Editors Reads

Best Literary Fiction Books

427 expert-reviewed books — page 17 of 18

Machines Like Me book cover

Machines Like Me

by Ian McEwan

3.9

An alternative 1980s London where Alan Turing survived and the first synthetic humans have just been manufactured. Charlie buys one — Adam — and shares custody of it with Miranda, his upstairs neighbour. A love triangle and the questions it raises about consciousness and moral status.

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Men Without Women book cover

Men Without Women

by Haruki Murakami

3.9

Seven stories united by a single condition: men who have lost women — through departure, death, separation, or the gradual erosion of connection. A doctor whose wife has had an affair; a man who receives a phone call from the husband of a woman he loved twenty years ago. Murakami's most emotionally concentrated story collection.

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No Bones book cover

No Bones

by Anna Burns

3.9

Amelia Lovett grows up in a Catholic enclave of North Belfast from the 1960s through the 1990s, in a family shaped by proximity to violence — the novel follows her through fifteen vignette chapters, each presenting a distinct moment in the Troubles and its effects on ordinary family life.

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One August Night book cover

One August Night

by Victoria Hislop

3.9

The sequel to The Island, set fifty years after the events of the original novel. The island of Spinalonga has been empty since the leper colony was closed; the families of Plaka on the Cretan shore have rebuilt their lives. But one August night, a violent act resurfaces history and forces the characters — and their descendants — to confront what was never fully resolved. A companion piece to Hislop's most famous novel.

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Selection Day book cover

Selection Day

by Aravind Adiga

3.9

Two brothers from rural India are brought to Mumbai by their obsessive father to become cricket stars — but Manju, the more talented of the two, is not sure he wants what his father wants for him.

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South of the Border, West of the Sun book cover
3.9

Hajime, a successful jazz bar owner in Tokyo with a comfortable marriage, is reunited with Shimamoto — his only close childhood friend, with whom he spent hours listening to records. Their reunion opens something he cannot close. A quiet, compressed novel about the specific grief of the road not taken and the women who persist as figures of the unlived life.

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Sputnik Sweetheart book cover

Sputnik Sweetheart

by Haruki Murakami

3.9

K loves Sumire, who loves a married older woman named Miu. When Sumire disappears on a Greek island where she and Miu have been travelling, K is called to help. A quiet, triangular love story about people who orbit each other without connecting — Murakami's most explicitly about the loneliness of desire and the distances between people who want each other across unbridgeable gaps.

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The Children's Book book cover

The Children's Book

by A.S. Byatt

3.9

A vast Edwardian panorama following several interconnected families from the Arts and Crafts movement of the 1890s through the catastrophe of the First World War, centred on Olive Wellwood, a writer of fairy tales for children who uses her stories to contain what she cannot say to her family directly.

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The Marriage Plot book cover

The Marriage Plot

by Jeffrey Eugenides

3.9

Brown University, early 1980s. Madeleine Hanna is writing her senior thesis on the Victorian marriage plot in literary fiction; Mitchell Grammaticus is having a religious crisis; Leonard Bankhead is brilliant, charismatic, and bipolar. Their triangular relationship unfolds against the backdrop of literary theory and manic depression.

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The Piano Teacher book cover

The Piano Teacher

by Elfriede Jelinek

3.9

Erika Kohut is a piano teacher at the Vienna Conservatory, living under the total control of her possessive mother. Her masochistic relationship with a younger student exposes the violence embedded in Austrian bourgeois culture and its insistence on female repression.

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The Sea House book cover

The Sea House

by Esther Freud

3.9

Two stories separated by fifty years interweave in a Suffolk village: a contemporary woman researching an architect's life, and the architect's story itself — a portrait of a German-Jewish émigré and the house he built on the English coast.

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The Witches of Eastwick book cover
3.9

Three divorced women in a small Rhode Island town have acquired magical powers. When the mysterious Darryl Van Horne arrives, he disrupts their coven. A satirical novel about female power, desire, and the anxieties of the 1960s sexual revolution, told with Updike's characteristic density of observation.

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Theophilus North book cover

Theophilus North

by Thornton Wilder

3.9

In 1920s Newport, Rhode Island, a young man named Theophilus North arrives to teach tennis and finds himself drawn into the lives of the town's wealthy families — solving problems, righting wrongs, and falling in love.

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To Have and Have Not book cover

To Have and Have Not

by Ernest Hemingway

3.9

Harry Morgan, a boat captain in Depression-era Key West, is forced into smuggling and running rum to survive. The novel Hemingway considered his worst tracks Morgan's degradation against the backdrop of wealthy vacationers whose money insulates them from consequence.

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Utopia book cover

Utopia

by Thomas More

3.9

A dialogue in which the traveller Raphael Hythloday describes the island of Utopia — a society with communal property, religious tolerance, and rational social organisation. Written in Latin by Thomas More in 1516, the book gave the word 'utopia' (no-place) to all subsequent thinking about ideal societies.

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Weather book cover

Weather

by Jenny Offill

3.9

Lizzie Benson is a librarian, a mother, a sister to a difficult brother in recovery. Her former mentor, a climate scientist, asks her to answer listener mail for her podcast on environmental collapse. The novel moves between Lizzie's domestic life and the approaching catastrophe — climate anxiety as the ambient condition of contemporary American life.

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Wind/Pinball book cover

Wind/Pinball

by Haruki Murakami

3.9

The two novellas that launched Murakami's career — 'Hear the Wind Sing' (1979) and 'Pinball, 1973' (1980) — published together for the first time in English. The unnamed narrator and his friend 'the Rat' move through a coastal Japanese town, listening to music, drinking beer, and circling the losses of youth. Quieter and more elliptical than Murakami's later work, these novellas show the essential qualities of his sensibility in concentrated form.

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Young Jane Young book cover

Young Jane Young

by Gabrielle Zevin

3.9

Aviva Grossman has an affair with the congressman she interns for — the internet destroys her life, but not her. A multi-perspective novel about women, politics, and the asymmetry of public scandal.

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Zone One book cover

Zone One

by Colson Whitehead

3.9

Mark Spitz is a sweeper — part of a civilian unit tasked with clearing zombies from lower Manhattan after a plague. The novel covers three days of his work, interspersed with flashbacks to the collapse and his survival of it. A literary zombie novel about grief, memory, and the texture of the American city in ruins.

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A Week in December book cover

A Week in December

by Sebastian Faulks

3.8

Seven interconnected characters in contemporary London — a hedge fund manager shorting bank stocks before the 2008 financial crisis, a footballer's wife, a Muslim radicalisation plot, a reality TV contestant, a tube driver, a book reviewer. A state-of-England novel of pre-crash London.

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After Dark book cover

After Dark

by Haruki Murakami

3.8

One night in Tokyo, told in real time and in the second person plural — 'we' observe, as if a camera, the city between midnight and dawn. Mari, a student, sits in a Denny's with a book; her sister Eri sleeps in their apartment, apparently unable to wake. The night connects them to musicians, a Chinese woman beaten in a love hotel, and the city's insomniac underside. Murakami's shortest and most experimental novel.

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Amnesty book cover

Amnesty

by Aravind Adiga

3.8

Danny, an undocumented Sri Lankan immigrant cleaning houses in Sydney, recognises that a client of one of his regular houses may know something about a murder — and spends a single day deciding whether to go to the police, knowing that doing so will mean deportation.

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Birnam Wood book cover

Birnam Wood

by Eleanor Catton

3.8

A New Zealand guerrilla gardening collective called Birnam Wood begins farming unused land without permission; when their activities bring them into contact with a reclusive American tech billionaire with interests in the land, the collision between their idealism and his power becomes increasingly dangerous.

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