant daughter by fundamentalist brothers who believed they were acting on divine revelation, intertwined with the full history of the Latter-day Saint movement from Joseph Smith to the present day. A rigorous examination of religious fundamentalism and faith.

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Milkman book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

Milkman

by Anna Burns

4.0

An unnamed young woman in an unnamed city during the Troubles is subjected to the unwanted attentions of a senior paramilitary figure known only as Milkman — and finds that the community, the paramilitaries, and even her family interpret this attention as complicity.

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