Editors Reads

Best Magical Realism Books

41 expert-reviewed books — page 2 of 2

Eva Luna book cover

Eva Luna

by Isabel Allende

4.2

Eva Luna, an illegitimate child who grew up among eccentric employers, becomes a storyteller and eventually a writer of telenovelas, navigating a South American country's political violence and social upheaval. Allende's most playful novel — a celebration of the female storyteller whose power resides entirely in her ability to invent.

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Shame book cover

Shame

by Salman Rushdie

4.2

A fictionalized account of Pakistani politics during the Zia ul-Haq era, told through the story of Omar Khayyam Shakil and two families — one a corrupt political dynasty, the other a military one — whose daughters embody the shame the novel's title names. Rushdie's satirical fable is more direct and controlled than either Midnight's Children or The Satanic Verses, and its portrait of how shame operates as political control is as precise as anything he has written.

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The Tin Drum book cover

The Tin Drum

by Günter Grass

4.2

Oskar Matzerath, narrating from a mental institution, recounts how at age three he decided to stop growing, and how he witnessed the rise of Nazism, World War II, and the collapse of Danzig through the perspective of a child in an adult world — beating his tin drum and shattering glass with his voice.

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The Water Dancer book cover

The Water Dancer

by Ta-Nehisi Coates

4.2

Ta-Nehisi Coates's debut novel follows Hiram Walker, a enslaved young man in antebellum Virginia who discovers he possesses a mysterious power called Conduction — a magical ability linked to memory and loss — and who becomes involved with the Underground Railroad.

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Dance Dance Dance book cover

Dance Dance Dance

by Haruki Murakami

4.1

The sequel to A Wild Sheep Chase: the same nameless narrator returns to the Dolphin Hotel in Hokkaido — now replaced by a gleaming luxury development — and finds the Sheep Man waiting for him. The investigation that follows involves a missing woman, a boy with psychic powers, and an old high-school friend who has become a celebrity actor. The darkest and most culturally specific of Murakami's early novels, explicitly about what Japan lost in the 1980s economic boom.

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The Elephant Vanishes book cover

The Elephant Vanishes

by Haruki Murakami

4.1

Seventeen short stories ranging from the title piece — in which a municipal elephant and its elderly keeper vanish without trace — to encounters with sleeping women, disintegrating marriages, and the surreal textures of ordinary Japanese life. The best single collection for encountering Murakami in concentrated form: all the themes, all the tonal shifts, all the American music, in pieces that can be read in a sitting.

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The Ground Beneath Her Feet book cover
4.1

A retelling of the Orpheus myth set in the world of rock and roll, following Indian rock stars Vina Apsara and Ormus Cama from Bombay to London to New York across the second half of the twentieth century. Rushdie's most ambitious deployment of myth weaves together earthquake, music, fame, love, and death in the kind of vast, allusive narrative that makes him the heir to García Márquez in the English-speaking world.

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1Q84 book cover

1Q84

by Haruki Murakami

4.0

In Tokyo in 1984, a fitness instructor named Aomame and a maths teacher and aspiring novelist named Tengo are on parallel tracks that gradually converge. Aomame assassinates abusive men; Tengo ghost-writes a novel about a world with two moons. Both become entangled with a sinister religious cult. Murakami's most ambitious novel — nearly a thousand pages, three books, a full reimagining of what a Murakami novel can hold.

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Señor Vivo and the Coca Lord book cover

Señor Vivo and the Coca Lord

by Louis de Bernières

4.0

The second South American novel — a professor of philosophy in a Colombian city writes letters to the newspaper denouncing the drug cartels, and falls in love, as the coca lords begin to notice him.

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The Familiar book cover

The Familiar

by Leigh Bardugo

4.0

In the Spanish Golden Age, a servant girl with a hidden gift for small miracles is thrust into a deadly contest of magic at court. Leigh Bardugo conjures a lush historical fantasy of secret power, survival, and the price of being seen in an age of inquisition.

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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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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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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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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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The City and Its Uncertain Walls book cover
3.7

A young man follows a girl he loves into a walled city surrounded by a golden forest, where shadows are detached at the gate and a Dream Reader works in a library reading the dreams stored in unicorn skulls. Decades later, the same man takes a job in a small library in a mountain town in Japan — and the walled city returns. An expanded and deepened return to the world of Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World.

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