Druss the Legend is an aging, cancer-ridden warrior who leaves his mountain retirement to help defend the fortress of Dros Delnoch against an overwhelming Nadir horde. A siege novel with the emotional power of a meditation on courage, mortality, and what it means to die well. Gemmell's debut novel and the founding text of heroic fantasy.
Stanisław Lem's classic of philosophical science fiction. On a station orbiting the planet Solaris, scientists confront a vast, sentient ocean that resurrects their most painful memories in living form, forcing a reckoning with the limits of human understanding.
The epic conclusion to Don Winslow's Cartel trilogy. Now head of the DEA, Art Keller takes his decades-long war against the Mexican cartels to Washington itself, where the corruption he has fought for forty years reaches into politics, banking, and the highest levels of power.
P.G. Wodehouse's classic collection of linked Jeeves and Wooster stories. The amiable, dim-witted Bertie Wooster blunders through romantic and social scrapes — chiefly those of his lovelorn friend Bingo Little — only to be rescued, again and again, by the brilliant valet Jeeves.
A collection of linked short stories introducing Geralt of Rivia, a witcher — a professional monster hunter whose moral compass is tested by the creatures he hunts, the people who hire him, and the world that neither trusts nor welcomes him.
Detective Cassie Maddox is pulled back into undercover work when a murder victim is found bearing her exact face — and carrying the identity Cassie once used as an alias.
In the final volume of the Wolf Hall trilogy, Thomas Cromwell reaches the peak of his power as Henry VIII's chief minister — and begins the long fall that history has already pronounced inevitable. Mantel renders his last years with the same unflinching interiority that made the first two volumes masterpieces.
A middle-aged man returns to his childhood home and remembers an extraordinary summer when he was seven, a magical neighbor girl, and a darkness that threatened to consume the world.
Jernau Gurgeh, the Culture's greatest game player, is sent to the Empire of Azad to compete in the civilization-defining game that gives the empire its name. The game is a mirror of the empire's values — and Gurgeh's progress through it is a confrontation with everything the Culture stands against.
The eighth Expanse novel. Under the heel of the Laconian empire, the scattered crew of the Rocinante wage a covert resistance while High Consul Duarte's experiments provoke the unknowable alien power that destroyed the protomolecule's makers.
Thomas Sutpen arrives in Jefferson, Mississippi in 1833 with a hundred slaves and a design: to build a dynasty. By the time Quentin Compson and his Harvard roommate Shreve piece the story together in 1910, the design has produced only catastrophe. Faulkner's most ambitious novel, told through multiple narrators across multiple decades.
Young Varguitas, an eighteen-year-old aspiring writer working at a Lima radio station, falls in love with his Aunt Julia (his uncle's ex-wife, fifteen years older). Meanwhile, the brilliant and possibly mad scriptwriter Pedro Camacho is turning out radio soap operas at an impossible rate—and slowly losing his mind. Vargas Llosa's most autobiographical and most comic novel.
The first of Kate Atkinson's Jackson Brodie novels. Private investigator Jackson Brodie takes on three apparently unconnected cold cases — a missing child, a murdered young woman, an act of family violence — in a literary mystery that braids grief, coincidence, and dark comedy.
When the Yoruba king dies, his horseman Elesin is required by tradition to follow him in ritual suicide. The British colonial officer—genuinely believing he is saving a life—intervenes. The intervention destroys more than it saves. Soyinka's masterwork, based on events that occurred in Oyo, Nigeria in 1946.
A young girl is sent to spend the summer with relatives in rural County Wexford, Ireland, in the 1970s, and discovers for the first time what it means to be cared for unconditionally.
Nine stories about love's permutations—the love that turns into hate, the love that survives betrayal, the love that arrives too late. The title story begins with a prank that accidentally produces love; others explore what happens when desire outlives its object or arrives in a person who cannot recognize it.
17th-century Iceland under Danish rule. Jón Hreggviðsson, a peasant wrongly accused of murder, fights his case through the Danish courts for decades. His story becomes entangled with that of an Icelandic scholar who believes in Iceland's spirit and a beautiful woman who survives everything. Laxness's historical epic about Icelandic identity under colonial rule.
Michael K, a gardener with a harelip, pushes his dying mother through a South Africa wracked by civil war, trying to reach her childhood home. He grows pumpkins in a ruined farm and is repeatedly captured by different authorities who cannot understand why he doesn't want anything. Coetzee's Booker Prize winner.
In the months after a nuclear war has killed every living thing in the Northern Hemisphere, the survivors in Melbourne wait for the radioactive cloud to reach Australia. On the Beach follows a small group of men, women, and a US submarine commander as they face the end of all human life with quiet, heartbreaking dignity.
Eight stories in which secrets—known but unspoken, felt but unconfirmed, buried but still alive—shape the lives of women in small Ontario towns and further afield. Among Munro's richest collections, containing 'Carried Away' (often cited as one of the greatest stories in English) and the title story about a girl who vanishes on a hike.
The al-Jawad family navigates the 1920s: Al-Sayyid Ahmad indulges his secret life of pleasure while maintaining the facade of pious paterfamilias; his sons Yasin and Fahmy pursue their own paths; and Kamal—Mahfouz's autobiographical child—discovers philosophy, unrequited love, and the first disillusionment of adulthood. The second volume of the Cairo Trilogy deepens every character established in Palace Walk.
Alien visitors briefly landed on Earth, then departed, leaving behind six Zones filled with mysterious and lethal artifacts. Stalkers illegally enter the Zones to retrieve these artifacts for sale on the black market. A Soviet SF classic and the basis for Tarkovsky's film Stalker, exploring humanity's relationship with the incomprehensible.
A wealthy dilettante travels periodically to a hot-spring resort in snow country and carries on an affair with Komako, a young geisha. The novel accumulates in vignettes rather than plot, capturing the quality of light on snow, the sound of a shamisen, the impossibility of knowing another person. Kawabata's most celebrated work.