The second canticle of The Divine Comedy — Dante and Virgil climb the mountain of Purgatory, where souls atone for the seven deadly sins and prepare for Paradise. The most human and most hopeful of the three canticles, written with greater lyric tenderness than Inferno.
Craiglockhart War Hospital, Edinburgh, 1917. Dr W.H.R. Rivers, army psychiatrist, treats officers traumatised by the Western Front — including poet Siegfried Sassoon, who has written an anti-war declaration, and Billy Prior, working class and volatile. The first novel of the Regeneration Trilogy.
Aeneas, survivor of Troy, journeys to Italy to found the civilization that will become Rome. In twelve books of Latin hexameter, Virgil traces Aeneas's trials at sea, his affair with Dido in Carthage, his descent into the underworld, and his final wars in Latium — creating the founding myth of the Roman world.
Mark Schluter survives a car crash on a Nebraska highway and wakes up with Capgras syndrome — he believes his sister Karin, who has moved back to care for him, has been replaced by an impostor. A neurologist, his patients, and the cranes that migrate through the Platte River Valley are woven into the story of Mark's recovery.
The third novel of the Regeneration Trilogy. Billy Prior returns to the front in 1918 alongside Wilfred Owen. Rivers, in London, treats surviving casualties while recovering memories of his anthropological fieldwork in Melanesia — and the parallels between the savagery of the islanders' head-hunting rituals and the Western Front's industrial slaughter become unavoidable.
Coleman Silk, a 71-year-old classics professor, is accused of making a racist remark about two Black students he has never met and whose names he did not know. The accusation ends his career. He is, in a secret he has kept for fifty years, Black himself — a light-skinned man who chose to pass as Jewish.
Le Guin's landmark science fiction novel about an envoy from a galactic federation who visits a planet whose inhabitants are ambisexual — neither male nor female — and the profound implications for society and consciousness.
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 novelist travels to Jeju Island in the middle of a snowstorm to care for her friend's injured bird — and confronts the buried history of the Jeju April Third Incident, the 1948 massacre in which tens of thousands of Koreans were killed.
Dave Eggers, twenty-one, loses both parents to cancer within weeks of each other and becomes the primary guardian of his eight-year-old brother — a memoir that is also a meditation on memoirs and on the absurdity of claiming to capture grief in prose.
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.
Kenzie and Gennaro are hired to protect a psychologist who has received death threats from a patient. As they investigate, they are drawn into a twenty-year pattern of murders in Dorchester and Charlestown — and into personal danger that will alter the series permanently.
Chichikov travels through provincial Russia purchasing 'dead souls' — serfs who have died since the last census but are still recorded on landowners' rolls, and can therefore be used as collateral for loans. The scheme is comic, opaque, and darkly satirical. Gogol described the novel as the first part of a Russian Divine Comedy.
Miles Roby manages the Empire Grill in Empire Falls, Maine — a dying mill town owned entirely by the widow Francine Whiting. He has waited his whole life for things to resolve themselves. His marriage is failing, his teenage daughter is struggling, and the town is slowly emptying. Russo's Pulitzer Prize winner.
Arkady brings his friend Bazarov home to his father's estate. Bazarov is a nihilist — he believes in nothing except empirical science and rejects all authority, sentiment, and tradition. His conflict with the older generation, his unexpected passion for Madame Odintsova, and his death define the Russian novel's engagement with the question of what to believe.
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.
Eleven linked short stories following a nameless, druggy narrator through the American Midwest — car crashes, hospitals, petty crime, heroin, grace and violence in equal measure. Johnson's collection is one of the most acclaimed works of short fiction in American literature.
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.
Nedra and Viri Berland live a beautiful life in a house on the Hudson River with their daughters, friends, dinner parties, and winters in Europe. The novel follows their marriage across two decades as it slowly unravels — not through drama but through the accumulation of small divergences.
John Self, an English director of beer commercials, is flying between London and New York trying to make a film. He drinks, overeats, watches pornography, fights, spends money he does not have, and is being manipulated by forces he cannot see. Amis's monstrous comedy of the 1980s money culture — narrated in a prose of extraordinary comic energy by one of fiction's great unreliable slobs.
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.