Editors Reads

Best Fiction Books

1720 expert-reviewed books — page 58 of 72

Missing You book cover

Missing You

by Harlan Coben

4.1

NYPD Detective Kat Donovan finds a dating website profile that appears to be her father — the man who went missing eighteen years ago. Following it leads her into something far darker than she expected.

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My Son's Story book cover

My Son's Story

by Nadine Gordimer

4.1

Will, a 'coloured' South African teenager, discovers his father Sonny—a political activist—is having an affair with a white woman who works for the anti-apartheid movement. The novel is narrated by Will and is about the cost of the political life on the family that sustains it. Gordimer's most personal meditation on the activist's divided loyalties.

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Nausea book cover

Nausea

by Jean-Paul Sartre

4.1

Jean-Paul Sartre's first novel and a foundational text of existentialism. Through the diary of Antoine Roquentin, a solitary historian gripped by a creeping 'nausea' at the sheer, meaningless existence of things, Sartre dramatizes the confrontation with a universe without inherent purpose.

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No Longer at Ease book cover

No Longer at Ease

by Chinua Achebe

4.1

The sequel to Things Fall Apart follows Okonkwo's grandson Obi Okonkwo, who returns to Lagos after education in England, hoping to resist corruption in the colonial civil service. Achebe's mordant second novel is about the generation that inherited colonialism's aftermath — caught between their elders' world and a Western modernity that has no genuine place for them.

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Noble House book cover

Noble House

by James Clavell

4.1

The longest and most ambitious Clavell novel, set in Hong Kong in 1963 — the Noble House descended from Dirk Struan battles takeover bids, Chinese Communists, the KGB, American businessmen, and internal family conflict during a single tumultuous week. A sprawling portrait of Hong Kong at a pivotal moment in its history.

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One Plus One book cover

One Plus One

by Jojo Moyes

4.1

Single mother Jess Thomas is struggling to get by when tech millionaire Ed Nicholls offers her and her mismatched family a ride to Scotland for a maths competition — a road trip that changes both their lives.

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Our Missing Hearts book cover

Our Missing Hearts

by Celeste Ng

4.1

In a near-future America consumed by anti-Asian sentiment and a PACT law criminalising anything deemed unpatriotic, twelve-year-old Bird's mother — a poet — has disappeared. Bird sets out to find her, following a trail of clues hidden in her mother's poems. A dystopian novel about the power of stories and what parents sacrifice for their children.

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Possessing the Secret of Joy book cover
4.1

Tashi, the African woman who appeared briefly in The Color Purple, undergoes female genital mutilation as an act of cultural solidarity and spends the rest of her life dealing with the trauma, eventually killing the woman who performed the procedure. Walker's most confrontational novel — a direct political act about female genital cutting as a cultural and feminist issue.

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Provenance book cover

Provenance

by Ann Leckie

4.1

Set in the same universe as the Imperial Radch trilogy but following different characters, Ingray Aughskold steals a prisoner from a secure facility as part of a scheme to impress her mother, and finds herself in the middle of a diplomatic crisis involving the authenticity of her people's historical artefacts.

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Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour: An Introduction book cover
4.1

Two stories about Seymour Glass: 'Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters,' narrated by Buddy on Seymour's wedding day when he fails to appear, and 'Seymour: An Introduction,' in which Buddy tries and fails to describe his brother. The second story is a meditation on the impossibility of capturing a person in language, and a portrait of obsessive love as a form of artistic blockage.

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Ranger's Apprentice: The Ruins of Gorlan book cover
4.1

Will, an orphan boy at Castle Redmont who dreams of becoming a knight, is instead chosen as apprentice to Halt — the kingdom's most enigmatic and skilled Ranger — and must develop the arts of stealth, archery, and tracking to help face a rising evil threatening the kingdom.

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Red Mars book cover

Red Mars

by Kim Stanley Robinson

4.1

One hundred colonists arrive on Mars in 2026 to begin humanity's first permanent settlement — and the political and philosophical fault lines that will define the planet's future immediately emerge.

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Ripley Under Ground book cover

Ripley Under Ground

by Patricia Highsmith

4.1

Tom Ripley has settled into comfortable French country life at his villa Belle Ombre with his wealthy wife Héloïse. He is co-managing a scheme to sell forged paintings attributed to a dead artist named Derwatt. When an American collector arrives convinced the paintings are fraudulent, Ripley must manage the situation — which escalates, as Ripley situations always do. The second Ripley novel, fifteen years after The Talented Mr. Ripley.

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Safe Haven book cover

Safe Haven

by Nicholas Sparks

4.1

A mysterious young woman arrives in the small coastal town of Southport, North Carolina, and starts over with a new name. She keeps her distance — from her neighbours, from the widowed store owner Alex who is drawn to her, and from the past she is fleeing. Safe Haven is Sparks' most thriller-adjacent novel, blending domestic danger with his signature romance.

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Salammbô book cover

Salammbô

by Gustave Flaubert

4.1

Set during the Mercenary War in Carthage (240-238 BC), Flaubert's archaeological novel follows mercenary soldier Mâtho's obsession with Salammbô, daughter of Hamilcar Barca and guardian of the sacred veil — a deliberate departure from domestic realism into extreme historical otherness.

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Seveneves book cover

Seveneves

by Neal Stephenson

4.1

When the moon inexplicably breaks apart, scientists calculate that Earth will become uninhabitable within two years. The surviving remnant of humanity must learn to live in space — and the seven women who survive a catastrophic orbital crisis become the mothers of all future humanity.

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Sharp Objects book cover

Sharp Objects

by Gillian Flynn

4.1

Crime journalist Camille Preaker is sent back to her small Missouri hometown to cover the murders of two young girls, and back into the orbit of her controlling mother Adora and half-sister Amma. Flynn's debut is a novel about women's violence against women, and the ways trauma writes itself permanently on the body.

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Siege and Storm book cover

Siege and Storm

by Leigh Bardugo

4.1

Alina Starkov is on the run from the Darkling — the powerful Grisha commander who wants to use her light-summoning abilities to control all of Ravka. Seeking safety at sea, she instead discovers a new amplifier and a privateer named Sturmhond whose motives are far more complicated than they appear.

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Starship Troopers book cover

Starship Troopers

by Robert A. Heinlein

4.1

Rico joins the Terran Mobile Infantry to fight in an interstellar war against insectoid aliens. Heinlein's Hugo-winning novel is a passionate defence of civic virtue, military service, and the idea that citizenship must be earned — one of SF's most celebrated and most debated books.

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Stay Close book cover

Stay Close

by Harlan Coben

4.1

Three people — a suburban mother hiding her past, a detective haunted by an unsolved case, and a paparazzo watching a nightclub — are all circling the same disappearance from seventeen years ago.

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Steppenwolf book cover

Steppenwolf

by Hermann Hesse

4.1

Harry Haller, a middle-aged intellectual who believes himself to be half-man and half-wolf — the Steppenwolf — is drawn by a young woman named Hermine into a world of dance, pleasure, and eventually the surreal Magic Theatre, where he must confront the multiplicity of selves he has denied.

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Suspended Sentences book cover

Suspended Sentences

by Patrick Modiano

4.1

Three novellas bound by common themes: a child left by his parents with a group of dubious characters in suburban Paris; a writer who reconstructs the people his father knew in the Paris underworld; an attempt to recover a woman who appears and disappears across decades. Modiano's most autobiographically transparent fiction.

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That Was Then, This Is Now book cover
4.1

Bryon and Mark have been inseparable since childhood — more brothers than friends — but as they move into their mid-teens, Bryon begins to change in ways that will make their bond impossible to sustain.

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The Ambassadors book cover

The Ambassadors

by Henry James

4.1

Henry James's late masterpiece, which he considered his finest novel. Lambert Strether is sent from New England to Paris to retrieve a wealthy widow's wayward son — only to fall under the spell of the city and to question, too late, whether he has truly lived. A subtle drama of consciousness and regret.

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