Editors Reads

Best Literary Fiction Books

427 expert-reviewed books — page 16 of 18

The Magic Mountain book cover

The Magic Mountain

by Thomas Mann

4.0

Hans Castorp, a young Hamburg engineer, visits his cousin at a tuberculosis sanatorium in the Swiss Alps and stays for seven years — drawn into a world where illness, intellectual debate, and the distortion of time separate the inhabitants from ordinary life on the plains below.

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The Return book cover

The Return

by Victoria Hislop

4.0

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.

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The Sorrows of Young Werther book cover

The Sorrows of Young Werther

by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

4.0

Werther, a young man of sensitivity and artistic feeling, falls in love with Charlotte, who is engaged and then married to another. His inability to either act on his love or let it go leads to his suicide. Written in epistolary form by the twenty-four-year-old Goethe, the novel triggered a wave of imitative suicides across Europe.

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The Spider's House book cover

The Spider's House

by Paul Bowles

4.0

In Fez during the last days of French Morocco in 1954, an American writer and a Moroccan boy encounter each other against the backdrop of the independence movement. Bowles's most politically engaged novel.

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The Sunrise book cover

The Sunrise

by Victoria Hislop

4.0

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.

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The Utopia Avenue book cover

The Utopia Avenue

by David Mitchell

4.0

A fictional British rock band in 1967 London — Utopia Avenue — rises from Soho to the Royal Albert Hall and across America, with chapter-length songs as the structural unit and the actual music scene of 1967 as the setting.

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The War of Don Emmanuel's Nether Parts book cover
4.0

The first novel in Louis de Bernières's South American trilogy — a magical realist tale of a Colombian village caught between a corrupt landowner, the army, and guerrillas, as a British woman tries to divert the river to water her garden.

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Timbuktu book cover

Timbuktu

by Paul Auster

4.0

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.

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To Paradise book cover

To Paradise

by Hanya Yanagihara

4.0

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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Ulysses book cover

Ulysses

by James Joyce

4.0

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.

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Watt book cover

Watt

by Samuel Beckett

4.0

Watt arrives at the house of Mr. Knott to serve as his domestic. He observes everything with extreme precision and cannot understand any of it. When his service ends, he moves to an asylum and dictates the story to a man named Sam. Beckett's most comic novel—and the one in which he worked out the machinery he would use for the rest of his career.

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Wonder Boys book cover

Wonder Boys

by Michael Chabon

4.0

Grady Tripp, a creative writing professor at a Pittsburgh university, has been working on his second novel for seven years. It is 2,600 pages and shows no signs of ending. Over one chaotic weekend — during a literary festival — everything in his life comes apart at once: his wife leaves, his editor arrives, his student steals a jacket from the chancellor's house.

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A Partisan's Daughter book cover

A Partisan's Daughter

by Louis de Bernières

3.9

In 1970s London, a middle-aged travelling salesman is captivated by a young Yugoslav woman named Roza, who claims to be a prostitute and tells him stories about her father — a partisan in Tito's Yugoslavia — that may or may not be true.

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After the Quake book cover

After the Quake

by Haruki Murakami

3.9

Six stories set in the weeks following the 1995 Kobe earthquake, all featuring characters who are not in Kobe but are affected by the disaster at a psychological distance. The earthquake becomes a figure for the ruptures in ordinary life that expose what is missing underneath. Murakami's most politically engaged fiction — a meditation on collective trauma and individual isolation in Japan in the 1990s.

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Autumn book cover

Autumn

by Ali Smith

3.9

Elisabeth Demand, a young woman, visits Daniel Gluck, her hundred-year-old neighbour, who is dreaming in a care home. The novel moves between their past friendship and the present moment — post-Brexit Britain, 2016, a country divided in ways it cannot articulate. The first of the Seasonal Quartet.

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Black Leopard, Red Wolf book cover
3.9

Tracker, a hunter with a nose that can follow anyone anywhere, is hired to find a missing boy across a mythological Africa of shapeshifters, witches, and ancient gods. The first volume of the Dark Star Trilogy, told as Tracker's interrogation-room account of what happened and why the boy is now dead.

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Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman book cover
3.9

Twenty-four short stories spanning twenty-five years of Murakami's career, many translated into English for the first time in this collection. A frog saves Tokyo, a man's dead wife appears as a crab, a couple separates over a mysterious birthday present. The full range of his imagination in a single volume.

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Briefing for a Descent into Hell book cover
3.9

A middle-aged professor is found wandering and amnesiac. As psychiatrists attempt to restore his 'normal' mind, the reader experiences the world he inhabits—visions of a cosmic mission, a tropical island, the war between light and dark. Lessing's most experimental novel, a challenge to the very concept of normality.

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Cosmopolis book cover

Cosmopolis

by Don DeLillo

3.9

Eric Packer, a 28-year-old billionaire currency trader, crosses midtown Manhattan in his stretch limousine on a day when his bet against the yen is going catastrophically wrong, the city is gridlocked by a presidential motorcade, and someone — possibly himself — is trying to kill him.

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Dangling Man book cover

Dangling Man

by Saul Bellow

3.9

Chicago, 1942. Joseph, waiting to be drafted, keeps a journal for seven months. He has left his job; he cannot do anything else; he hangs in suspension. Bellow's first novel—written under the influence of Dostoevsky and Kafka—is the purest statement of the anxious intellectual that would define his career.

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God Help the Child book cover

God Help the Child

by Toni Morrison

3.9

Bride, a beautiful dark-skinned young woman who has turned her blackness into a brand and a career asset, confronts her traumatic childhood—and the lie she told as a child that sent an innocent woman to prison—when her boyfriend suddenly vanishes. Morrison's final novel, set in contemporary California.

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In Evil Hour book cover

In Evil Hour

by Gabriel García Márquez

3.9

A small Colombian town is disturbed by anonymous pamphlets—lampoons—that appear overnight on doors and walls, revealing private scandals. As the town's mayor tries to suppress them and violence escalates, García Márquez creates his most purely political early novel.

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Killing Commendatore book cover

Killing Commendatore

by Haruki Murakami

3.9

A portrait painter, after his wife leaves him, retreats to a house in the Odawara mountains once owned by the painter Tomohiko Amada. In the attic he finds a canvas of an obscure Japanese-style painting titled 'Killing Commendatore'. Soon a mysterious bell begins ringing from a sealed pit in the woods, and a faceless figure called the Idea emerges to set the narrator's world in motion. Murakami's most art-focused novel.

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Let It Come Down book cover

Let It Come Down

by Paul Bowles

3.9

Nelson Dyar, a bored New York bank teller, moves to Tangier hoping to escape his life — and descends into a world of currency smugglers, drug dealers, and nihilistic expatriates that ends in catastrophe.

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