Roy's second novel, twenty years after The God of Small Things, follows Anjum — a hijra who lives in a graveyard — and Tilo, an architect entangled in the Kashmir conflict, through a fragmented, polyphonic account of India's multiple political crises.
An Irish woman in Mexico encounters a political and religious movement attempting to revive the ancient Aztec religion and displace Christianity — Lawrence's most politically troubling and visually extraordinary novel.
Eight stories exploring the lives of Vietnamese refugees and immigrants caught between cultures — the ghost-haunted, the displaced, the American-born, and those who never made it out — drawn from two decades of Nguyen's work.
Sonia, a British woman, travels to Granada to learn flamenco after her relationship ends. Staying with family friends, she discovers letters and photographs that reveal the story of the Ramirez family during the Spanish Civil War — a story of love, betrayal, and the violence that divided Spain. Alternating between the present day and the 1930s, The Return is Hislop's portrait of Granada and the civil war's lasting trauma.
Don Tillman, a brilliant but socially rigid genetics professor, designs the Wife Project — a rigorous questionnaire to identify the perfect partner — only to find himself derailed by Rosie, who fails every criterion.
Falcón is called to investigate a domestic murder-suicide in a Seville suburb — a prominent businessman apparently shot his wife and then himself. The investigation reveals the case is far more complex, pulling Falcón into the world of Seville's wealthy elite and the corruption that underlies the city's surface prosperity. The third Falcón novel deepens the detective's psychological portrait while delivering Wilson's most tightly plotted thriller.
Famagusta, Cyprus, 1972. The Sunrise hotel is the most glamorous in the eastern Mediterranean, and the Georgious and Özkan families are its heart — one Greek Cypriot, one Turkish Cypriot, bound by friendship across the island's division. Then 1974 arrives: the Turkish invasion, the occupation of northern Cyprus, and the abandonment of Famagusta — a ghost city still frozen in that summer. Hislop's most politically charged novel.
A loose sequel to The Color Purple following several characters — including an aged spirit named Miss Lissie who remembers multiple past lives — through a meditation on African and African American history, gender, and spiritual continuity. Walker's most ambitious and most polarizing novel.
Father Time is the man who first counted the hours — and was punished for it by being forced to hear all of humanity's pleas for more time, or for time to stop. Albom's modern fable weaves three stories across millennia to examine humanity's complicated relationship with time.
Howard Ingham, an American writer, has come to Tunisia to work on a screenplay. His fiancée doesn't arrive. A colleague dies ambiguously. One night Ingham may have killed an intruder with a typewriter. He isn't certain. Set almost entirely in Hammamet, Tunisia, this is Highsmith's most existential novel — the question of whether Ingham committed a crime becomes less important than the question of whether it matters to him that he might have.
Athens, 1960s. Rydal Keener, a young American drifting through Greece on his father's money, encounters Chester MacFarland — a small-time con man on the run with his wife Colette. When Chester accidentally kills a man and Rydal witnesses it, the two become fatally linked. A thriller set across Greek landscapes — Athens, Crete, Istanbul — exploring the father-son dynamic between two men who are drawn to each other and threatening to each other.
Six friends speak their inner lives across childhood, youth, and middle age — not in dialogue but in pure soliloquy, interspersed with wave descriptions. Woolf's most radical novel dissolves the boundaries between prose and poetry, self and world.
Toby, charming and fortunate, wakes up in his cousin's home after a violent attack that has left him changed. When a skull is found in the wych elm in the garden, Toby becomes entangled in a decades-old death — and begins to question everything he believed about himself and his family.
Amory Blaine moves through Princeton and the First World War and a series of love affairs toward a nebulous self-awareness. Fitzgerald's debut novel made him famous at twenty-three and introduced the Jazz Age to American literature.
David Kelsey maintains a double life: during the week he lives in a boarding house and works as a chemist; on weekends he retreats to a house he has secretly bought and furnished for a woman named Annabelle — who doesn't love him and has married someone else. A study in erotic obsession so complete that the obsessive has replaced reality with a private fiction. One of Highsmith's most psychologically acute portraits of a particular masculine pathology.
Alice steps through a mirror into a reversed world organized as a chess game. Carroll's sequel to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland introduces Tweedledee and Tweedledum, Humpty Dumpty, and the White Queen — and refines his philosophical games with language, identity, and time.
Narrated by Mr. Bones, a dog, as he accompanies his dying owner Willy G. Christmas — a homeless poet of genuine but unrecognised talent — to Baltimore to find Willy's former teacher, and then navigates the world alone after Willy's death.
Ragle Gumm wins a newspaper contest called Where Will the Little Green Man Be Next? every single day. He lives in a pleasant 1950s suburb. He begins to notice that things in his world are slightly wrong — objects dissolve, structures fail to match their descriptions, reality seems to have seams. His comfortable suburban life may be an elaborate construction.
Stephen Fry retells the complete story of the Trojan War, from the wedding of Peleus and Thetis and the Judgment of Paris through the fall of Troy and the fates of its heroes, with characteristic wit and erudition.
Hawthorne's first major collection includes 'The Minister's Black Veil,' 'Dr. Heidegger's Experiment,' 'The Gray Champion,' and 'Wakefield' — stories of Puritan guilt, scientific hubris, moral allegory, and the stranger who removes himself from human society.
Melville's first novel, based on his actual time among the Typee people of the Marquesas Islands after jumping ship, is part adventure narrative, part ethnography, and part critique of Western civilization's assumptions about 'savagery.'
Set over a single day in Dublin on June 16, 1904, James Joyce's Ulysses follows advertising canvasser Leopold Bloom, his wife Molly, and the young writer Stephen Dedalus through the city in a revolutionary act of literary modernism modeled on Homer's Odyssey.
An invisible, impenetrable dome descends without warning on the small town of Chester's Mill, Maine, sealing it off from the outside world. As resources dwindle and communication with the exterior becomes impossible, the town's worst political instincts emerge with terrifying speed.
Juliette has escaped the Reestablishment and found safety at Omega Point, a refuge for those with supernatural abilities. But safety has its own demands, and when Warner — the Reestablishment commander she fled — reveals unexpected depths, Juliette's certainties begin to unravel.