Women in Translation – Books and Bao https://booksandbao.com Translated Literature | Bookish Travel | Culture Tue, 08 Apr 2025 15:37:58 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://booksandbao.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Logo-without-BG-150x150.jpg Women in Translation – Books and Bao https://booksandbao.com 32 32 16 Unmissable Fantasy Books by Women https://booksandbao.com/unmissable-fantasy-books-written-by-women/ Thu, 22 Aug 2024 13:37:05 +0000 https://booksandbao.com/?p=25110 The women of fantasy are always pushing the boundaries of the genre in all new directions, as these wonderful writers prove with their marvellous stories and characters. The fantasy genre has historically been known for its lack of diversity, with white men writing the vast majority of fantasy novels, but that stereotype is vanishing, and women of all backgrounds are writing some of the best fantasy books that have ever been written.

fantasy books by women

To prove that, here are some of the best works of fantasy fiction written by women over the past several decades. Many of these books are modern, but of course great authors like Ursula K. Le Guin flew so high long before many of us even considered trying to walk.

The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison

The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison

With The Goblin Emperor, author Katherine Addison provides a very unique take on the fantasy story. Its setting is familiar: an elven land with a kingdom at its heart. But this is a high court tale of political games, rather than an adventure or a great war. Our protagonist, Maia, is the half-goblin youngest son of the emperor, and when a tragedy leads this exiled prince to suddenly ascend to the throne, he must learn the ins and outs of court life.

Imagine a novel set in the world of A Song of Ice and Fire which takes place entirely in the King’s Landing—more specifically, the Red Keep. The Goblin Emperor is, first and foremost, a political drama. We follow closely, often with bated breath, as Maia navigates palace life, learns quickly who to trust, and who might want to stab him in the back. Then, of course, there’s the matter of the tragedy that took his father and brothers.

The Goblin Emperor is a fresh and unique fantasy novel that succeeds on the back of its fantastic protagonist, its sharp dialogue, and its deep dive into palace politics. A real page-turner of a fantasy novel, and a book like no other in the genre.

A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin

earthsea books

Ursula K. Le Guin was one of the great authors of sci-fi and fantasy; her legacy will last for as long as books themselves do. And while sci-fi novels like The Left Hand of Darkness and The Dispossessed encouraged readers to consider social dynamics and gender roles in unique ways, her Earthsea fantasy series—which began with A Wizard of Earthsea—is a masterpiece of world-building, character writing, and plotting.

In this first book in the series, we follow Ged, a young man born on a quiet island in this expansive archipelago world. Ged displays a knack for magic early in his life, and is sent off to study wizardry at a school of magic. From here, we watch him grow up into a powerful wizard.

What sets the novel apart from many of its kind is Ged himself: a reckless and often arrogant young man who makes mistakes and must fix them. This is a coming-of-age story in the trust sense, as Ged fumbles and commits grave errors on his way to being not only a wizard but, simply, an adult. Much like her contemporary Diana Wynne Jones, Le Guin wasn’t afraid to write characters who are at first unlikeable and must learn to face life head on.

The City We Became by N.K. Jemisin

the city we became nk jemisin

N.K. Jemisin is a powerhouse of a writer who pens fantasy masterpieces; that’s simply what she does, time after time after time. The City We Became—the first half of an urban fantasy duology—blends Lovecraftian mythology with superhero tropes to create a vibrant, exciting, and brilliantly fast-paced story about the soul of a city. The novel is also an unabashed love letter to the author’s home of New York City.

Our protagonists are the newly-awoken avatars of New York’s five burroughs: people chosen to fight for and protect a city and its people. When a world city has lived for long enough, and has developed enough of an identity, it wakes up and a soul is born. But some cities have more than one soul—London, for example, has twelve. And newly-awoken New York has five (and a sixth for the city itself).

These avatars—Manny, Brooklyn, Bronca, Padmini, and Aislyn—must find one another and also learn to understand themselves as the face off against a mysterious invader who is wreaking havoc on their city: The Woman in White. This is a brilliant work of urban fantasy that also explores contemporary American politics, race relations, gender dynamics, and more in a savvy and engaging way.

Ship of Magic by Robin Hobb

ship of magic by robin hobb

Robin Hobb is a queen of the fantasy genre, and she is known for writing tightly-crafted trilogies of books which all take place in the same world. The best of these trilogies is, in this writer’s opinion, The Liveship Traders, which begins with Ship of Magic. These are books of family politics and trade economics set on islands, in coastal towns, and aboard ships brought to life by a sacred generational magic.

In Ship of Magic, we follow multiple interconnected characters—many of whom come from the same family of liveship traders: the Vestrits—as their liveship quickens following the death of its captain. Liveships are made from wizardwood, and they come to life (quicken) once three generations of captain have died on board. Its a magic that takes much time and sacrifice to finally take effect.

The strength of this series of fantasy novels comes from its interconnected family politics and the strength of those individual characters; some courageous and spirited, others secretive and corrupt. The cast is large, diverse, and brilliantly dynamic, and the political moves that are made keep readers firmly glued to the page.

The Poppy War by R.F. Kuang

the poppy war rf kuang

R.F. Kuang became an overnight sensation with the publication of her dark academia novel Babel, but her debut novel The Poppy War (the first book in a trilogy of the same name) is also a masterpiece of epic fantasy fiction. The Poppy War is set in a world inspired by 20th century China, and it follows Rin—a southern peasant girl who passes a rigorous test to enter the nation’s most prestigious military academy.

In doing so, Rin immediately frees herself from a life of poverty, removes herself from the place where she became a war orphan, and escapes the guardians who had planned to marry her off for money. But the academy itself is far from a pleasant place, and new struggles await her. Rin must continue her fight to survive, to thrive, and to prove herself against all the odds.

R.F. Kuang is, without a doubt, one of the great fantasy writers of this century. Her novels continue to amaze and inspire, and all of this began with the astonishingly powerful The Poppy War.

Ink Blood Sister Scribe by Emma Törzs

ink blood sister scribe

Ink Blood Sister Scribe is a wonderful work of urban fantasy that begins in Vermont and Antarctica. We follow two sisters, daughters of a family that has long been entrusted with protecting a library of powerful magical tomes. When the novel opens, their father stumbles out of their Vermont house, holding one of these books, and it kills him by draining him of his blood. How did this happen, and why?

While Joanna deals with this tragedy and the mystery behind it, her sister Esther is on a research base in Antarctica. She left home as a teenager and was told by her father that she can never stay in one place for longer than a year. Every November, she must pick herself up and move somewhere new. She is running from whatever it was that killed her mother, and that thing requires a year to find and hunt Esther down.

Mysteries abound in this novel, which blends dark academia with urban fantasy and thriller elements. Ink Blood Sister Scribe is a fantastically well-paced and well-plotted novel of dangerous, dark magic and those who keep it secret.

The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V.E. Schwab

The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue

V.E. Schwab is one of the most successful fantasy authors of this century so far. With her works often being set in our world, and with an urban fantasy vibe, she is often compared to Neil Gaiman, but her books very much have their own style and flavour. And that can best be seen with The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue: a faustian tale about a young French woman who once made a deal with the devil, with unique ramifications.

The titular Addie LaRue made a deal that would see her living forever without ageing, but the catch is that nobody will ever remember her. As soon as she is out of sight, anyone who comes in contact with her instantly forgets her. She has lived this way for centuries, but one day in New York City, she meets a young man who, for some reason, doesn’t forget her.

The novel takes us from 18th century France to the NYC of the modern day, following the cursed and lonely life of a woman who cannot die but can also never be remembered. It’s a wonderful urban fantasy epic for readers of all kinds to enjoy.

Piranesi by Susanna Clarke

piranesi

Susanna Clarke exploded into the literary scene with her thousand-page historical fantasy epic Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell. And years later, she returned with the far shorter and far stranger Piranesi, one of the most singularly enjoyable and beloved fantasy novels of recent years (and winner of the Women’s Prize for Fiction 2021).

The less you know about this novel’s plot, the better, but here’s a vague blurb: the titular Piranesi lives in an endless labyrinth known as the House. He is mostly alone, except for routine visits from a well-dressed man he calls the Other. Piranesi explores this house, decorated with clouds and statues and an entire ocean. And one day, the Other gives him a task to complete.

To say more would be to spoil it, but Piranesi is a true page-turner. The mystery of the House begs understanding, as does the Other. And Piranesi himself is one of the most likeable, endearing protagonists in recent fiction—fantasy or otherwise. He is a true treasure of a protagonist, and its thanks to him that the novel is so adored.

The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon

the priory of the orange tree e1599596607775

Until the publication of this book, British fantasy author Samantha Shannon was known for her series of urban fantasy novels The Bone Season. Then came the enormous fantasy epic The Priory of the Orange Tree, which launched Shannon into the upper echelon of great fantasy writers.

The Priory of the Orange Tree is a beautifully queer, brilliantly feminist tale of castles and dragons. It follows several characters in different places around the world. One is the queen of Inys, Sabran. She is struggling to hold onto power and there are those who seek to dethrone her. She also has a maid who secretly serves the titular society of mages: the priory. And then there is the young dragon rider Tané.

Each of these characters risks much from the very beginning, as tensions burn and the world threatens to shift. Worst of all is the threatened return of the great and evil dragon: The Nameless One. The Priory of the Orange Tree is a fantasy epic in every single way; one that adheres to the familiar rules and tropes of the genre but brings them into the modern day.

Gifted & Talented by Olivie Blake

gifted and talented olivie blake

While her novel The Atlas Six was an immediate smash hit, Gifted & Talented is certainly the superior novel. This is a richly detailed novel, written with a kind of gilded prose, which presents us with the lives of three horrible siblings: Meredith, Arthur, and Eilidh.

These nepobabies are the children of Thayer Wren, CEO of a magitech company. Meredith invented an app that asserts an ability to cure mental illness; Arthur is a young senator; and Eilidh is a former ballerina whose career was cut short by an injury.

Our protagonists are all horrid in their own entertaining ways, and each one is a potential inheritor of their father’s empire. Or are they? The events of the novel take a backseat to the unfolding of their hilariously unlovable personalities and behaviours; and Blake also sprinkles in a little (though arguably not enough) fun magic along the way.

The Magician’s Guild by Trudi Canavan

the black magician trilogy

The first book in Trudi Canavan’s Black Magician trilogy, The Magician’s Guild follows a young slum girl named Sonea, who has put a target on her own back by disrupting the peace with a single stone.

The magicians of Imardin are hated and feared, and during one of their routine purges of the city, their magic is pierced by a rock hurled by a little girl. This girl has a gift; untrained and untamed, she could turn their world on its head.

And so Sonea must run, and if she is captured she will be hurled into a world of dominant magic as she is held and trained by the titular Magician’s Guild.

A Winter’s Promise by Christelle Dabos

Translated from the French by Hildegarde Serle

a winter's promise

Written by French author Christelle Dabos, A Winter’s Promise is the first book in The Mirror Visitor trilogy of YA fantasy books. The peoples of this world live entirely on floating islands, isolated and heavily distinct from one another. These island nations (known as Arks) have their own traditions, technologies, and cultures.

One the Ark known as Anima, protagonist Ophelia is a girl with the unique ability to communicate with the souls of objects. She is also able to travel by passing through her own reflection. And Ophelia is thrown into an unhappy and unlikely situation when her hand is promised to a powerful member of the Dragon Clan: a man named Thorn.

A Winter’s Promise is a brilliantly inventive YA fantasy novel with a focus on romance and high court politics.

The Unbroken by C.L. Clark

the unbroken cl clark

C.L. Clark’s The Unbroken is the first novel in the Magic of the Lost fantasy series. This is a bold and thrilling queer epic about the evils of empire. Through subtle use of established languages and linguistic rules, the novel implies that it takes heavy inspiration from the French Colonial Empire and the North African nations it colonised.

Our first protagonist is Touraine, a soldier taken from her home and conscripted to fight for the very empire that took control of her land and its people. The second is the princess of that empire: a woman named Luca. It’s been years since Touraine was taken, and she has risen through the ranks as a weapon of the empire. Now, she is sent back to her homeland to squash a rising rebellion.

When one the rebellion’s leader is captured and executed, Touraine is told that her mother is alive. In a moment, this splits her loyalties and she is caught between her duty and her homeland. Making things harder is the bond that she forms with the princess after saving her life. The Unbroken is a phenomenal story of colonialism and empire.

The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

Night Circus e1620320875741

Easily one of the most beloved fantasy stories of the past few decades, Erin Morgenstern’s astonishing debut novel The Night Circus is set in an alternate Victorian world, and it follows two protagonists who are pitted against one another by their masters in a contest of magic.

The titular circus is truly magical, travelling from place to place and led by its powerful owner, Prospero. But Prospero has an enigmatic friend named Mr A.H. —, and the two have made a pact to each raise a powerful magic user; when the time comes, their protégés will be made to duel. And it’s these two protégés that we follow over the course of this spellbinding novel.

Celia is Prospero’s daughter, and Marco is the orphan ward of Mr. A.H. —. As the novel goes, we watch them grow and learn more about the circus. The Night Circus stands out thanks to its playful fairytale plot and its author’s magnificent command over writing and dialogue.

Nettle and Bone by T. Kingfisher

nettle-and-bone

T. Kingfisher is a master author of horror and dark fantasy, and Nettle and Bone is a short novel inspired by the tropes and aesthetics of fairy tales. Everything about these tropes are entirely and playfully inverted here, however. Protagonist Marra is the youngest princess of a small kingdom squashed between two larger and more imposing nations.

Her eldest sister, in a move of political strategy, was married of to the prince of one nation in order to better protect them from the other, but that sister has since died. Now, the prince wants to marry the family’s second daughter. Marra moves to protect her sister from sharing the first daughter’s fate. She means to kill this murderous prince.

To do that, however, she will need to head out on a dangerous quest, completing impossible tasks and recruiting strange people to her cause. She will somehow have to bring a dog to life and forge a cloak out of nettles. Doing so might allow her to complete her dangerous task.

Red Sonja: Consumed by Gail Simone

Red Sonja Consumed by Gail Simone

Red Sonja is a character with a long and storied history, having begun as a Marvel Comics character back in the 70s. Today, she is owned by Dynamite and her story was rebooted by comic book legend Gail Simone back in 2013. A decade late, Simone made the world of Red Sonja the subject of her debut novel, Red Sonja: Consumed. And it is a fantastic sword and sorcery adventure.

Sword and sorcery is a unique subgenre of fantasy with a more pulpy tone and aesthetic; they are violent and less focussed on world-building. Rather, they follow a morally grey antihero on a bloody quest across an eldritch land of monsters and magic. And Red Sonja: Consumed offers fantasy readers a return to that subgenre which has become increasingly unpopular over the past few decades.

The novel begins with the titular Sonja, the She-Devil, having seduced and then stolen from a queen. Now, with the queen in hot pursuit, Sonja must return to her homeland as she hears whispers of a strange evil that rises from the earth and steals the life from unsuspecting innocents. The novel shifts point-of-view frequently, giving us a dynamic look at the world she inhabits and the dangerous tale that unfolds.

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10 Transgressive Books by Weird Women https://booksandbao.com/transgressive-books-by-weird-women-authors/ Thu, 11 Jul 2024 13:26:56 +0000 https://booksandbao.com/?p=25038 This is the era of the weird woman! Sad girls and weird girls, rise up—we’re taking over the world of good fiction. What’s a weird girl, you ask? Weird woman fiction is literature that’s written by women, usually featuring unlikeable protagonists with odd behaviours. It may have a horror or thriller tint, or it may not. It make make readers feel uneasy; it’s transgressive and breaks away from the status quo of women being nice and polite.

transgressive books by weird women

Weird girl books are all about upsetting the norm. They’re punk tales of women being gross, strange, dangerous, or even just allowing themselves to be sad, angry, unpleasant, and unlikeable. These subversive books are all about painting women in darker, stranger colours, and we love to see it!

Out by Natsuo Kirino

Translated from the Japanese by Stephen Snyder

out natsuo kirino

One of the progenitors of weird girl fiction, Out is a thriller that follows four women who work night shifts at a sandwich factory. The men in their lives are cruel and hateful, and eventually one of them snaps and murders her husband by choking him to death with his own belt while their kids are in the other room.

With the help of the other three women, she cuts up and hides his body, and they all agree to a vow of silent solidarity. But this vow might not last, and if it doesn’t there will be police and even worse sniffing around, searching for the truth. This is a very bleak novel about downtrodden women doing dark things in order to forge a path too freedom, liberation, or even just a little good old fashioned revenge.

Lapvona by Ottessa Moshfegh

lapvona

Ottessa Moshfegh is perhaps the quintessential weird woman of fiction right now. Her books are off-kilter and upsetting, leaving readers with a sense of unease. None moreso than Lapvona, a gothic medieval tale of serfdom, subservience, witchcraft, and death.

The titular Lapvona is an isolated village lorded over by a rich man who lives on a hill above the peasantry. One of those peasants is a disfigured boy with a cruel father who lies to him. We learn about these men, as well as the son of the lord, over the course of a year. That year is beset by drought, disease, and day-to-day struggles.

There is also a dark magical element to Lapvona. The village witch was wet-nurse to many of the villagers, and she replaces her eyes with those of a horse in order to regain her sight. Beyond this, Lapvona is a novel with clear socialist undertones from an author who seems to be very cynical towards society, and the book is amazing as a result.

Boulder by Eva Baltasar

Translated from the Catalan by Julia Sanchez

boulder eva baltasar

Boulder is a Catalan novel about the complexities of love and relationships. We begin on a ship off the coast of Chile, where the titular Boulder meets a woman with whom she quickly falls in love. When Samsa gets a job in Reykjavik, Boulder follows her and their relationship becomes strained. This is mostly because Samsa wants to have a child and Boulder doesn’t.

What begins as a hedonistic relationship defined by lust and adventure soon becomes a recognisable tale of the struggles of love when one person wants what the other doesn’t. It’s an ugly and uneasy work of sapphic literary fiction. There is little romance in here; instead, it reminds us of the often uneasy and messy nature of relationships.

Boy Parts by Eliza Clark

Boy Parts by Eliza Clark

An icon of weird girl fiction, Eliza Clark’s Boy Parts is a work of literary fiction about a photographer in her twenties who lives in Newcastle and is defined by her own self-destructive behaviour. Irina is building a portfolio of works which all depict boys and men in explicit poses and doing illicit acts. She invited them to her studio, sometimes seduces them, and takes photos for her collection.

Soon, she is offered the opportunity to display her work at a museum in London, which she accepts. In the meantime, she falls into a potential relationship with an actual good guy, goes to parties with friends, and flashes back to a fractured and strange past that we gently piece together over time.

Irina isn’t like other girls; and she is also on the fast track to burning out. Memories are creeping in, and she is shutting everyone out. We watch her like a car crash and we wonder where she will land.

Read More: Essential Fantasy Books by Women

Paradise Rot by Jenny Hval

Translated from the Norwegian by Marjam Idriss

paradise rot

Written by Norwegian singer-songwriter Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot follows a naive young woman who has moved to a dank and wet nameless town for university. She moves into a converted brewery—open-plan but divided poorly by cheap and flimsy walls, like the cubicles in an office. There is an unsettling lack of privacy here between pour protagonist and her new roommate.

What makes this so wonderfully weird and gothic is our protagonist’s obsession with the body—with bodily fluids and the mechanics of our fleshy, wet parts. While it isn’t body horror, it is a novel that makes a horror out of the body, reminding us that we are gooey sacks that take in and expel so much mush and wetness, and everything about us dies and rots. This is a claustrophobic and strange tale.

Tell Me I’m Worthless by Alison Rumfitt

tell me im worthless

A straight-up work of political horror, Tell Me I’m Worthless has become a cult classic of the genre. Rumfitt’s novel tells the story of two women who were once friends at university. As adults, however, one is transgender and the other is a TERF. We know they fell out after spending a night at a haunted house (called Albion—get it?). Something awful happened there, and we will eventually find out what, exactly, that was.

With a real Shirley Jackson edge to it, Tell Me I’m Worthless is a novel about the fascistic attitudes of modern-day Britain to scapegoat transgender people. It explores the “values” of Britain and twists them into something that better resembles what the country really is at its core. A wonderfully subversive and unsettling haunted house horror novel.

Earthlings by Sayaka Murata

Translated from the Japanese by Ginny Tapley Takemori

Earthlings by Sayaka Murata

Japanese author Sayaka Murata has become a legend of weird fiction in recent years, and her novel Earthlings upsets as many people as it impresses. It tells the story of a young woman named Natsuki who believes that she is, in fact, an alien.

As a girl, she spent her summers in a mountaintop holiday home with her extended family. She and her cousin Yuu had an unhealthy and taboo relationship at a very young age, and that is only the tip of Natsuki’s iceberg.

As an adult, she still believes that she is an alien, but she has found a way to survive in ordinary human society by entering into an asexual marriage with a man, though she gradually teaches him about how she sees the world: as a factory churning out well-behaved minions for patriarchy and capitalism to suck dry. Natsuki wants to escape this factory, and her methods for doing so are deeply unsettling.

The Pisces by Melissa Broder

the pisces broder

Like Ottessa Moshfegh, Melissa Broder is a queen of weird woman fiction, and The Pisces is her masterpiece: a darkly funny tale of mental illness, seduction, unhealthy relationships, and dysfunctional people. Protagonist Lucy is invited to look after her sister’s dog and apartment in Venice, LA. There, she goes on a few bad dates with awful men and eventually falls into a relationship with an actual honest-to-goodness merman.

She goes to group therapy sessions, continues to fall deeper into self-destruction via toxic Tinder dates, and develops a deep obsession with her merman, all the while gradually ignoring her sister’s dog, her responsibilities, and her life. She is a broken, awful woman, and we become addicted to following her decline into depravity and unhinged behaviour.

Cuckoo by Gretchen Felker-Martin

Cuckoo by Gretchen Felker-Martin

Gretchen Felker-Martin is known for writing the most visceral, uncensored, and frankly depraved scenes of horror in the genre’s history. Her novel Cuckoo plays out like Stephen King’s IT meets Invasion of the Body Snatchers at a conversion camp for gay and trans kids in the ’90s. These kids have been abducted and driven out to the desert to learn “correct” values. There, they will come up against an eldritch horror that threatens their lives.

This group of kids features lesbian, gay, bisexual, and trans boys and girls, and we gradually learn about their individual pasts, watch them bond together, and get some kind of idea about the monstrous thing that lives out in the desert, hunts them, and wears their skin. These kids are being hollowed-out, but they’re also resilient and tougher than they look. But the threat is monstrous and deadly.

Bunny by Mona Awad

bunny mona awad

Bunny is part of the popular dark academia genre, but it stands out by being a strange, satirical, and cynical novel about college life and the cliquey relationships between young women. This modern classic follows Samantha, a masters student of Creative Writing, and she’s the only girl on the course who isn’t part of an exclusionary in-group of vapid girls who all call each other Bunny.

Samantha is a punk outlier until she isn’t. She gets invited into the group via a letter to one of their parties. At this party, the Bunnies play with dark magic and sacrifice rabbits, which conjures up a hot but simple-headed guy who suddenly appears at their door. From here, Samantha falls into a world of off-kilter strangeness. Feverish and occult, it is an addictive tale of weird women being weird.

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18 Gripping Mystery Books for Agatha Christie Fans https://booksandbao.com/modern-mystery-novels-not-by-agatha-christie/ Thu, 21 Dec 2023 04:40:27 +0000 https://booksandbao.com/?p=21313 The murder-mystery genre is seeing something of a renaissance at the moment. So many great authors and translators are tackling the genre from new angles. These authors owe an impossible debt to the works of Agatha Christie, but they are also undeniably paving their own paths and taking us on a mind-bending journey with them.

modern mystery novels

The Best Modern Mystery Novels

From Argentina to Japan, here are some of the finest mystery novels that are revitalizing the genre right now, all of which deserve your attention. Get ready to scratch your head and remark on the ways in which these mystery writers are blending genres and casting aside the rulebook to achieve great things. Let’s dive in.

The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turton

the seven deaths of evelyn hardcastle

Few modern mystery novels lean as hard on the definition of “mystery” as The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle does. There are countless mystery novels that present an answer that reveals a dozen new questions, but this puzzle box of a novel actually pays all of that off with aplomb.

We begin halfway through a word that has just left the mouth of our nameless, amnesia-stricken protagonist. It is as though he has just woken up in his own body. He is in a forest, shouting a name he doesn’t know, and he is alone. He walks and eventually arrives at a manor house. The people there tell him he is their friend and that he is a doctor.

The next morning, he wakes up as a different person in the house, and it is then that he learns that he will continue to flit from body to body for eight days, tasked with solving and preventing the death of the titular Evelyn Hardcastle.

The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle is a dizzying novel, masterfully crafted and thrilling at every turn. Stuart Turton showed absurd and admirable confidence in writing such a mystery masterpiece as his debut novel. Incredible work.

Buy a copy here!

If We Were Villains by M.L. Rio

if we were villains

One of the novels that stands at the summit of the dark academia genre, If We Were Villains is also an excellently crafted murder mystery story. What sets this apart from other mystery novels is the fact that its mystery sits quietly at the back of the room. You can’t forget about it but are encouraged not to look at it.

We begin with a man named Oliver, who has just been released from prison for a murder he didn’t commit. We then flashback to the year of that fateful murder. Our cast is a group of college students, all studying theatre at a specialist arts academy. They live in the minds and works of Shakespeare, and one of them will soon die.

We don’t know who the victim will be until it happens, and we know that Oliver didn’t do it. The drama of this dark academia novel is at its forefront, with the murder mystery sitting like a ghost offstage. The blend of these two genres is what makes If We Were Villains one of the great modern mystery novels.

Buy a copy of If We Were Villains here!

The Last Murder at the End of the World by Stuart Turton

the last murder at the end of the world

Forget your typical whodunnit. Turton’s newest novel throws you headfirst into a genre-bending whirlwind of dystopian sci-fi, pulse-pounding thriller, and classic murder mystery, all set against the idyllic backdrop of a seemingly perfect island untouched by the world’s deadly fog.

With multiple POVs and the omnipresent AI Abi whispering in everyone’s ear, the narrative unfolds like a puzzle box slowly clicking into place with Emory, a would-be detective, at the heart of it.

This is no ordinary murder mystery. The memory-wiping security system adds a mind-bending twist, forcing suspects to grapple with the possibility of being a killer without any recollection of the act. It’s a constant dance of uncovering and rediscovering, keeping you guessing at every turn. Each revelation feels like a victory, propelling you further into the heart of the island’s secrets.

If you’re looking for a book that will bend your brain and keep you guessing until the last page The Last Murder at the End of the World is it.

Buy a copy of The Last Murder at the End of the World

Helle & Death by Oskar Jensen

Helle & Death by Oskar Jensen

Helle & Death is a loud and proud homage to the golden age of crime fiction; a rekindling of the cosy vibes and puzzle-box structure that made Agatha Christie a cherished household name. Jensen’s novel follows a group of eight friends in their early thirties who all studied at Oxford together ten years ago. One of those friends made his fortune straight out of uni by developing an app. He has now sold it and lives a reclusive life in a large country manor.

Out of the blue, Dodd has invited the other seven to visit his home for a reunion dinner, and we primarily follow Danish art historian Torben Helle as he and the rest spend an evening catching up, dining, and then being hit by the bombshell that Dodd is dying, and in his will he has left each of them £50,000. A large sum to many, and a pittance to others. The group drown their sorrows, and in the morning Dodd is found dead in his bed.

From here, the game is afoot. Made to look like suicide, it surely couldn’t have been. Right? Helle puts on his sleuthing hat and starts asking questions, piecing together motives and means. Whodunnit? You’ll have to read on to find out. It’s a doozy of a tale that echoes the best Christie stories, and cements Jensen as a stellar writer of the modern mystery novel.

Buy a copy of Helle & Death here!

The Three Dahlias by Katy Watson

The Three Dahlias by Katy Watson

Katy Watson’s The Three Dahlias is a love letter to the golden age of crime fiction, led by the Queen of Crime, Agatha Christie. It’s a murder-mystery story about murder-mystery stories. Our protagonists are three actresses from three generations who have all played (or are about to play) the role of an iconic detective.

Created by the author Lettice Davenport — Princess of Poison — Dahlia Lively was a Miss Marple-esque sleuth who featured in many of Davenport’s novels and was brought to life via TV and Film. To celebrate those adaptations, a celebration is being held at the stately home of the late Lettice Davenport. There, our three Dahlias will be brought together by blackmail, then by theft, and at last by murder.

This stately home inspired Davenport’s writing; most of her mystery stories were based on her own home, and now someone is using her works to inspire their own very real murders, and our three actresses must summon their inner Dahlias to solve this crime, all while fearing exposure by whomever is blackmailing them.

The Three Dahlias pays homage to the traditions of the murder mystery while also leaning into the genre’s tropes in order to break its rules and take the reader on a fresh, original journey.

Buy a copy of The Three Dahlias here!

The Last House on Needless Street by Catriona Ward

the last house on needless street

This genre-blending gothic horror mystery thriller wasn’t Catriona Ward’s debut, but it was the novel that broke her into the mainstream and landed her on every reader’s lips. The Last House on Needless Street is a rare book that pushes the world of mystery novels forward, mixing terror and strangeness into its formula to create an unforgettable experience.

Our main protagonist is a man in his thirties named Ted. More than a decade ago, he was the prime suspect in the disappearance/murder of a girl at a nearby lakeside. Now, Ted lives a secluded life with his cat and his daughter. We sometimes see things from the cat’s perspective, and the daughter is not always there.

Assumptions can very quickly be made, but they are all so telegraphed, so predictable, that they can’t be true. This is a novel that wrongfoots the reader constantly and has fun doing so. The gothic and horror themes and tropes that have been mixed in make for an atmosphere that you feel as though you’re drowning in. The Last House on Needless Street set Catriona Ward up as the new queen of mystery novels.

Buy a copy here!

Looking Glass Sound by Catriona Ward

looking glass sound

With The Last House on Needless Street, Catriona Ward turned the genres of mystery, thriller, horror, and gothic into Lego bricks to play with in new and experimental ways. With Looking Glass Sound, she takes that approach several steps further, writing a book within a book that examines the very concepts of fact and fiction, of memoir and narrative, of lives and lies.

Our protagonist, Wilder, first provides us with a memoir about two teenage summers spent on the coast of Maine, about the two friends he made there, and about the dangerous Dagger Man haunting the town. This doesn’t last long, however; soon, we move with Wilder to college in Pennsylvania and the strange roommate who calls himself Sky.

We watch Sky steal Wilder’s memoir and publish it as his own novel, propelling him into fame and leaving Wilder alone with nothing. Now, Wilder is an aging man going blind who has returned to coastal Maine with the aim of setting the record straight, of writing his memoir at last, and of exposing the now-dead Sky as the thief he was.

Looking Glass Sound is a dizzying modern thriller that examines the genre and its implications for readers, writers, and storytellers.

Buy a copy of Looking Glass Sound here!

Scorched Grace by Margot Douaihy

scorched grace

Scorched Grace is a very different kind of mystery novel. Not so much because it breaks convention in a genre sense, but certainly in a tonal one, and in terms of what we expect from a mystery novel protagonist. Sister Holiday was a punk kid; a young lesbian from Brooklyn, covered in tattoos, playing in a band, doing drugs, and tangling with her parents.

She’s also a devout Catholic. After escaping to New Orleans, she was taken in by the progressive nuns of Saint Sebastian’s School, where she has worked as a teacher ever since. A tattooed, chain-smoking, filthy-mouthed nun isn’t your typical sleuth.

The mystery she becomes tangled up in is a series of arson attacks targeted at her school — arson attacks which also lead to the deaths of people she knows and cares about. When the police prove all but useless, Sister Holiday takes things into her own hands, especially when she feels prying eyes on her, and all signs point to her being set up for the crime.

Set against the backdrop of a scorching, sweltering, oppressive summer heat, with a supporting cast of angry nuns, punk teenagers, and unreliable cops, this is one of the most unique and compelling mystery novels in a long time.

Buy a copy of Scorched Grace here!

The Readers’ Room by Antoine Laurain

Translated from the French by Jane Aitken

the readers room antoine laurain

The Readers’ Room is a delightful French murder mystery novel, very much in the vein of Agatha Christie and her compatriots. This is a bright yet twisted mystery that grows and tangles as it goes.

The Readers’ Room is set in a Paris publishing house. The head of the publishing house has been sent a manuscript that she sees as something truly unique and special. It’s fresh, daring, and exciting, and she has big plans for it. Meanwhile, the novel also remarks on the mechanics of publishing houses in a very intimate and satisfying way.

That new novel is published, but the identity of the author remains a mystery. When it is nominated for a prize, the prize can only be given if the identity of the author is revealed. Our publishing director is now caught up in the investigation of real-world murders tied to the events within this strange new mystery novel.

The cozy, warming note of The Readers’ Room is so at odds with its content, and that’s often the pleasant paradox of so many beloved murder mystery novels.

Buy a copy of The Readers’ Room here!

The Tattoo Murder by Akimitsu Takagi

Translated from the Japanese by Deborah Boehm

the tattoo murder

The honkaku genre of Japanese murder mysteries is a broad and beloved thing. Many talented authors have added small masterpieces to this genre over the past century. The genre has a legacy so grand that it is difficult to pick one that stands above the rest, but what makes 1948’s The Tattoo Murder unique is its dedication to character drama.

Translated by Deborah Boehm, The Tattoo Murder was honkaku author Akimitsu Takagi’s debut mystery novel. Set in the aftermath of World War II, after the fall of the Japanese Empire, The Tattoo Murder is a locked-room murder mystery novel that satisfies as much as it surprises.

Our protagonist is a medical student who becomes enamoured with a young woman: the heavily tattooed daughter of a late legend of the Japanese tattooing world. She tells him that her brother and sister were both lost to the war, and that she believes she herself is not long for this world.

Her prediction proves true when she is found dead in her own home’s locked bathroom, the water still running. Her torso, the canvas for her stunning tattoo art, is missing. This is a classic Agatha Christie-esque murder mystery but with added emphasis on blood, gore, and character drama.

Buy a copy here!

How to Kill Your Family by Bella Mackie

how to kill your family

Here is one of those modern mystery novels that had every kind of reader sitting up and paying attention, likely in part because of its delightfully cheeky title. Reminiscent of Emerald Fennell’s daring 2020 film Promising Young Woman, How to Kill Your Family is an angry mystery novel about class disparity, selfishness, and cruelty.

Our protagonist is a young woman who was raised by a poor, single French woman in London. Grace’s mother was knocked up by a philandering playboy billionaire who cast her aside and refused to even look in her or their daughter’s direction.

After the death of her mother, Grace decides to head out on a killing spree, murdering the members of her father’s rich family one by one, and we get to sit back and watch.

The mystery is revealed in the prologue, however. The novel’s framing device: Grace is in prison, writing her memoir. Here, she tells us that she actually got away with all of these murders, and was locked up for the only murder she didn’t commit. There’s our hook; there’s our mystery.

This is a wonderfully funny, grim, and satisfying book that stands out amongst other great modern mystery novels.

Buy a copy here!

The Decagon House Murders by Yukito Ayatsuji

Translated from the Japanese by Ho-Ling Wong

the decagon house murders yukito ayatsuji

The Decagon House Murders is another masterpiece of the Japanese honkaku genre of murder mystery novels, and one that uniquely and specifically pays homage to the legacy of Agatha Christie. Many (including myself) consider Christie’s magnum opus to have been her novel And Then There Were None, a story that has inspired so much art and media in the decades since its publication.

One of those writers inspired by it was Yukito Ayatsuji, and his novel The Decagon House Murders proudly echoes Christie’s novel in brilliantly inventive ways. Our protagonists are a group of university students who are all members of their college’s mystery club.

These students have headed out to an island which, only a few months prior, was the site of an as-yet-unsolved murder. The honkaku genre is a pool of fantastic mystery novels, and even amongst all these great books, The Decagon House Murders stands out as a mystery masterpiece.

Buy a copy here!

The Final Girl Support Group by Grady Hendrix

The Final Girl Support Group

Grady Henrix is an author of horror novels, all of which have brilliant titles and subvert the tropes of the genre in fun ways. This particular novel, however — The Final Girl Support Group — is as much a murder mystery as it is a horror novel. Maybe moreso, honestly.

Our protagonist is Lynette, a middle-aged woman who was once a final girl (a term used to describe the last victim left alive at the end of a slasher movie). For years, Lynette has been attending the titular therapy support group for massacre survivors, but now one of these final girls stops turning up to their sessions, and is found murdered in her home.

Someone is targeting final girls, it seems. And to make things stranger, a new final girl has just appeared, having survived a fresh massacre. Lynette makes for a great protagonist; as something of an outsider and an incredibly paranoid person, she is an unlikely hero. This adds a lot to the fun and the tension.

Buy a copy here!

The Key in the Lock by Beth Underdown

the key in the lock

Here is an exciting piece of historical drama that doubles as a compelling murder mystery story. The Key in the Lock is a narrative that is split chronologically. We follow both the adult Ivy, who lost her son in the Great War, and the younger Ivy of the past, scarred by a dreadful fire.

The mystery of the novel surrounds the fire itself, the boy who died in that fire, and the reasons behind it. As a child, Ivy was the daughter of the village daughter. When the fire broke out, she and her father were called to the big house, and are tangled in the web of lies surrounding the cause of the blaze.

As an adult, Ivy has not only lost her son but her husband is also incredibly sick, and as we flit back to the past we see how she and her husband’s relationship initially began. The Key in the Lock is a shining example of both historical British fiction and the legacy genre of murder mystery novels.

Buy a copy here!

The Leviathan by Rosie Andrews

the leviathan rosie andrews

Set in 1643, during the English Civil War, The Leviathan is a creeping, gothic piece of historical fiction that will have you gripping the pages like the wheel of an out-of-control car. Our narrator-protagonist, Thomas Treadwater, is a young man who has returned from war to his father’s farm.

His younger sister is all out of sorts because she believes that their new servant has been seducing and manipulating their ageing father. On occasion, chapters shift forward to Thomas as an old man, married and comfortable but haunted by something in his house. Something he must periodically feed and watch over.

The Leviathan is, frankly, delicious. It is a camp piece of mystery and melodrama. It has all the insane beats of a gothic horror B-movie, while also leading us by the nose with its ridiculous puzzles and problems.

It’s wonderful to see a piece of historical fiction be so lively and campy, as opposed to the more typical slow-burn approach to the genre. This is gothic historical fiction at its finest, while also being a shining example of the mystery genre.

Buy a copy here!

The Confessions of Frannie Langton by Sara Collins

the confessions of frannie langton

Here is one of the most impactful mystery novels of the past decade; all the more impressive considering it is a debut novel. Sara Collins is a Black British writer and ex-lawyer. Her debut novel The Confessions of Frannie Langton has also been adapted into a beautiful TV show.

The Confessions of Frannie Langton begins with our protagonist on trial for murder. It’s 1826, she was born and educated on the plantations of Jamaica, and she has since worked as a maid for Benham family. Mrs Benham, a woman Frannie dearly loved, is dead, and it’s Frannie who stands to hang for the murder. But did she do it? And if so, why?

The Confessions of Frannie Langton isn’t only one of the best historical novels of today; it is also a twisting, turning, tantalising murder mystery novel. A mind-bending tale of race, class, empire, love, queerness, and so much more. It is a true modern classic of historical fiction and mystery fiction.

Buy a copy here!

Elena Knows by Claudia Pineiro

Translated from the Spanish by Frances Riddle

elena knows Claudia Piñeiro

Though Claudia Pińeiro is most famous for her crime fiction, Elena Knows is a slightly different beast. This heavy yet short literary mystery novel tackles big themes of religion, sexism, responsibility, and fantasy vs reality.

The novel’s titular, Elena, is a woman in her sixties who is suffering from Parkinson’s. It’s hard for her to move around, yet she is on a journey across Buenos Aires to meet and talk with someone she hopes will understand her situation.

The situation in question concerns Elena’s daughter, Rita, who, three months prior, was found dead at their local church. Rita was found hanging from a rope in the belfry; the death was immediately written off as suicide, but Elena refuses to believe that.

Her only evidence is that it was raining on the day of Rita’s death, and Rita had always avoided the church on rainy days for fear of lightning strikes. Elena Knows takes place over a single day as she journeys across Argentina’s capital, and we are treated to flashbacks to Rita’s death and funeral and their life together as mother and daughter before that.

This is an Argentinian novel that heavily explores the effects of religion on women and children; it asks us to consider our relationships with the people around us vs the relationships we have with the invented versions of them that our minds have cooked up.

There is more to Rita, more to Elena, more to everything than is first laid out, but this is not a crime novel. It’s a mystery story with a laser focus on religion, gender, and family dynamics.

Buy a copy here!

Bad Cree by Jessica Johns

bad cree

Blending the tone and tropes of horror fiction and mystery novels, Bad Cree tells the story of a young cree Canadian woman whose dreams are following her into reality. When Mackenzie wakes up on page one, she has the freshly severed head of a crow in her hands, and this isn’t the first time a thing from her nightmares has appeared in her waking world.

The dreams themselves are guiding her back to a lakeside forest, a place where her older sisters once briefly disappeared before emerging, disheveled and shaken up but safe. That is, until one of these twin sisters, Sabrina, suddenly died of a brain aneurysm, and now she seems to be haunting her little sister’s nightmares.

The memories, the haunting, and the blurring of dreams and reality all make for some really disturbing and chilling horror and a very compelling supernatural mystery story. Twisted and chilling as a horror novel and utterly compelling as a mystery thriller, Bad Cree is a unique spectacle of a novel.

Buy a copy of Bad Cree here!

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47 Must-Read Novellas (Books Under 200 Pages) https://booksandbao.com/must-read-novellas-short-books/ Fri, 17 Nov 2023 12:47:39 +0000 https://booksandbao.com/?p=23291 Novellas provide a special kind of reading experience, and require their own kind of skill to craft. Shorter than a novel (but still often expected to carry the same narrative heft) and longer than a short story, novellas are exciting in their uniqueness. They can be re-read more easily and therefore provide more thematic satisfaction for the reader.

best novellas short books

As for defining a novella, that depends on who you ask. Typically, a novella is any piece of fiction that’s shorter than 200 pages (though some argue for 150 pages), but not so brief as to be considered a short story. Here, we’re going off general consensus.

These are your must-read novellas, separated neatly into different styles and genres. Here, you’ll find a hefty selection of classics, as well as many modern novellas separated out by genre. And so many of these masterful short books come from all around the world.

Classic Novellas

So many of your favourite classic stories and novels often actually fall into the definition of a novella, and this can even take some readers by surprise. These classic novellas have changed the landscape of literature for the better; they’re stories we talk about every day, and they continue to impact readers on the deepest levels.

Animal Farm by George Orwell

animal farm

George Orwell’s allegorical novella, often taught in high schools all around the English-speaking world, is one of the most popular, beloved, and well-respected novellas ever written. Retelling the story of the Russian Revolution and the Stalinist era that followed, Animal Farm is a fantastic piece of dark satire so brilliantly told.

Orwell famously argued that language and stories should be simple, appealing to the broadest possible audience, and Animal Farm is an excellent example of this. A fable for children and a satirical allegory for adults, the novella appeals to so many, so perfectly.

Buy a copy of Animal Farm here!

The Trial by Franz Kafka

The Trial by Franz Kafka

Franz Kafka saw little success in his life, but after his death his works came to define an entirely new genre of fiction: the kafkaesque. The Trial is a novella that tells the story of Joseph K, a man arrested for a crime he is unaware of, who finds himself tossed by the waves of the legal system.

K has no idea what he did, and nobody will tell him. We watch as the system intimidates and confuses him, and he is moved from place to place, all the while desperate to understand his own situation. The Trial is a darkly funny, sombre, frustrating read that bites at bureaucracy in inventive and evocative ways.

Buy a copy of The Trial here!

We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson

we have always lived in the castle

Shirley Jackson remains the queen of the American gothic, famous for her horror novels and short stories — the best of which is We Have Always Lived in the Castle, a gothic novella about a secluded family on the edge of town. The family is shunned by everyone, and has a lot of secrets to keep hidden.

We follow the family’s youngest daughter, Merricat, who lives with her sister and uncle. Her parents and brother died from poisoning several years ago, and now Merricat uses what she believes to be magical wards to protect what’s left. A chilling and cold piece of gothic fiction and a wonderful classic novella.

Buy a copy of We Have Always Lived in the Castle here!

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

One of the most famous and revered American stories ever written, The Great Gatsby is a true classic of the 20th century. A novella that tells the story of a lonely man who hosts lavish parties that he himself never attends, all with the hope of luring out the woman he has loved for so many years.

The Great Gatsby is written with captivating clarity and lyricism, and it presents the reader with a unique perspective on the great American dream. Gatsby himself is an alluring and haunting figure, and Fitzgerald’s novella has become one of the great American classics.

Buy a copy of The Great Gatsby here!

Silas Marner by George Eliot

Silas Marner by George Elliot

George Eliot was a pioneer of realism in 18th century literature; an approach to fiction that set her apart from the likes of Dickens and the Brontës. Silas Marner is a novella that tells the story of a weaver who has settled in a quiet village after dark events came to pass.

Accused of stealing from the congregation in his Northern hometown, and likely framed by a friend, Silas is shunned, loses his love, and retreats to the Midlands to live out his life in seclusion, but things don’t go the way he hoped. Silas Marner is a powerful Victorian novella that cemented George Eliot as one of the great writers of her time.

Buy a copy of Silas Marner here!

The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson

Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson

This gothic novella, like Dracula, Frankenstein, and The Picture of Dorian Gray, is a gothic tale that has left an enormous legacy. Everyone knows the tale of Jekyll and Hyde, whether they’ve read Stevenson’s novella or not: the story of the scientist who transforms into his beastly and dangerous alter-ego.

The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde is a well-loved story by a well-loved author, and its ongoing prevalence in popular culture shows what a powerful and original story it was. The tale of a meek and respectable doctor transforming into a cruel and dastardly monster is one that continues to resonate with readers to this day.

Buy a copy of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde here!

A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens

A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens

One of the most cherished stories that Charles Dickens ever told, A Christmas Carol has since become larger than Dickens ever was, with people knowing the story whether they’re familiar with Dickens himself or not. Adapted to the screen many times, A Christmas Carol is, at this point, a fairy tale that every child has enjoyed.

The story of a miserly old capitalist who strangles the joy from his workers, only to be visited by the regretful ghost of his former business partner, and then frightened into changing his ways by visions of the past, present, and future. It’s a terrifying tale, but also a warming and hopeful one that resonates with readers across the world.

Buy a copy of A Christmas Carol here!

The Turn of the Screw by Henry James

the turn of the screw henry james

Alongside Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, Henry James’ classic novella The Turn of the Screw made an icon of the governess: the intelligent young woman who works as a teacher to the children of a wealthy and large country home full of ghosts and secrets. In the case of this novella, that home is Bly Manor.

Our nameless governess is charged with the care of two children who live with their uncle after the deaths of their parents. While working at Bly, the governess starts to see ghostly figures, and also learns about two people who once worked and died there; now, their ghosts are seemingly influencing the children. It’s a chilling tale and a classic gothic novella.

Buy a copy of The Turn of the Screw here!

Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin

Giovanni’s Room James Baldwin

James Baldwin was an American author, playwright, and civil rights activist who escaped to Paris. There, he wrote the much-loved novella Giovanni’s Room. The story of a bisexual American man living in Paris and the love affair that unfolds between himself and a bartender named Giovanni.

Giovanni will soon be executed, and our protagonist David narrates the story of their love affair, which took place while David’s girlfriend is in Spain. This is a tale of isolation, gender roles and expectations, and queer expression in the 1950s. An empathetic and vitally important piece of queer fiction.

Buy a copy of Giovanni’s Room here!

Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

Steinbeck was one of the great American authors, and his novella Of Mice and Men remains as thematically prevalent as it ever did. Frequently taught in schools, the novella tells the story of two men — George and Lenny — who work on a farmstead to raise enough money to eventually free themselves from the cycle of capitalism.

George, like so many men, is following the American dream. He will have land of his own, and the simple giant Lenny will help him get there. But the cycle of capitalism is harder to break away from than George thinks, and tragedy awaits them both. Of Mice and Men is a powerful tale, vitally relevant, and beautiful in its simplicity. An amazing novella.

Buy a copy of Of Mice and Men here!

The Stranger by Albert Camus

The Stranger by Albert Camus

Albert Camus was a French philosopher known for presenting his philosophical arguments as fiction. The first and most famous of his works was the novella The Stranger, which tells the tale of a man living in French Algeria who kills another man shortly after the death and funeral of his own mother.

In the novella’s first half, we learn about Mersault’s life leading up to the funeral, and the subsequent murder. In the second half, we watch the fallout of these events. The Stranger is a piece of absurdist fiction that explores the theme of isolation in unusual ways (as Camus was known to do), and it remains an impactful novella to this day.

Buy a copy of The Stranger here!

Snow Country by Yasunari Kawabata

Translated from the Japanese by Edward G. Seidensticker

snow country kawabata

Japanese author and Nobel Prize winner Yasunari Kawabata wrote many beautiful tales, often characterised by their emphasis on beauty. Aesthetics, in the form of both human and natural beauty, were intrinsic to his storytelling and his plots, and that can best be seen in his classic novella Snow Country.

This Japanese novella takes place in a remote hot spring town, where our Tokyoite protagonist, Shimamura, falls in love with a local geisha who works at the town’s onsen. Though geisha are forbidden to show affection for their clients, she too falls in love, and we watch their love affair unfold. A stunning short masterpiece by one of the greats.

Buy a copy of Snow Country here!

A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess

a clockwork orange anthony burgess

Anthony Burgess supposedly wrote A Clockwork Orange over the course of just a few days, and the resulting novella has gone on to become a revered story, adapted into one of the most famous and respected films of all time.

This piece of dystopian satire follows a psychopathic young man named Alex, who spends his days as part of a violent gang, but is later captured and subject to torturous reformation methods by the authorities. A haunting, harrowing story. Surreal and strange, difficult to read, but ultimately powerful and impactful.

Buy a copy of A Clockwork Orange here!

The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway

the old man and the sea

The Old Man and the Sea is regarded by many readers as Hemingway’s masterpiece. A vital piece of American fiction, and a wonderfully short piece of fiction. This novella presents the reader with exactly what the title promises.

Our old fisherman hasn’t caught a single fish in more than eighty days, but one morning he sets out and hooks an enormous marlin, which he cannot reel in and so holds onto for more than a day and a night, slowly developing great respect and admiration for the fish as the hours tick away. This is a true American classic and one of the great novellas of its time.

Buy a copy of The Old Man and the Sea here!

Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys

Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys

Jean Rhys’ novella Wide Sargasso Sea is a prequel to Charlotte Brontë’s gothic romance novel Jane Eyre. Using what was hinted at in Brontë’s novel as a framework, Rhys presents us with a powerful and literary feminist novel about English colonialism.

Our protagonist is Brontë’s famous madwoman in the attic, a Creole woman named Antoinette. We follow her life leading to her marriage to the cruel Mr Rochester, who removes her to England and famously locks her away in his attic. Rhys’ novella humanises her, gives her a story, and has become a feminist classic novella.

Buy a copy of Wild Sargasso Sea here!

Modern & Literary Novellas

From Argentina to Japan, so many of the best stories of the past several years have come in the form of novellas; short books that can be enjoyed again and again by readers who cherish what they have to offer. These modern — and often literary — novellas are all must-read stories for fans of the artform.

At Night All Blood is Black by David Diop

Translated from the French by Anna Moschovakis

at night all blood is black david diop

Winner of the International Booker Prize, French author David Diop’s incredible war novella is set in the trenches of World War I, where we follow a Senegalese soldier who faces death, disease, and prejudice from his fellow soldiers.

When he loses his fellow Senegalese brother-in-arms, he feels alone and isolated, and so dedicates himself to the fight, despite all that is against him. This is a harrowing tale of war on the front lines, as well as the prejudice and dangers that faced Senegalese soldiers made to fight by the French government. A haunting, incredible novella.

Buy a copy of At Night All Blood is Black here!

Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata

Translated from the Japanese by Ginny Tapley Takemori

Convenience Store Woman

Convenience Store Woman is a transfixing, thought-provoking Japanese novella about a woman who has worked at the same convenience store for more than a decade. Her life is predictable, simple, and stable. And so, she is content. But her family worries about her. They want her to climb that ladder, and also eventually get married and have kids.

Our protagonist has found a way to survive and feel comfortable in a strange, capitalistic, traditionalist world that she doesn’t understand or feel part of, but this only serves to confuse those around her. Sayaka Murata’s novella is a profound piece of Japanese fiction. A masterpiece of modern literature.

Buy a copy of Convenience Store Woman here!

Brickmakers by Selva Almada

Translated from the Spanish by Annie McDermott

Brickmakers by Selva Almada

Selva Almada is a genius of feminist literary fiction. Hailing from Argentina, she has written some of the best novels of the modern day. Brickmakers is a novella about cycles of abuse, especially within the context of masculinity.

Starting at the end, with two boys having killed each other in a fight, they are bleeding out on the ground and we trace their personal histories back to the source of this feud. Inherited hatred, masculine pride, and class divides paint a picture of patriarchy in its darkest most honest form. A true masterpiece of a novella.

Buy a copy of Brickmakers here!

Foster by Claire Keegan

foster claire keegan

Irish author Claire Keegan is a master of short fiction, and Foster is a perfect example. This is a novella about a young girl whose mother is about to go into labour. Our girl is taken, by her father, to stay with a family in a nearby town for the summer.

There, she is welcomed in with open arms by a loving couple and shown a different way of living and loving as part of a family unit. This is a touching tale of growth and experience through the eyes of a child. A stunning work of literary fiction and one of the best modern novellas you’ll ever read.

Buy a copy of Foster here!

Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan

small things like these

Following on from Foster, Claire Keegan once again wowed the literary world with Small Things Like These. This novella is set during the week leading up to Christmas. Our protagonist is a middle-aged man, married with children, and working as the manager of a lumber mill.

His small community are god-fearing church-going hypocrites, and as the novella progresses we watch him steadily come face-to-face with those hypocrisies. This is a novel that daringly exposes the darkness and corruption of organised religion in the modern day. An incredible novella and a masterpiece of literary fiction.

Buy a copy of Small Things Like These here!

Walking Practice by Dolki Min

Translated from the Korean by Victoria Caudle

walking practice dolki min

A fantastically strange and imaginative Korean novella, Walking Practice tells the story of an alien creature that crash-landed on Earth and spends their days hunting and eating the most delicious thing on this planet: us.

The best way for them to do this is to shapeshift into a man or woman and use dating apps to lure out their prey. The novel explores gender roles in a multitude of ways, as our alien switches genders and plays different roles to get what they want. It’s a fascinating exploration of gender expectations in the modern world.

Buy a copy of Walking Practice here!

The Premonition by Banana Yoshimoto

Translated from the Japanese by Asa Yoneda

the premonition banana yoshimoto

Banana Yoshimoto is one of the most beloved Japanese authors of today, and The Premonition is an elegantly simple novella about a teenager with a happy ordinary life and a family who love her. But she also enjoys sneaking out of the house to stretch her legs. One place she likes to go is the home of her hedonistic aunt.

But one day, while visiting her aunt, gaps in her memory become clear, and she starts to uncover a truth about her childhood and her family that had long been kept from her. This reframes her ideas of love, trust, and family bonds. A truly wonderful modern from a talented Japanese author.

Buy a copy of The Premonition here!

Graveyard Shift by M.L. Rio

Graveyard Shift by M.L. Rio

From the author of the celebrated If We Were Villains (one of my personal favourite novels) comes Graveyard Shift, a gothic novella that clocks in at a mere 108 pages and takes places over a single night. Graveyard Shift follows a group of insomniacs and night shift workers who often meet for a smoke at a local graveyard. Our first protagonist is editor of the university newspaper, and others include a cab driver, a hotel receptionist, and a bartender.

One night, while at the graveyard, they notice a freshly-dug hole. But this graveyard is old; nobody has been interred there in a century. So, who dug this hole and why? Over the course of this night, our misfit gang of protagonists will hunt for answers and uncover a conspiracy along the way. This is dark academia that actually explores the darkness of academia in a creeping, claustrophobic way.

The novella is the perfect medium for this kind of story as well, since it can be enjoyed in a single setting. Reading this will take as long as watching a horror movie, and you will feel just as much edge-of-your-seat tension as the plot thickens and the strangeness amps up.

Paradise Rot by Jenny Hval

Translated from the Norwegian by Marjam Idriss

paradise rot

Jenny Hval is an internationally famous Norwegian singer-songwriter, and she has also written some fantastic short novels. Her novella Paradise Rot is a wonderfully gothic piece of strange fiction about a university student who moves to a new city in a new country for her studies.

When she arrives, she moves in with a local woman. They live together in a converted brewery where the walls between them are more like office cubicles in an open-plan space. Privacy is an illusion, and the space itself becomes a character in its own right. This is a wonderfully unsettling tale and a brilliant work of modern gothic fiction.

Buy a copy of Paradise Rot here!

Boulder by Eva Baltasar

Translated from the Catalan by Julia Sanchez

boulder eva baltasar

Boulder is a work of sapphic literary fiction from Catalan author Eva Baltasar. Our nameless protagonist works as a cook on a merchant ship which is off the coast of Chile when she meets and falls deeply in love with a woman named Samsa. Her addiction to this woman leads her to move with Samsa to Reykjavik.

Their relationship quickly becomes strained, however, when Samsa declares that she wants a child, and our protagonist doesn’t. Their lives are moving at different paces and in different ways, causing a painful rift between them. This is a stellar and visceral sapphic novella that everyone should read.

Buy a copy of Boulder here!

The Swallowed Man by Edward Carey

The Swallowed Man by Edward Carey

Edward Carey rose to prominence with his incredible historical novel Little, about the life of the girl who would eventually grow up to become Madame Tussauds. His novella The Swallowed Man retells the tale of Pinnocchio, focussing on the experiences of Geppetto after being swallowed by the whale.

We spend time in the whale with Geppetto as he explores his surroundings, finds a shipwreck, and reads the captain’s journal. And we also journey back through his memories to the creation of Pinnocchio in a stunningly human and empathetic tale. A beautiful little novella from a master of the craft.

Buy a copy of The Swallowed Man here!

Ms Ice Sandwich by Mieko Kawakami

Translated from the Japanese by Louise Heal Kawai

Ms Ice Sandwich by Mieko Kawakami

Mieko Kawakami is one of the great feminist Japanese writers of today, and her novella Ms Ice Sandwich is a sweet, soulful, uplifting tale. Our protagonist is a teenage boy facing several personal struggles, especially with his at-home family relationships.

However, he has become entranced by a girl who works at his local grocery store; a girl whom he called Ms Ice Sandwich. He admires her, feels as though he is in love with her, and even looks up to her as someone cool, aloof, and unique. It’s a charming tale that will comfort anyone who reads it.

Buy a copy of Ms Ice Sandwich here!

Finger Bone by Hiroki Takahashi

Translated from the Japanese by Takami Nieda

finger bone hiroki takahashi

Hiroki Takahashi’s war novella, Finger Bone, places us in the life of a nameless soldier stationed in the jungle of Papua New Guinea. He befriends his fellow soldiers while healing at a war hospital where men are being treated for wounds and sickness, but their lives could be stripped from them at any moment (and they often are).

This is a visceral yet poetic novella about the realities and the uncomfortable truths of war. Like the poetry of Wilfred Owen, this is bleak and honest, painting a raw picture of warfare from the frontlines. An incredible work of short fiction.

Buy a copy of Finger Bone here!

Hex by Jenni Fagan

hex jenni fagan

This is a unique and original novella from a fantastic voice in Scottish literature. Protagonist Iris has found a way to travel back in time several centuries, and there she spends the night in the prison cell of a woman who will be hanged at dawn for witchcraft.

This woman is Gellis Duncan, and she tells Iris the story of how she got here. Iris tells Gellis that the women of today are still treated unfairly, and true equality has still not been reached. The two bond over this painful truth and we learn about the very real North Berwick Witch Trials of 16th century Scotland.

Buy a copy of Hex here!

For Thy Great Pain Have Mercy On My Little Pain by Victoria MacKenzie

for thy great pain have mercy on my little pain

A stunning piece of literary historical fiction, For Thy Great Pain Have Mercy On My Little Pain tells the story of two women of English history, both of whom claimed to hear the word of God: Julian of Norwich and a lesser-known woman named Margery.

Julian hid herself away and took to life as an anchoress, giving out advice to strangers who sought it. Margery, however, stood in the town square and cried about the words she heard. The two women will eventually meet, and this meeting will eventually change the course of history.

Buy a copy of For Thy Great Pain Have Mercy On My Little Pain here!

The Vegetarian by Han Kang

Translated from the Korean by Deborah Smith

the vegetarian han kang

Han Kang’s novella, translated with splendour by Tilted Axis Press founder Deborah Smith, won the International Booker Prize in 2017. The Vegetarian tells the story of a woman who decides to become a vegetarian when she is plagued by unsettling and upsetting dreams of animal slaughter.

We see the fallout of this decision from the perspectives of various family members across three parts: her husband, her brother-in-law, and her sister. Each one places her at the centre and has a different attitude towards Yeong-hye and her behaviour. This is a radical, powerful Korean novella that should be read by everyone.

Buy a copy of The Vegetarian here!

Mild Vertigo by Mieko Kanai

Translated from the Japanese by Polly Barton

mild vertigo mieko kanai

Japanese author Mieko Kanai’s literary novella is a dense and poetic story about nothing much at all. Our narrator-protagonist is a Tokyo housewife with children and a husband to look after, and we spend time in both her life and her mind as she goes about her daily routine.

What makes this novella so captivating is its structure and delivery, as the realism of the tale is offset by the ways in which we fluidly weave in and out of thoughts, memories, actions, and conversations and lines between them all are blurred in an engaging and fascinating way, all translated amazingly by Polly Barton.

Buy a copy of Mild Vertigo here!

Mammoth by Eva Baltasar

Translated from the Catalan by Julia Sanchez

Mammoth by Eva Baltasar

Eva Baltasar is a remarkable artist who is able to weave sapphic and feminine themes into stories that explore belonging, hedonism, indecision, and the feeling—whether it be good or bad—of being untethered. Across just one hundred pages, Mammoth accomplishes all of this with harsh, electrifying prose that is translated with staggering force by Julia Sanchez.

Mammoth follows a young lesbian who, as the novella opens, wishes desperately to be pregnant. She works as a researcher at a university and, at a party, attempts to seduce a man who might give her the one thing she wants. When this fails, she quits her job and wanders, almost nomadically, from place to place and job to job, eventually arriving at a rural farm.

This is a story of anxiety. Our protagonist is young, brash, unsure of herself, and seems to be living through a persistent crisis. She knows herself to an extent but experiments with herself and the world in order to better understand both, and harm is often the result. She might often be dark, unlikable, and pitiable, but she is also relatable in one way or another.

Orbital by Samantha Harvey

Orbital by Samantha Harvey

Winner of the Booker Prize 2024, Orbital is a novella that traces a single day aboard the International Space Station. Six astronauts orbit the world sixteen times, seeing a new sunrise and sunset every ninety minutes. And in that time, they bond, share memories, discuss God and philosophy, marvel at the beauty of our world, and take stock of our place in the universe.

While it is light on plot and events, Harvey’s focus with Orbital is on musing over the big questions: life, death, love, faith; all those heady questions, all while watching the world spin under your feet. The main subject of the novella is relationships: those between neighbours, family members, nations, and even the relationships between us and our home planet, and between Earth and the rest of the universe.

All of this is written with sharp and poetic prose. While it all feels almost eerily apolitical, avoiding any kind of commitment to one idea or another, it remains introspective, thoughtful, and hopeful. And that, in itself, is something that can be appreciated.

Horror Novellas

Many of the best horror stories of all time take advantage of brevity. Short stories and novellas are uniquely equipped to deliver a terrifying, spine-chilling scare and then simply end, leaving the reader feeling cold but alive. These horror novellas are powerful, frightening things that you will absolutely adore. Not for the faint of heart, of course.

The Black Spider by Jeremias Gotthelf

Translated from the German by Susan Bernofsky

the black spider gotthelf

This all-but-forgotten classic of gothic horror is a work of strangeness and brilliance. The Black Spider begins with a Swiss family hosting a celebration in their valley home, when the elder patriarch begins telling the story of something dreadful that happened there in the middle ages.

That story involves a village of serfs toiling away to serve a cruel lord in his castle. One day, at the point of starvation, they are visited by a stranger who tempts them with magic that will save them, in exchange for the next child to be born. From here, the village descends into unimaginable horror and tragedy, making for a truly spectacular gothic horror novella.

Buy a copy of The Black Spider here!

Come Closer by Sara Gran

come closer sara gran

Reminiscent of Rosemary’s Baby, Sara Gran’s horror novella Come Closer is an eerie and unsettling experience. Our protagonist, Amanda, is starting to lose her grip on what is real and what is sane as strange things occur around her. Noises in her apartment, odd and violent dreams, and accusations of things she hasn’t done.

Amanda’s world is turning upside down, and she desperately needs to understand why. There is a voice in her head that’s taking control and telling her to do things she’d never do. She is losing control and it frightens her. This is a whole new kind of terror, and a brilliant short horror novel.

Buy a copy of Come Closer here!

What Moves The Dead by T. Kingfisher

what moves the dead

This is T. Kingfisher’s bold and brilliant retelling of Edgar Allan Poe’s iconic short story The Fall of the House of Usher. While that tale is an untouchable classic, Kingfisher took it and created something entirely fresh and unique, adding more detail and dynamism to the story.

What was once a twisted and hopeless tale now features more body horror, more strangeness and grotesquerie. Mysteries are answered but the answers are wonderfully unpleasant. This is a fantastically dark, twisted, and exciting horror novella.

Buy a copy of What Moves the Dead here!

The Salt Grows Heavy by Cassandra Khaw

The Salt Grows Heavy by Cassandra Khaw

The Salt Grows Heavy is a monstrously strange and bleak horror novella. Our protagonist is a mermaid who, as the story opens, is watching her newborn children feast on the body of their dead father — a cruel patriarch who cut out his wife’s tongue. From here, she leaves on a journey into the woods with a charismatic plague doctor.

In this strange new place, they meet a gang of boys who hunt and kill each other, only to be resurrected by their cultish masters, and so a kind of battle ensues between our heroes and these lords. A wonderfully grotesque and gory tale of body horror and twisted people.

Buy a copy of The Salt Grows Heavy here!

You’ve Lost a Lot of Blood by Eric LaRocca

you've lost a lot of blood

You’ve Lost a Lot of Blood is a book within a book. We begin with a man named Martyr Black, who is a self-professed serial killer. We read transcripts, diaries, and poetry from him, as well as a novella that he wrote. And that novella takes up the bulk of this strange and wonderful book.

The novella tells the tale of a young woman who has been recruited by a reclusive and enigmatic video games developer. She lives at his remote mansion with her little brother, but her boss is injured and recovering. She is strapped there and being ordered around by her boss’ sister. It’s a claustrophobic, gothic, and unnerving horror novella.

Buy a copy of You’ve Lost A Lot of Blood here!

Queen of Teeth by Hailey Piper

queen of teeth

Queen of Teeth is a gross and fantastic piece of short horror fiction about a young lesbian woman who wakes up after a one-night-stand with the sheets soaked in blood. What she first thinks is her period turns out to actually be a set of teeth growing at the entrance to her hoo-ha.

The people to blame are part of a pharmaceutical company that treated Yaya when she was still in her mother’s womb, and now, decades later, she is transforming and a voice in her head is getting louder. This is a twisted, dark tale and a brilliant horror novella.

Buy a copy of Queen of Teeth here!

Sci-Fi Novellas

Science fiction is a genre known for its thematic exploration of various politics and big ideas, and having that distilled down into a short, easily re-readable book provides such obvious benefits. It’s so easy to chew on and get all the benefits from a clever sci-fi story if it’s a novella: something short and re-readable. That goes for all of these brilliant books.

The Time Machine by H.G. Wells

the time machine hg wells

H.G. Wells was one of the great godfathers of science fiction, and The Time Machine remains one of his most well-loved books. It tells the story of a man who travels far into the future; so far, in fact, that humanity has branched into two evolutionary chains.

In this future are the pristine and childlike eloi and the monstrous underground-dwelling morlocks, who feed and then eat the eloi. The Time Machine was one of the earliest sci-fi stories and remains a classic novella to this day.

Buy a copy of The Time Machine here!

To Be Taught If Fortunate by Becky Chambers

To Be Taught If Fortunate Becky Chambers

American author Becky Chambers is the queen of modern sci-fi, and her short novella To Be Taught If Fortunate is a masterful work of hard science fiction. In a near-future socialist Earth, a grass-roots global space agency has been established, and a group of astronauts has been sent on a mission to another solar system.

While there, this team explores the planets and moons, learn, scan, and study. They come across unexpected obstacles and overcome them together. This is a hopeful work of sci-fi that paints a positive picture of our future.

Buy a copy of To Be Taught If Fortunate here!

This is How You Lost the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone

this is how you lose the time war

These two fantastic authors worked together to pen a masterful work of short science fiction. Two soldiers fight for opposing armies in a war that spans both space and time, but they are both becoming disenchanted by the war, and in that loss of faith love can bloom.

Our soldiers leave taunting, teasing notes for the other to find, and slowly their letters become declarations of love as they journey from a future battlefield full of mechs back to Shakespeare’s London and Plato’s Greece. An incredible work of science fiction romance.

Buy a copy of This is How You Lose the Time War here!

Pluralities by Avi Silver

pluralities avi silver

Pluralities is a queer work of short science fiction; a dual narrative about two very different people. One is a young person who works at a mall and is steadily coming to terms with their gender identity, and also happens to have the power of foresight. The other is a prince who has fled his home planet and all the responsibilities that go with it.

The two never meet, but they are connected by something greater. We watch our earthling form an intense relationship with a trans man and we see the prince’s AI ship gradually fall in love with him. This is a fun and unique work of short science fiction. A fantastic sci-fi novella.

Buy a copy of Pluralities here!

All Systems Red by Martha Wells

all systems red martha wells

All Systems Red is the first novella in a sci-fi series called The Murderbot Diaries. This story is set in a future world where corporations control much of space and the planets in it. While exploring, teams of humans are assigned a “murderbot” to keep them safe.

We follow a team whose own murderbot has managed to hack its own systems and become self-aware. Now, it wishes to better understand itself, its purpose, and its relationship to humanity. A fantastic sci-fi novella.

Buy a copy of All Systems Red here!

Fantasy Novellas

Fantasy is a genre famous for its size and scale. Fantasy novels are so often not only large in stature but also part of long, ongoing series. There are entire worlds full of people, histories, traditions, religions, politics, and more. But condensing all of that down neatly into a novella is its own kind of beauty, as these authors demonstrate.

Thornhedge by T. Kingfisher

thornhedge t kingfisher

Thornhedge is a modern fairy tale story by the incredible T. Kingfisher. Blending Shakespearean fairies with elements of Sleeping Beauty and Rapunzel, this is the tale of a girl who was stolen by fairies, raised as one, and then given the responsibility of guarding a tower surrounded by thorns.

She has guarded this tower for a long time, and watched as knights try and fail to access it. But one day, she befriends a himbo knight with good intentions, and she tells him her story. The two bond, and we slowly learn about our fairy and about what is actually in the tower. A wonderful fantasy novella from a legendary author.

Buy a copy of Thornhedge here!

The Slow Regard of Silent Things by Patrick Rothfuss

The Slow Regard of Silent Things by Patrick Rothfuss

Fantasy fans will know the name Patrick Rothfuss, author of the widely celebrated The Name of the Wind and its sequel. But Rothfuss also wrote The Slow Regard of Silent Things, a fantasy novella which takes place in the world of The Kingkiller Chronicles.

This short novel follows Auri, a character introduced in Rothfuss’ first novel, and the adventures she goes on in a hidden labyrinth nestled beneath the university in which The Name of the Wind is predominantly set. This is a great novella that expands the lore of this world brilliantly.

Buy a copy of The Slow Regard of Silent Things here!

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30 Must-Read Sapphic & Lesbian Novels https://booksandbao.com/must-read-sapphic-lesbian-novels/ Sun, 15 Oct 2023 21:21:30 +0000 https://booksandbao.com/?p=19523 Lesbian authors are paving the way when it comes to genre and boundary pushing, writing dark and toxic love stories and unlikeable women protagonists.

When looking at lesbian novels and the art put out by lesbian authors, you see the darkest kinds of gothic fiction, as well as the brightest dedications to love and kindness. Whatever genre you love, from historical fiction to tales of sea monsters, and love crossing time and space there’s something for you here.

lesbian novels

Essential Lesbian Novels

Some of these lesbian novels are dark and twisted; others are celebrations of queer love in the face of patriarchy. Some are in translation from other languages; others are forging new paths for well-trodden genres. What unites them all is their sheer quality. These are essential lesbian novels by some of the best women writers of today.

Our Wives Under the Sea by Julia Armfield

our wives under the sea

Julia Armfield made an enormous splash with her debut short story collection, Salt Slow. When she followed that with a staggering work of modern gothic fiction in Our Wives Under the Sea it quickly became clear how special her writing really is.

Our Wives Under the Sea is a gothic tale told from two perspectives; and one that explores the concepts of loss and grief from a frighteningly original angle.

Miri’s wife Leah set out on an expedition to the bottom of the sea in a cramped submarine. What should have been weeks turned to months, and when Leah eventually returned, she was different. Leah’s chapters blend the Lovecraftian with the Kafkaesque as we sink slowly with her, and we see what’s down there beneath everything.

Miri’s chapters follow her as she tries to live with, and fails to care for, the returned and broken Leah. A new Leah who barely speaks and behaves in strange and frightening ways. Miri is grieving the loss of her wife, confronted with the fact that whatever has returned is not Leah.

This is a lesbian novel that forces the reader to confront the idea of grief and how it might present itself. It’s a tale of love and loss and loneliness and isolation. A truly original gothic novel.

Watch our full video review of Our Wives Under the Sea

Buy a copy of Our Wives here!

After Sappho by Selby Wynn Schwartz

after sappho

After Sappho is the novelisation of a web of interconnected lives: queer women from around the turn of the 20th Century who pushed feminism and queer experiences into the limelight. This is one of the most kind, hopeful, and inspiring lesbian novels you could ever hope to read and enjoy.

We begin in Italy before tracing multiple threads across France, England, Ireland, and across to the US. The women here were all real: artists, writers, actors, philosophers, and travellers. Some you will be familiar with; others you won’t. All of them were inspired by Sappho, and in turn inspired one another to move, act, shake the world, and turn the status quo on its head.

These are women who didn’t conform to gender roles and expectations, who loved other women, who spoke out and inspired the women and queer people around them. The novel is told out of order, in small vignettes that traces these lives over and again; we move through time and across borders to paint a picture of change, growth and love. Beautiful, genius, and perfect.

Buy a copy of After Sappho here!

Notes of a Crocodile by Qiu Miaojin

Translated from the Mandarin by Bonnie Huie

notes of a crocodile

Qiu Miaojin’s Notes of a Crocodile is a few things: it is one of the quintessential Taiwanese novels of the twentieth century; it is also one of the most prominent and powerful lesbian novels of the past few decades. Separated into a series of notebooks, Notes of a Crocodile tracks the university years of a queer Taiwanese student who goes by the name Lazi.

Lazi is tormented by her love for a woman in the year above; their relationship is tumultuous and aggressive. She also spends time in queer circles populated by other emotionally unhealthy young people. This is a visceral tale of personal hatred and acceptance, of love and lust and danger. Reminiscent of Osamu Dazai’s No Longer Human, this Taiwanese novel rips you apart unapologetically.

Buy a copy of Notes of a Crocodile here

Lucky Red by Claudia Cravens

lucky red claudia cravens

Lucky Red is a historical sapphic novel set in the American Wild West of the late 19th century. Our protagonist, Bridget, is a beautiful young redhead whose childhood was plagued with bad luck, to say the least.

Bridget was raised by her dumb and useless father, who sold their house for nothing much at all. While on the road together, they take shelter and he is bitten and killed by a snake. Alone, Bridget wanders until she reaches the frontier town of Dodge, Kansas. There, she is taken in by the kind women of the Buffalo Queen brothel, where she works and finds a community.

She takes to the work well, enjoys having food and shelter, and builds strong bonds with the other women. And soon enough, she realises that men are work but women are what she loves and craves. Her first crush is a fellow sex worker, and her second is an infamous female gunslinger with whom she falls in deeply in love.

Lucky Red is a sapphic novel about sex, lust, love, and the bonds between women and small communities in a dangerous, difficult, hard world.

Buy a copy of Lucky Red here!

The Gracekeepers by Kirsty Logan

the gracekeepers

A special and beautifully written book that subtly evokes Scottish folklore while building an original and highly creative world. On a floating circus, in a world divided between those who live on land or at sea, North dances with her beloved bear, betrothed against her will to the ringmaster’s son. However, she’s harboring a secret that could destroy everything.

Meanwhile, Callanish, exiled to a solitary lighthouse, tends to the graves of those lost at sea. A chance encounter sparks a magnetic bond between the two women, offering the promise of a new life together. Perilous waters threaten to tear them apart. If you love theatrical and whimsical books then prepare to fall in love with this novel and its vibrant and endearing ensemble.

Buy a copy of The Gracekeepers here

Love Me Tender by Constance Debré

Translated from the French by Holly James

Love Me Tender by Constance Debré

Like so many great sapphic and lesbian novels, Love Me Tender is a brash and punk piece of lesbian liberation.

Our protagonist is forty-seven, and three years ago she separated from her husband of twenty years when she realised she was gay. Now, she lives in a small studio flat in Paris, spending her days swimming, reading, getting new tattoos, writing in cafes, and sleeping with women. A life of freedom and hedonism.

What complicates this is the fact that she has a son, Paul, whom her homophobic ex-husband is weaponising against her. At just 160 pages, Love Me Tender is a novel that explores queer liberation and the ways in which heteronormativity, bigotry, traditionalism, and family can all feel like ghosts, shackles, stalkers, and abusers.

Our protagonist is a complex woman; from one angle she seems selfishly carefree, and is clearly suffering for that. From another, she’s enjoying her lesbian liberation. This is punk literature, through and through, and one of the most raw and exciting lesbian novels of recent years.

Buy a copy of Love Me Tender here!

Pizza Girl by Jean Kyoung Frazier

pizza girl

Pizza Girl is a coming-of-age story about an 18-year-old pregnant pizza delivery girl named Pizza Girl (she is never given a real name) who becomes obsessed with a stay-at-home mom named Jenny whom she delivers pizza to.

When we meet Pizza Girl, she is grieving the death of her alcoholic father, avoiding her supportive mom and loving boyfriend, and flagrantly ignoring her future. She feels more in common with her dead father than she does with anyone else in her life.

As Pizza Girl and Jenny’s relationship deepens, she begins to question her own identity. She is attracted to Jenny, but she is also deeply afraid of becoming her. She sees in Jenny the future that she herself could have if she doesn’t make some changes in her life. This novel beautifully explores themes of identity, motherhood, obsession, grief, and loss and you truly feel devasted for her as the book goes on.

Buy a copy of Pizza Girl here

Boulder by Eva Baltasar

Translated from the Catalan by Julia Sanches

boulder eva baltasar

Accomplished and celebrated Catalan poet Eva Baltasar has here written a raw and tender novella about love and pain, and how too often they are one and the same.

Our protagonist, nicknamed Boulder by her geologist girlfriend, spends her days floating from job to job. She’s a cook, and when we meet her she’s working on a ship at sea. Boulder is cold and uncaring; she’s as harsh and unforgiving as the sea upon which she currently works. But when she meets Samsa, she softens and gives into her lust and love for her.

The two move to Reykjavik, and Boulder eventually finds some success opening up a Spanish food truck. Life is solid, good, reliable, stable. Until Samsa, almost forty, insists that she wants a child and it must happen now, before it’s too late for her. Boulder doesn’t want to lose her, so she gives in and agrees.

We watch Boulder struggle with having a pregnant partner, and later a child she never wanted. This sapphic novel is told entirely from the perspective of Boulder, as a kind of diary, as she does nothing but voice her thoughts, feelings, and opinions.

It’s a sensual novel, but also a painfully raw and angry one. Queer and punk, this is one of the most harrowing and powerful lesbian novels you’re ever likely to read.

Buy a copy of Boulder here!

Mrs. S by K. Patrick

mrs s k patrick

Set in an old-fashioned boarding school, Mrs. S tells the story of a nameless Australian who has moved to England for work. There, she meets the headmaster’s wife, the titular Mrs. S, and begins a journey of growing obsession.

Our protagonist is unsure of herself. She wears a binder and enjoys being seen as masculine, but she doesn’t have the language to express how she feels or what she wants for herself. She identifies as a lesbian and begins to see Mrs. S as more than an object of obsession — perhaps this beautiful, charming woman might be able to guide our protagonist to her true self, unlock something in her.

Mrs. S has a very specific and rare style of presentation: run-on sentences and paragraphs that don’t differentiate between narration and dialogue.

Characters are named for their jobs and no proper nouns are used. The all-female school’s student body is described as a faceless mass which K. Patrick simply refers to as The Girls. This makes the characters and setting feel as though they are floating in a vacuum, outside of time and space. This is a nowhere place in which our protagonist is trapped, trying to understand herself and what she wants.

Her obsession with Mrs. S grows. She is lustful, jealous, curious, and eager to know this woman better, despite not knowing herself at all. Mrs. S is an answer, a distraction, a muse, so many things to her. There are few novels as captivating, intimate, claustrophobic, and sensual as Mrs. S; a true modern masterpiece amongst the best sapphic and lesbian novels.

Buy a copy of Mrs. S here!

My Darling Dreadful Thing by Johanna van Veen

My Darling Dreadful Thing by Johanna van Veen

Queer Dutch author Johanna van Veen’s My Darling Dreadful Thing is a work of gothic heartache. This sapphic horror-tinged drama will rip you apart in more ways than one. The novel follows Roos, a young woman barely out of girlhood, who has been working as a medium at her mother’s seances. While her mother is a cruel charlatan, Roos really does have a connection to the spirit world in the form of her ghostly companion, Ruth.

But when Roos meets Agnes—a young widow mourning the loss of her husband—the two form a quick bond and Agnes pays Roos’ mother to have Roos as her own companion at her crumbling estate. There, Roos discovers that Agnes has her own spirit companion, as well as a few dark secrets. And between chapters we read doctor/patient transcripts from after the events of the novel, which reveal that Agnes will not last the novel, and Roos is on trial.

The gothic elements of this story are turned up to eleven, with ever single gothic checkbox being ticked, and what makes this a real dramatic masterpiece is the intense, painful longing that Roos and Agnes grow to feel for each other. Their love blossoms through the novel but it is a flower blooming in a murky, ghost-infested place.

Chlorine by Jade Song

chlorine jade song

Chlorine is a sapphic coming-of-age story inspired by the author’s own experience as a competitive swimmer.

Our protagonist, Ren, is a Chinese-American girl with a deep love for swimming. We learn from the beginning that she is telling her story after having somehow transformed into a mermaid. We follow Ren as she grows through her teen years, experiencing puberty, sex, depression, friendship, and crises. All the while her friend Cathy, who holds a deep romantic love for Ren, remains by her side.

Occasionally, the narrative switches to Cathy’s perspective, expressed via letters which she has been casting out to sea in the hopes that they will reach the mermaid Ren.

The build up to Ren’s supposed transformation is one fraught with feelings of pain, stress, disappointment, dysphoria, violence, and more. The metaphor being played with can be interpreted in a variety of ways, as one which explores a general sense of truth and honesty, or more specifically feelings of dysphoria, sexual repression, and freedom from society.

This is a raw and difficult coming-of-age story, a tale of sapphic love and self-hatred. A story of frustration and pain; a difficult read that tackles many difficult themes with honesty and empathy.

Buy a copy of Chlorine here!

Milk Fed by Melissa Broder

milk fed melissa broder

Melissa Broder leads the charge of unlikeable protagonists and difficult characters, especially amongst women writers. Historically, men are allowed to be unlikeable. Nobody bats an eye when male characters behave in an unlikeable way; and yet Melissa Broder stirs up a lot of ill feelings in certain readers by simply making her women complex, broken, selfish, distant, and difficult.

After the success of The Pisces, she brought us Milk Fed, one of the most daring and original lesbian novels of the last few years.

Milk Fed‘s protagonist is Rachel, a young Jewish woman from New Jersey who lives in LA and works at a talent agency while spending her nights doing stand-up comedy. Rachel has a lot of mummy issues that have instilled in her a lifelong and crippling obsession with calorie counting and weight watching.

Soon, Rachel meets Miriam: an overweight orthodox Jewish woman who loves food and loves her family. She is everything Rachel isn’t, and she soon becomes an unhealthy obsession for Rachel. Rachel lusts after Miriam, is inspired by her attitude towards life, and builds fantasies of sexual desire around her.

Milk Fed is one of the most daring and exciting lesbian novels of recent years.

Watch our full video review of Milk Fed

Buy a copy of Milk Fed here!

X by Davey Davis

x davey davis

X is a sexy, kinky noir story about a non-binary lesbian searching the clubs and dungeons of Brooklyn for the elusive, enigmatic X. Our protagonist, Lee, spends their days working a corporate job and their nights going to punk shows, hooking up with people, and engaging in some amateur sadism.

Despite being a dom, Lee had a particularly exciting masochistic encounter with X a few weeks ago, and now they can think of nothing else but finding X again. However, the US government is systematically deporting immigrants, refugees, and queers, and Lee has heard rumour that X is about to be deported as well.

We spend the novel getting to know Lee, their life, their friends, their kinks, and their childhood traumas, all while we follow them on their hunt for X. This is a very exciting book amongst lesbian novels that really leans on kink. It’s bleak at times, occasionally funny, and unapologetically raw.

Buy a copy of X here!

Biography of X by Catherine Lacey

biography of x

Biography of X is an insightful and harrowing exploration of narcissism and its devastating impact on the lives of others, set against a dystopian backdrop that enriches the story and provides a unique perspective on the protagonist’s development.

After X, a renowned artist and writer, dies suddenly, her widow CM sets out to write a biography, uncovering a Pandora’s box of secrets and betrayals as she goes. We viscerally experience the obsession, disbelief, and anger CM feels as she uncovers X’s hidden past from her collaborations with Bowie and Waits to her hidden past in the fascist Southern Territory.

Biography of X is a roaring epic that plumbs the depths of grief, art, and love, introducing us to an unforgettable character who shows us the fallibility of the stories we craft for ourselves. While the pacing occasionally lags, the novel remains a compelling and thought-provoking read, and is a must for fans of challenging sapphic literature.

Buy a copy of Biography of X here

Paradise Rot by Jenny Hval

Translated from the Norwegian by Marjam Idriss

paradise rot

Written by internationally acclaimed Norwegian musician Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot is a short, visceral, sensual novel about desire, temptation, and the human body. Textured, loud, coarse, and raw, Paradise Rot obsesses over the beautiful and the gross aspects of the female form: what it’s made of, what it creates, how it thrives, and how it decays.

Our protagonist is a young Norwegian woman named Jo who has just moved to a new country to attend university. She moves into a converted brewery and lives with a local woman. This shared space has no real borders; flimsy plywood walls create half-formed rooms and secrecy is non-existent.

These women obsess over each other, give into temptation, make each other jealous, and sexually awaken in each other’s company. This novel is alive, pulling the senses into focus and demanding your attention, even as it behaves in an alluringly crass and gross way. A truly addictive lesbian novel.

Buy a copy of Paradise Rot here!

Solo Dance by Li Kotomi

Translated from the Japanese by Arthur Reiji Morris

solo dance li kotomi

Few lesbian novels hit as hard as Solo Dance. Written by Taiwanese-born, Japan-based author Li Kotomi, Solo Dance follows a similar protagonist. Cho Norie grew up in Taiwan and left for Tokyo to pursue a master’s degree, learn the language, and get a job.

However, Norie is horribly depressed, carries heavy trauma, and obsesses over death. She reads the works of novelists who took their own lives and struggles to hide her sexuality for fear of being harassed. As a child, Norie lost a friend. At university, she suffered abuse. Now, as an adult working a corporate job in Tokyo, she struggles with day-to-day life as a lesbian immigrant in Japan.

If you are a queer person who has ever suffered (or feared) abuse, you will relate strongly to Norie and her experiences. You’ll find in her a companion, and perhaps even catharsis through how she struggles and grows and lives.

Solo Dance is not an easy book to read, but it is an extremely rewarding one. It illuminates, especially to cishet readers, the eggshells that LGBTQ+ people walk on every day. It also leans towards hope in the third act, but you have to go through a lot to get there.

Ultimately, queer readers who have faced depression and anxiety will find a friend and a companion in Norie. Solo Dance is one of the best lesbian novels you’ll ever read. Thank you, Li Kotomi.

Buy a copy of Solo Dance here!

A Dowry of Blood by S.T. Gibson

a dowry of blood

A Dowry of Blood is a gothic romance for the ages. S.T. Gibson has gifted us the story of the cursed marriage between Dracula and his bride Constanta.

We learn on the very first page that Constanta will eventually kill her sire, but we must read on to see how this happens, and the centuries that pass in the meantime. This is a novel dripping with blood, love, and lust. Animal aggression and burning passion.

Soon enough, a second bride joins their marriage. a Spanish woman who becomes a source of burning desire for Constanta. She loves her like nobody else, and it’s their love that plays a part in Dracula’s undoing. The love, lust, and longing laced into this novel is spectacular. There is so much hate and spite and venom to enjoy as well, as with any good gothic romance.

Buy a copy of A Dowry of Blood here!

Night Shift by Kiare Ladner

Night Shift Kiare Ladner

In Night Shift, author Kiare Ladner paints a gritty picture of late-90s London. Here’s one of the grimiest and gnarly lesbian novels you’re likely to read; fiercely literary and often bleak, Night Shift will twist you as you grow more and more obsessed with its characters and their lives.

Our protagonist is Meggie, a young woman who presumes herself straight until she falls into an obsessive and unhealthy friendship with sexy Belgian Sabine. Meggie works night shifts and spends as much of her days as possible with her boyfriend, Graham, but Sabine steadily shows Meggie a different side of London, work, and life. Meggie is happy to go along for the ride as she questions and explores her sexuality.

Sabine represents possibility, mystery, new experiences, and a new way for Meggie to spend her days. She is intoxicating and illuminating. She is everything Meggie didn’t know she wanted to be, could be, and might yet be. Night Shift is one of the harshest, raw, and punk lesbian novels of today.

Buy a copy of Night Shift here!

Read More: Best Queer Graphic Novels and Manga

The Confessions of Frannie Langton by Sara Collins

the confessions of frannie langton

The Confessions of Frannie Langton is one of the boldest and most beautiful lesbian novels. Sara Collins’ debut novel is an homage to the gothic classics while also representing a bright and exciting new direction for the gothic genre as she places a Black lesbian front and centre.

This is a piece of genre fiction that gives readers everything they could want: an enticing mystery, an epic tale of freedom and love, an exciting historical context, an homage to the Brontës, and a tragic lesbian love story led by gothic fiction’s first Black female protagonist.

The titular Frannie Langton was born on a plantation in Jamaica, where she learns to read and write. From there, she moves to London and works in the house of a rich couple. After falling in love with Mrs Benham, however, she is put on trial for her murder. But did she do it? This is her story; these are the confessions of Frannie Langton.

Buy a copy of The Confessions of Frannie Langton here!

Bloom by Delilah S. Dawson

Bloom by Delilah S. Dawson

Bloom is a hypnotic descent from alluring sapphic romance into paranoid gothic terror. This short novel begins with a series of chapters in which our young professor protagonist finds herself drawn to a woman who sells her wares—cupcakes, soap, and more—at a farmer’s market. But as these women enter into an electrified and subtly toxic relationship, the darkness starts to creep in, looming and humming at the edges.

Ro went through a bad breakup with a guy in New York, and now she’s taken an assistant professor role at a small town university, and it’s there that she meets Ash, who lives in an isolated farmhouse that she inherited from her grandmother. This is Ro’s first experience of a lesbian relationship, and it’s exciting, but Ash is controlling and secretive. There are places Ro mustn’t go and rules she must follow.

The hows and whys of Ash’s behaviour are kept close to the chest until the eleventh hour, and all the while we watch on, unblinking, as this gothic drama of sapphic love and toxic tension unfolds. It is wonderfully refreshing to read a sapphic book with a toxic relationship that spirals into something truly terrifying at the end of it all.

This is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone

This is How You Lose the Time War

An abstract and beautifully lyrical sapphic love story unfolding through unique letters sent across time and space.

Two rival agents named Red and Blue come from opposite sides of warring factions of a time war and fall in love through the course of this novella. Their love grows through taunting letters that they leave for each other, and these letters appear anywhere and everywhere; from Shakespeare’s London to a far-flung alien war between warring mechs.

This is How You Lose the Time War is highly poetic and may not be for you if you prefer a structured plot and world-building, but this unstructured approach lends itself well to emphasising the fractured yearning and tenderness between these two agents.

The co-writing of This is How You Lose the Time War also means that the two agents have very distinct voices and personalities which makes their love all the more endearing. Beyond being a warming sapphic love story, this is also one of the best sci-fi novels of all time.

Buy a copy of How You Lose the Time War here!

The Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo

Last Night at the Telegraph Club

Winner of numerous awards, this beloved poignant lesbian novel is set in San Francisco’s Chinatown in 1954, during the Red Scare, when openly exploring queerness isn’t an option.

Protagonist Lily secretly gathers photos of women with masculine qualities, is drawn toward ‘unfeminine; clothing and interests, and slowly recognises her lesbianism with her budding connection to Kathleen Miller, a white classmate. Last Night at the Telegraph Club seamlessly incorporates cultural touchstones and places with historic Chinese American significance alongside a beautiful and touching sapphic love story.

The inclusion of Mandarin and Cantonese language in the text with footnote translations was also a nice touch.

Buy a copy of Last Night at the Telegraph Club here!

The Adventures of China Iron by Gabriela Cabezón Cámara

Translated from the Spanish by Fiona Mackintosh and Iona Macintyre

the adventures of china iron

In the great library of lesbian novels, never has there been such a glorious, unshackled celebration of queer love. The Adventures of China Iron is an Argentinian novel that laughs in the face of patriarchy and heteronormativity. It is a wild and wonderful ride from beginning to end.

The titular China Iron is still young, yet she has seen much tragedy. She was married to and then abandoned by a singer. She gave birth at age fourteen and gave her children up. Now, her story begins anew. At the novel’s outset, China meets Liz, a Scottish woman exploring the plains of Argentina. The two quickly fall deeply in love and head out on a wild journey together.

The Adventures of China Iron celebrates lesbian love, sex, and intimacy. It shrugs off the touch of men and shows the reader just how beautiful and alive queer love is. Few lesbian novels were written to be guiltlessly enjoyed this much. What a work of art.

Read our full written review of The Adventures of China Iron

Buy a copy of The Adventure of China Iron here!

The Colour Purple by Alice Walker

The Colour Purple Alice Walker

Currently the only work featuring a lesbian relationship written by a woman to win a Pulitzer, this epistolary novel is a true classic that spans twenty years of protagonist Celie’s life.

It’s a beautifully written and important novel that can be difficult to read at times due to the subject matter, while explicitly a lesbian novel The Color Purple also tackles race, class, gender, sexual assault, domestic abuse, religion, and the South in the early 1900s.

Told through a series of letters to ‘God’ (and later her sister Nettie in Africa), Celie is fourteen at the beginning of the novel and is being physically and sexually abused by her father — she is desperately trying to protect her sister from a similar fate.

Later we are privy to the events of Celie’s abusive forced marriage to ‘Mister’ and also her developing relationship with Shug, Mister’s mistress, who shows her love and intimacy for the first time. It’s a very human book that will definitely stay with you.

Buy a copy of The Color Purple here!

Fingersmith by Sarah Waters

fingersmith sarah waters

One of the most popular Sarah Waters novels for good reason, the twists and turns in this book just don’t let up and just when you think you have a handle on what is going on, the rug is pulled from under your feet. If you have seen Park Chan’Wook’s Handmaiden film which is based on Fingersmith and think you will be prepared for the events of this novel don’t be fooled, the film deviates from the book in a big way at the end of part one.

This is an addictive read and at no point feels slow despite being a bigger novel. Protagonist Sue Trinder is raised by a group of scam artists in Victorian London and finds herself drafted into a plan to steal a fortune from an unmarried, rich young woman named Maud Lilly.

Things are never as straightforward as they seem, however. If you enjoy historical fiction or simply want a lesbian novel with endless backstabbing, revenge, and twists then Fingersmith is the one for you.

Buy a copy of Fingersmith here!

An Education in Malice by S.T. Gibson

An Education in Malice by S.T. Gibson

Adapted liberally from Sheridan Le Fanu’s Carmilla (below) S.T. Gibson’s An Education in Malice is an exciting work of sapphic, vampiric dark academia. When the novel opens, its protagonist, Laura Sheridan, has moved to rural Massachusetts to attend the isolated Saint Perpetua’s College, and in her poetry class she meets the professor she will develop a deep obsession with—a woman named De Lafontaine—and the girl who will quickly become her rival.

This rival is Carmilla, De Lafontaine’s pet (in more ways than are initially implied). Aggravating Carmilla, Laura proves to be a formidable poet, and this is enough to snatch De Lafontaine’s attention from her. Competition for the professor’s affections grows more complicated with the revelation that De Lafontaine is a vampire, and soon the rivalry will flip on its head completely.

An Education in Malice is a sapphic enemies-to-lovers narrative in a teasingly oppressive dark academia setting. The kind of blood-soaked romance that you’ll find yourself unable to look away from.

One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston

One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston

From the author of the highly successful Red, White & Royal Blue, we have another light-hearted and witty romance novel that successfully captures the fizzing energy of meeting someone for the first time and knowing that they are your person.

Unfortunately, when August meets Jane on the subway, it is not a straightforward romance since Jane is displaced in time from the 1970s and August has to help her. The interesting concept of One Last Stop offers a lot of insight into historic queer culture across the US during the 70s and keeps you hooked as you get more and more invested in a happy ending for these cute lovers.

Buy a copy of One Last Stop here!

House of Hunger by Alexis Henderson

house of hunger

Alexis Henderson’s second novel House of Hunger is a tumble into a frightening gothic fantasy world that gently shifts from grim and gory to sexy and sapphic as the pages turn.

Set in a fantasy world reminiscent of Victorian Britain, our protagonist Marion is a twenty-year-old maid living in the slums of a smog-filled city. Sick of her work as a maid to a cruel woman, and going home each night to a sick and cruel brother, she answers an advertisement for a new blood maid.

Blood maids are women who serve the powerful houses of the North, where counts and countesses believe that drinking the blood of others can help with their maladies. As she rises through the ranks of blood maids at the House of Hunger, the relationship between Marion and her countess blossoms into something far more intimate and romantic, though it remains frightening and unstable.

Buy a copy of House of Hunger here!

Tipping the Velvet by Sarah Waters

Tipping the Velvet Sarah Waters

A lesbian book list wouldn’t be complete without another offering from Sarah Waters, just as beloved as Fingersmith, Tipping the Velvet is another historical novel set in the late Victorian period.

The setting of this novel is delicious, treating us to an imagined lesbian cabaret underworld as we follow Nancy from the sleepy seaside town of Whistable to London as she pursues her lover Kitty. This book has a real sense of place, and it’s difficult not to be fully present in the world Sarah is creating even if you are not fully invested in the characters who can be unlikeable at times.

Buy a copy of Tipping the Velvet here!

Carmilla by Sheridan Le Fanu

carmilla

Published more than two decades before Stoker’s Dracula Le Fanu’s Carmilla was not only the first great vampire novel, it was also a daring work of sapphic gothic fiction. This short and tense novel opens with a genuinely unsettling chapter, establishing the bleak and empty world of its protagonist, Laura, before introducing us to her soon-to-be playmate and predator, the titular Carmilla.

Carmilla is left at Laura’s father’s castle by her mother, and while she is there she develops a deep bond with our protagonist. They play and explore, and soon Carmilla openly admits her love and affection for Laura. But there is something dark and monstrous lurking just beneath the surface.

Carmilla works both as a campy work of gothic fiction and as a truly chilling piece of 19th century horror fiction. And the sapphic mood created by the tension between Carmilla and Laura is nothing short of intense.

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50 Essential Literary Fiction Books to Read Now https://booksandbao.com/essential-literary-fiction-books-to-read/ Fri, 07 Jul 2023 11:38:15 +0000 https://booksandbao.com/?p=22376 While literary fiction is a relatively broad genre (if it can be called a genre at all), and a relatively young definition, there is still a great wealth of literary fiction books out there. Here you’ll find some of the best literary fiction books ever written, some of which are beloved classics from the 20th century.

Many of these are works in translation, especially from Japan and Korea — countries with a great literary history, and a focus on the literary aspect of their fiction. Before we talk about the best literary fiction books for you to read, let’s define the term “literary fiction” for those new to the concept.

literary fiction books

What is Literary Fiction?

Generally speaking, literary fiction is fiction with a focus on themes and form. Stories and novels that are about something very specific. Authors of literary novels use stories to explore a theme or idea that they are curious about, or that they wish to teach their readers about.

This often means that a literary novel will have one defining theme. Examples include: religion, love, growth, loss, family, tradition, power, change, prejudice. All of the themes listed here will be found in the literary fiction books below.

For this reason, literary novels are often political. They might be about feminism, racism, religious persecution, conservatism, class, money, or war.

The themes of literary novels are often embodied by their characters. Protagonists might exist to exemplify the themes which the author wishes to explore. For this reason, literary fiction books are often grounded in reality, set in the modern day, and lacking in fantastical elements. Relatability is often key.

This isn’t always the case, however, and one popular genre of fiction that often crosses into the literary is sci-fi, a genre whose books are so often about a specific theme or concept. Literary fiction is also often about form. Rather than being a simple past-tense, third-person narrative, the story might be epistolary or experimental in its form.

This might also mean a lack of punctuation, a nameless protagonist, an unspecified setting or time, a lack of chapter markers, run-on sentences. These choices of context and form are made with the express purpose of more clearly and eloquently presenting the themes and ideas of the novel.

Fantasy is a genre that rarely blends with the literary, because the purpose of fantasy is escapism, world-building, and sparking imagination. This is not to say that fantasy fiction is never literary, but it is rarer to find specifically literary fantasy books.

For this reason, adult fiction is sometimes divided into two broad camps: literary fiction and genre fiction. This isn’t always accurate or fair but dividing lines and labels have their uses. It might help to think about it this way: if you were to start writing a story, would you begin by imagining the world and the story, or would you focus on something you wish to teach the reader?

If your focus is on telling an exciting story in an exciting setting, you’ll probably come out with a thriller, a fantasy book, or a horror novel. If your focus is on encouraging the reader to think about a specific theme or topic, your novel would likely be considered literary.

Essential Literary Fiction Books

Here are some of the best literary fiction books ever written, from authors around the world who have used literature to explore vital political and social themes.

You’ll find great feminist texts, books exploring class and race dynamics, queer narratives, books about specific political themes, anti-war novels, and so much more. You’ll also find more intimate literary novels about family dynamics, personal growth, and self-discovery.

All of these literary fiction books have something to teach the reader, and all have been carefully and beautifully crafted by mastermind authors of literary fiction.

The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro

the remains of the day ishiguro

Japanese-British author Kazuo Ishiguro is one of the most prominent authors of literary fiction. What’s interesting about Ishiguro is that his novels lean into different genres in playful ways. He has written sci-fi, mystery, historical fiction, and fantasy, but all are primarily literary.

His novels are about people, first and foremost. About the fallibility of people; about regret; about loss; about change or the lack thereof. Ishiguro’s magnum opus, The Remains of the Day, is a literary novel that explores tradition, conservatism, and time’s effect on people.

The Remains of the Day begins with our protagonist and narrator, a butler named Stevens, setting out on a road trip. Stevens has worked at Darlington Hall for decades, and his new employer, a nouveau riche American, happily encourages him to take a well-deserved vacation.

Stevens plans to reunite with Darlington Hall’s former housekeeper, a woman for whom he clearly had deep feelings. Stevens, however, has always been married to his job. He is a rigid, unmovable, conservative traditionalist with a particular attitude towards life, work, and class.

He is a man stuck in the past, corrupted and dismantled by his politics, his attitude towards life, and his inability to move forward as time itself does. As such, Stevens is now, in his twilight years, learning of his own regret, seeing the wood for the trees, and wondering if it’s possible to face these facts. One of the great literary fiction books from the master of literary fiction himself, Kazuo Ishiguro.

Buy a copy of The Remains of the Day here!

1984 by George Orwell

1984 george orwell

Quite often, the best literary fiction books are the same books we studied in high school English, and there’s a reason for that. In high school, we study books that have particular themes to dig deep into, as a means of learning critical thinking and analysis skills. And this is why so many of us studied Goerge Orwell’s dystopian masterpiece 1984.

A warning against the willingness of corrupt politicians to hoard power and wealth, and to control the populace via misinformation and media language, 1984 is a perfect novel.

This is a novel that teaches readers to look for the warning signs of fascism as it rises. The world of 1984 is an England ruled by oligarchs who invade the privacy of all residents with cameras and microphones, and who change the news to suit their needs.

Our protagonist, Winston, seeks to resist the corrupting, brainwashing tactics of Big Brother and the UK government. One of the most powerful books of the 20th century and one of the finest literary fiction books you’ll ever read, 1984 is a staggering achievement from a visionary writer.

Buy a copy of 1984 here!

The Lying Life of Adults by Elena Ferrante

Translated from the Italian by Ann Goldstein

The Lying Life of Adults by Elena Ferrante

Elena Ferrante is one of the most beloved Italian authors of all time; a literary author whose works explore feminism, class, and family dynamics in fresh and deeply clever ways. The Lying Life of Adults follows Giovanna, a girl from a wealthy family that all live in a house which sits high up, overlooking the poorer, working class people below.

Her father came from rags to riches, and now works as a professor. His wife, Giovanna’s mother, is also a well-educated woman and they are all kind and compassionate on the surface. When her father, in an unthinkingly cruel act of sexism, compares his daughter’s looks to those of his awful, ugly sister, Giovanna is distraught.

To understand why her aunt is so hated, Giovanna visits her and gets to know her. From here, she is torn between the truths that her parents tell, and those her aunt tells. This is a novel about patriarchy and sexism, and about modern-day class divides and privilege. An incredible piece of literary fiction.

Buy a copy of The Lying Life of Adults here!

The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett

the vanishing half brit bennett

Upon its release, The Vanishing Half saw an incredible amount of critical praise, all of which was wholly deserved. A novel of immense hype matched only by its scope of content and theme. The Vanishing Half tells two parallel stories of twin sisters who grow up to be very different women.

Born into a Black community in the deep south, twin sisters Stella and Desiree leave town at the age of sixteen. After spending a little time in New Orleans, one moves to DC and “becomes” Black, while the other ends up in the white suburbs of California and “becomes” white.

In a deeply literary way, The Vanishing Half examines what it means to perform Blackness and whiteness in a societal and cultural sense, beyond just skin colour. The Vanishing Half chronicles the choices and life events of these sisters, as well as those of their children as we move through the second half of the 20th Century.

It considers the relationships between place, race, and class, as well as how our relationships are defined by these seemingly immovable things. Spanning decades, this is a multi-generational novel that makes clear the visible yet ignored racial, political, and class divides of modern America. A masterpiece of Black American fiction and one of the best modern literary fiction books you’ll ever read.

Buy a copy of The Vanishing Half here!

Tokyo Ueno Station by Yu Miri

Translated from the Japanese by Morgan Giles

tokyo ueno stationn

Yu Miri was born in Japan to Korean parents, and as such is a South Korean citizen and occasional recipient of racist bias and abuse in Japan. Despite this, she has had a phenomenally successful career in Japan as both a playwright and a writer of prose.

Although born in Yokohama, Japan’s second largest city, she now lives in a small town in Fukushima, close to the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant which suffered a meltdown following the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami which claimed thousands of lives.

Her novel Tokyo Ueno Station is a boldly raw and angry literary novel about class disparity and social injustice. Kazu, Tokyo Ueno Station‘s protagonist, was born in the same year as Japan’s emperor, and both men’s sons were born on the same day.

While the emperor was born into the height of privilege, Kazu was born in rural Fukushima, a place that would later be ravaged by destruction in 2011. While the emperor’s son would go on to lead a healthy life, Kazu’s son’s life would be cut short, and Kazu himself would live out his final days as one of the many homeless barely surviving in a village of tents in Tokyo’s Ueno Park.

A socialist novel about the unfairness of social standings and class divides. A novel that asks the reader to ponder just how fair it is that the time, place, and financial situation we happen to be randomly born into determines everything we will become.

Buy a copy of Tokyo Ueno Station here!

The Trial by Franz Kafka

The Trial by Franz Kafka

Only a handful of authors lay claim to an entire genre, and Franz Kafka is one of those few. The Kafkaesque genre is defined by the specific themes and writing style that Kafka created. Sadly, he was entirely unknown in his day and died in misery and obscurity at a young age.

Kafka’s literary novels and short stories focus on the ways in which post-industrial European society undermines, confuses, and disempowers working men. His stories repeatedly examine the methods and tactics of law, bureaucracy, and social rules which render ordinary working class people frightened and impotent.

The finest example of this is his novel The Trial, which tells the story of a man named Josef K, who is one day very suddenly arrested. Josef has done nothing wrong, to his knowledge, and is not told what his crime is supposed to have been.

He is imprisoned, then freed, told to await instructions and further information, and failed over and over again by an absurd system. There is a bleak and dark humour to The Trial, as our man fails to ever understand what is happening to him, and nonsensical events continue to pile on top of one another.

Kafka is one of my own personal obsessions, and he has inspired so many great books and films over the past hundred years. The Trial remains a masterpiece that helped to forge an entire genre; one of the very best literary fiction books ever written.

Buy a copy of The Trial here!

Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel

Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel

Emily St. John Mandel has proven herself a modern master of blending genre fiction with lofty literary concepts. With The Glass Hotel, she created a compelling literary thriller. With Sea of Tranquility, she continued the tradition of blending the literary with incredible sci-fi storytelling.

But before those books, she provided readers with Station Eleven, a celebrated piece of literary fiction that turns the post-apocalypse on its head. Rather than this being another novel about human survival, and returning us to our base, animal selves, Station Eleven is a novel about holding onto human art and culture.

This is a pandemic novel about a group of travelling troubadours; a theatre troupe who roam North America bringing Shakespeare to those of us who are left.

Station Eleven celebrates the things worth holding onto: the art that humans created, and the culture which inspired, and was in turn inspired by that art. A beautiful and hopeful piece of literary fiction that encourages the reader to consider the importance of the art we create, and how it changes us.

Buy a copy of Station Eleven here!

The Wind that Lays Waste by Selva Almada

Translated from the Spanish by Chris Andrews

The Wind That Lays Waste

Selva Almada is one of Argentina’s greatest living writers, and The Wind that Lays Waste is a powerful piece of literary fiction that viciously explores patriarchy, masculinity, and religion.

With The Wind That Lays Waste, Selva Almada has crafted a story with a setting and pace reminiscent of Waiting for Godot, and biting, cutting, rhythmic dialogue that keeps the momentum strong from page one to its almighty conclusion.

This novella takes place at the home and workshop of a mechanic — a quiet, withheld, level, and masculine man named Gringo Brauer — out in the rugged countryside of Argentina. When the nomadic evangelist Reverend Pearson breaks down, he seeks the help of Brauer to fix his car and offer them somewhere to stay for a day or so.

These two men each have a ward, and their wards are drawn by the words of the other man, while the two men — one a preacher and the other an atheist — butt heads time and again. Beyond simply being a book about religious narratives, it’s also a book about masculinity, as these two men move towards self-destruction due to their unshakeable bullheadedness.

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Kindred by Octavia E. Butler

kindred octavia butler

A generation-defining science fiction novel and one of the best pieces of American fiction to come out of the 20th century, Butler’s Kindred is a true literary masterpiece. Written by Black American author Octavia E. Butler, Kindred is considered by many to be her magnum opus, a piece of incredible literary science fiction.

Originally published in 1979 and set in 1976, Kindred follows a Black writer named Dana and her white husband Kevin as they find themselves inexplicably tethered through time to a plantation in the year 1815. When the novel begins, Dana and Kevin are unpacking after moving to a new house in California, when she finds herself teleported back 150 years to a plantation in Maryland and the sight of a drowning red-headed boy.

Dana saves the boy from drowning and immediately finds herself facing down the barrel of a white man’s gun, before being yanked back through time to her present in 1976. As it transpires, the drowning boy is Rufus, an ancestor of Dana’s who will father a child with one of his family’s slaves, and Dana is now caught in a loop: any time Rufus’ life is threatened, she is pulled back to save him.

Kindred is a literary sci-fi novel about cruelty and compassion, about the importance of education and empathy. A true masterpiece of the 20th century by one of the US’s most important literary voices, Kindred is a perfect blend of sci-fi concepts and literary political/social themes.

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Kim Jiyoung, Born 1982 by Cho Nam-joo

Translated from the Korean by Jamie Chang

kim jiyoung born 1982 cho nam-joo

Kim Jiyoung, Born 1982 can be understood as the novelisation of the lived experiences of every ordinary Korean woman for the past forty-plus years.

Our protagonist is not one woman, but is rather a representation of the ordinary and expected experiences of your average woman in modern-day South Korea. The novel traces the life of a woman from early childhood to marriage and, eventually, motherhood.

Kim Ji-young, Born 1982 is a book that brings to light the everyday misogyny, sexism, ignorance, aggression, bias, and abuse (both active and passive) that women in South Korea (and, of course, the world over) suffer and do their best to survive in this modern world.

It is not a story with a view to entertaining us. It is a book that enlightens, and encourages anger in, its readers. A fantastic piece of feminist literary fiction. Kim Jiyoung is not a character to form a bond with. She is every abuse victim. She is every woman who has encountered sexism at home, at school, in the workplace, and on the street, and who perhaps never even realised it.

There is feminist rage stitched into every line of this incredible Korean book; a must-read that stands shoulder-to-shoulder with the best literary fiction books.

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James by Percival Everett

James by Percival Everett

James is a work of remarkable strength and spirit by one of the great American authors of today. The novel is a retelling of Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, told from the perspective of Jim, the escaped slave who accompanies Huck on his travels. James will likely stand as a timeless work of Black American fiction; a touching and poetic work of historical fiction that reminds us of the US’s rancid history.

Early in the novel, we see James teaching the younger slave children—including his own daughter—how to speak in a way that will keep them safe; not only the words and accents they should us, but also the tactics of their speech. It’s a moving scene that guides the tone of the rest of the novel, as James, while on the run, must use his wisdom and his savvy to outsmart the white men he meets, while also appearing dumb and useless.

James is a wholly different kind of adventure story that is not without its moments of humour, joy, and excitement—not to mention strangeness—but ultimately it is a tale of survival in a world of human ownership, dominance, and abuse. From the moment this novel was published, James became one of the great literary heroes of American fiction.

My Year of Rest and Relaxation by Ottessa Moshfegh

my year of rest and relaxation

My Year of Rest and Relaxation is a curiously unknowable book; one which is very much up for interpretation with regards to its themes and morals. Many of the best literary novels offer no ambiguity at all, making their statements clear and their themes deep but also definitively opaque. Moshfegh is one of the other kind; an author whose works are more fluid and curious.

This novel tells the story of a young, wealthy woman who has graduated from Columbia. Her parents, having both died, left her an inheritance which provided her with a comfortable apartment in Manhattan’s Upper East Side. Having left a good job behind, and with plenty of money to sustain her, she has decided to put herself into a kind of forced hibernation; a drug-addled coma that will work as a year-long reset on her life.

She has a therapist who is, for all intents and purposes, mad. He prescribes her a hefty cocktail of medication: anti-depressants, tranquillisers, mood stabilisers, and more. With that in mind, this is a novel that cynically reveals the absurdity of the American pharmaceutical industry and its liberal approach to over-prescribing expensive medications.

This is also a feminist book that examines the traumas which women are subjected to at the hands of objectifying and abusive boyfriends, as well as by their parents in many different fashions. However, this is also a hedonistic and cathartic novel that says to us: there is no right or wrong way to live a life. You can do as you please; you are beholden to nobody unless you choose to be.

Regardless of her wealth and privilege, our protagonist is choosing to throw a year (and maybe more) away. That is her choice, her right, her freedom. This novel is a rebellion against society rules and expectations. A rich, attractive woman in the prime of her life is choosing to sleep through her “best years” and refuse the role that society has laid out for her.

My Year of Rest and Relaxation is a remarkable literary novel. One of the finest pieces of literary fiction we have.

Buy a copy of My Year of Rest and Relaxation here!

I’m A Fan by Sheena Patel

I’m A Fan by Sheena Patel

Sheena Patel’s debut novel is a dense piece of literary fiction that spans only 200 pages, and yet provides enough material and inspiration for entire essays to be written about it. The novel’s protagonist is a British woman of Indian descent who lives in London. She has a job and a boyfriend, but you learn next to nothing about them. Instead, her life is defined by two people with whom she is obsessed.

The first is a married man whom she is secretly sleeping with and wishes to be in a real relationship with. The other is an American social media influencer whom the married man is also sleeping with when he’s on business trips in her neck of the woods.

This influencer is a child of nepotism, and our protagonist has formed an intense, unhealthy parasocial relationship with her.

I’m A Fan serves as a diary of our protagonist’s thoughts and feelings about this woman, about the man she wants to be with, and about broader topics concerning capitalism, colonialism, nepotism, privilege, fame, feminism, immigration, and even more.

Her obsession with this woman leads to a critical obsession with influencer culture and how vapid and shallow it is; led by white people who pretend to be altruistic for attention. It’s a book full of unlikeable but undeniably relatable people who all represent different dark aspects of modern life.

I’m a Fan is cynical and incredibly eye-opening, peeling back the layers of the social aspects of modern life, both in person and online. An almost revelatory piece of critical literary fiction that must be read.

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Chain-Gang All-Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah

Chain-Gang All-Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah

Chain-Gang All-Stars is to prisoner justice what The Handmaid’s Tale (below) is to women’s autonomy. A literary novel that explores the racial injustice and capitalistic corruption of the American carceral system. Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah’s debut novel is set in an America which has turned its prison system into a televised gladiator arena, and its prisoners into fighters who are encouraged to engage in blood sport.

While there is a broad cast of characters, our main protagonists are two Black women who are both teammates and lovers. They have been fighting for years and are close to earning their freedom. In this world there is high freedom and low freedom, with low freedom simply means dying in battle.

Chain-Gang All-Stars also features footnotes which relay facts and statistics about the American prison system, as well as about the police force. These footnotes reveal details about systemic racism, homophobia, and transphobia, and even reminds us of prisoners who died due to unjust circumstances involving the police or the prisons.

Chain-Gang All-Stars will stand shoulder-to-shoulder alongside other great dystopian novels like 1984, Fahrenheit 451, and the aforementioned The Handmaid’s Tale. An essential novel amongst the best literary fiction books.

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The Premonition by Banana Yoshimoto

Translated from the Japanese by Asa Yoneda

the premonition banana yoshimoto

Banana Yoshimoto is a cherished and revered Japanese author. Her literary books have been bestsellers across Japan and the rest of the world for decades, and they often tackle the themes of love and death in unique ways. Yoshimoto has told stories of love over and over, whether that love be romantic, familial, or something almost indescribable. And she does all of that here with The Premonition.

This is a short piece of literary fiction — a 110-page novella — that tells the story of Yayoi, a teenage girl who, as far as she is aware, has lived a comfortable life with her parents and brother in modern-day Tokyo. Yayoi also has a free-spirited and aloof young aunt named Yukino, who lives alone and works as a music teacher. Occasionally, Yayoi enjoys sneaking out of the house to visit her aunt and spend time with her.

During one visit, revelations hit Yayoi about her childhood, her family, and those pronounced holes in her memory. These reveals will twist her understanding of herself and her relationships in complicated ways. This is a wonderful piece of literary fiction about how unreliable our own memories can be, and how different kinds of love can manifest.

Buy a copy of The Premonition here!

Shy by Max Porter

shy max porter

Max Porter is a modern legend of literary fiction books; a leading example of how to writer literary fiction perfectly. He demonstrated this with his debut Grief is the Thing with Feathers. He continued that trend with poise and humour in Lanny, then with intense surrealism in The Death of Francis Bacon. But Shy might be his most complete, succinct, and perfect novel.

Shy tells the story of a teenage boy, the titular Shy, who begins the book by walking away from the “school for troubled boys” which he has been lodging at for a while now. As Shy wanders down the street in the dead of night, we are invited into his mind. We see his thoughts, memories, opinions, and internal conflicts all swirling around together.

This is a dreamscape of a novel that, like so many great literary books, plays with form and language and structure in order to express its themes and tone and emotions. We learn Shy’s backstory out of order as random memories surface and then vanish again. We learn what he thinks and feels, his justifications for certain behaviours and actions. We learn who he is from his perspective.

This is an exploration of how thoughts work, of how we see ourselves, of how our minds operate. It’s engaging, alluring, and thought-provoking, just like all the very best literary fiction books are.

Buy a copy of Shy here!

My Heavenly Favourite by Lucas Rijneveld

Translated from the Dutch by Michele Hutchison

My Heavenly Favourite by Lucas Rijneveld

The author of The Discomfort of Evening returns with another striking, unsettling work of literary fiction told from the perspective of a rural vet who develops an immediate and all-encompassing obsession with a farmer’s daughter. The novel is told from the nameless vet’s perspective, and he speaks as though addressing the girl as he watches, admires and spends time with her.

My Heavenly Favourite is written as a feverishly intense stream of consciousness; every chapter is a single paragraph and often a single sentence. The lines between what he experiences and what he imagines blur and fade. But despite the intensity of his voice, she remains centre-stage: her unanchored imagination, her delusional view of the world, and her dysphoria are all given a voice. They dance with his obsession in a chilling yet hypnotic way.

This is a novel of exquisite prose; it is lit on fire from page one and that fire only spreads through the characters and events of the novel. And all of this is translated so magically by Michele Hutchison, who demonstrates a true talent for literary translation and expression. What a work of madness and jarring, discomfiting beauty.

Boy Parts by Eliza Clark

Boy Parts by Eliza Clark

Eliza Clark’s phenomenal debut novel is a sweat-soaked literary fever dream about one talented young woman’s self-destructive tendencies, and just how far she is willing to go in order to fully ruin herself. Protagonist Irina is a twenty-eight-year-old Geordie who works at a pub half the time, and spends the rest of her waking hours picking up men to photograph in explicit ways for her ever-growing portfolio.

In her downtime, she watches bleak arthouse and horror movies and treats her few friends like crap. She isn’t like other girls, and she is on a path to burnout. Something from her past is troubling her; her mind and memories are fractured. But her fame is also growing; her art is getting her recognised and giving her opportunities. And there may even be a young man who cares for her. But does any of that matter?

Boy Parts is raw, wretched, and brilliant. A discomfiting, sometimes hilarious, often upsetting and unsettling literary novel but a powerful voice.

North Woods by Daniel Mason

north woods daniel mason

Daniel Mason’s North Woods is a literary novel that traces the story of a New England home built in the earliest moments of colonialist settlement in what soon became known as the USA. We move through a collection of interconnected stories that gradually takes us through time until we reach the present day.

We begin by following a young couple in love; two Puritan runaways who make a home in this wooden cabin. Later, a settler woman escapes capture and flees to this cabin, where the woman of the runaway pair is now elderly. Soon after, we follow an English soldier who suddenly drops his rifle and instead builds an apple orchard on this land, and once he is gone we follow the lives of his twin daughters.

Gradually, we are watching the United States grow and change, all from the perspective of a single plot of land, the house that sits on it, and the many people who have called it home. These stories are presented partially as traditional prose, and other times as epistolary journals, letters, articles, and more.

North Woods is a staggering piece of historical literary fiction that traces the life of a nation, presented as the life of a home. An incredible feat of fiction writing.

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The Secret History by Donna Tartt

the secret history

Donna Tartt’s debut novel The Secret History is, for many of us, the definitive dark academia novel. The Secret History is a twisted yet grounded tale that, on the surface, is about cults and murder but, beneath it all, is an exploration of class privilege, youthful arrogance, and ordinary evils.

A fantastic example of how to write compelling, enigmatic characters, a twisting-turning narrative, and a collection of important socio-political themes. The Secret History follows Richard Papen, newly enrolled at a college in Vermont. Richard is originally from a small California town, poor and uninteresting, but talented at Greek.

He quickly falls into a small class of hideously pompous and dysfunctional students who consider themselves to be their school’s elite. Slowly, this class reveals itself to be a mindless, murderous cult, projected forward by hedonism, carelessness, and arrogance.

The Secret History is a masterpiece, glued together by the internal social politics of its characters, their strained and toxic relationships, dangerous behaviours, and unpredictability.

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The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood

the handmaid's tale

Much like Orwell’s 1984, The Handmaid’s Tale is a dystopian novel that exists as a warning against where certain political, religious, and economic roads might lead us. Dystopian fiction like this works simply and elegantly as literary fiction, with its themes presented through allegories that are clear and impactful.

Published in 1985, The Handmaid’s Tale is a bleak look into a possible American future; a time in which women have been reduced to nothing but their anatomy and reproductive abilities. After fertility rates dropped to the point that they threatened human extinction, the US government decided to take the few men who were still fertile and give them power.

They then took fertile women and turned them into sex slaves living in the big houses now owned by the newly powerful fertile men and their faithful but infertile wives. Now known as Gilead, the US is a military dictatorship controlled by traditional Biblical ideals which strip women of all rights and privileges.

It’s a bleak literary novel, but, like 1984, remains one of the most important and influential works of the 20th century, a landmark work of feminist fiction, and one of the very best literary fiction books you’ll ever read.

Buy a copy of The Handmaid’s Tale here!

Breasts and Eggs by Mieko Kawakami

Translated from the Japanese by Sam Bett & David Boyd

breasts and eggs mieko kawakami

Breasts and Eggs is one of the best Japanese books of the 21st century, and an absolute masterpiece of feminist literary fiction. Breasts and Eggs follows the story of Nastsuko, an Osaka-born writer living in Tokyo who has spent her adult life trying to see her works get published.

The first half of this two-book novel focuses on a short visit by Natsuko’s more extroverted sister and that sister’s daughter. The daughter has fallen mute and her mother is in Tokyo for breast implants. We see the world from the perspectives of all three women, and they each have differing attitudes to womanhood and its place in society.

In the book’s second story, Natsuko has made it as an author but now dreams of being a mother, though she has no real wish for a partner to share her life with. Both stories explore how womanhood is defined and how women can find happiness, contentment, and strength in a patriarchal modern world.

This is very much a piece of hefty literary fiction about what womanhood is, what it can be, and what we are told it should be by patriarchy and tradition. Breasts and Eggs is a groundbreaking piece of feminist Japanese fiction, and a stellar work of literary fiction.

Buy a copy of Breasts and Eggs here!

To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee

To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee

To Kill A Mockingbird is one of the great American classics. Heralded the world over as a masterpiece, studied in schools, and a novel that stands the test of time. To Kill A Mockingbird, which has been adapted to the screen and the stage with enormous success, remains a true masterpiece of American literary fiction.

The story is told by a young girl, Jean Louise Finch, lovingly nicknamed “Scout” by her father, the iconic literary character Atticus Finch. Atticus is a widower, and raises Scout and her brother Jem alone, while working as a lawyer. While we follow the local neighbourhood antics of Scout and Jem, the main crux of the novel is Atticus being appointed as legal defender in a case of sexual assault.

A Black man named Tom has been accused of raping a young white woman, and Atticus, whose Black live-in cook has helped him raise his children, has accepted the role of Tom’s defense attourney. We see all of this play out from Scout’s young and naive perspective, and the novel explores American race relations in the South in many different ways: social, legal, and historical.

A great work of literary fiction about the relationship between the American legacy and the racism that is stitched into it.

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Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi

transcendent kingdom yaa gyasi

Yaa Gyasi’s second novel is a short, tightly-woven literary novel that moves seamlessly from its protagonist’s childhood to her present-day life.

Transcendent Kingdom tells the story of Gifty, a girl born to Ghanian parents in the American south. She is their second child, and their first, Nana, was a sports prodigy — first in soccer, then basketball. Nana, however, succumbed to drug addiction and died of a heroin overdose.

Today, Gifty is a budding neurobiologist at Stanford University, studying the brain’s relationship to addiction; inspired by her brother’s life and death, as well as her mother’s relationship to God and the church. Transcendent Kingdom is an intimate family saga that explores the effects of migration, capitalism, and the promise of freedom in America.

It pits science and religion against one another. It examines the effects of addiction and depression on the mind and the family. It does so much so well; a perfect literary novel.

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A Little Luck by Claudia Piñeiro

Translated from the Spanish by Frances Riddle

a little luck

A Little Luck is one of the most moving tearjerkers you’ll ever read. A beautiful piece of literary fiction from one of Argentina’s greatest living authors. Our protagonist, Mary, is originally from Buenos Aires, but has spent the past twenty years living in Boston, MA.

Mary’s American husband, Robert, has recently passed away, and now she must return to Argentina for a business trip. This will be her first time returning, and she is deeply afraid. We don’t know why she left but her fear of returning — the weight of her anxiety — tells us that she ran away from something and has continued to run for two decades since.

As we continue to read, we learn more about Mary, who she was, what her life in Argentina looked like, and, eventually, what she has been running from. A Little Luck is a powerful, poignant novel about motherhood, duty, and what we believe selflessness to be. There is grief, claustrophobia, and anxiety choking this novel, but there is also hope and beauty here, too.

A remarkable feat of literary fiction from a master storyteller and one of the best Argentinian novels of recent years.

Buy a copy of A Little Luck here!

Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

Like 1984 and The Handmaid’s Tale, Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 is a dystopian tale that serves as a warning against the refusal and destruction of knowledge and stories. In a version of the USA where all books have been banned, we follow a fireman — someone who burns all remaining traces of literature — as he becomes disenchanted with his work.

After giving into temptation and taking a book from a home full of books which he has been ordered to burn, protagonist Guy Montag eventually switches allegiances and vows to preserve the written word and the knowledge it contains.

Inspired by the ways in which fascist regimes burn books, remove academics from positions of authority, and limit the spread of knowledge and information, Fahrenheit 451 carries a powerful and timeless message of warning. One of the most important American novels ever written, Ray Btadbury’s dystopian masterpiece stands shoulder-to-shoulder with the other great dystopian literary fiction books.

Buy a copy of Fahrenheit 451 here!

Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

John Steinbeck was one of the great American writers, and his short masterpiece Of Mice and Men remains a flawless literary novel about the curse of the “American Dream”. Of Mice and Men follows two men — the sharp and savvy George, and the simple giant Lenny — who have been moving from farm to farm looking for work.

George wishes to free himself from the cycle of labour by saving enough money to eventually build a self-sustaining home and plot of land to call his own. However, this is the dream of countless men, and capitalism’s methods of entrapment guarantee that breaking from this cycle is almost impossible for most men.

But George is different; he has Lenny by his side to help him make more money and work harder than most men ever could. Of Mice and Men is an American tragedy; a savvy literary novel that keenly exposes the lies of the American Dream, and of the cycles of Western capitalism.

A true American masterpiece of literary fiction that works to expose the obvious lies and flaws within the modern capitalist system.

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Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata

Translated from the Japanese by Ginny Tapley Takemori

Convenience Store Woman

Keiko Furukura is thirty-six and has worked part-time in the same convenience store for eighteen years. She has seen eight managers — whom she refers to only by their numbers — and more co-workers than she could ever count. She is entirely content with her life, and has never asked for anything more; not a better job, more money, nor even a partner to share her life with.

She is a cog in the convenience store machine, as much a part of the furniture as the fluorescent bulbs and door jingles. As a result, this cog has never managed to fit the greater machine we call ‘modern life’. As Keiko is told in the novel, society is all about following a set path: part-time work leads to a career. Relationships lead to marriage and children and a mortgage.

But what happens if you’re content with what you have? No partner, no friends, no career path. Keiko is comfortable and happy, and that confuses everyone around her. Convenience Store Woman is a novel of rebellion, starring a character who isn’t trying to rebel at all; only to live her life in peace and simplicity.

A thought-provoking literary novel about the invisible rules of society that we all become trapped by, and what rebellion might look like. Sayaka Murata is a Japanese writer of revelatory fiction that frightens and challenges; a true visionary of literary fiction.

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Foster by Claire Keegan

foster claire keegan

Quietly beautiful and poignant; tragic yet hopeful. Foster is a small, perfectly-contained work of literary mastery from beloved Irish author Claire Keegan. This novella, set in the early 1980s, is told from the perspective of a young girl who has been taken by her father to stay with a married couple for the summer while her mother gives birth.

At first, our girl feels like an outsider and is nervous of what is expected of her. But over time, she learns to see home as something warmer, welcoming. A place of food and care and comfort. The couple — the Kinsellas — treat her with so much love and attention. They clothe her and take her into town; they take her to mass and they talk with her, laugh with her.

She comes to see this place and these people as home, but there is something unspoken that lies under the surface. Something she will eventually discover and have to understand. Foster is crafted with such care and composition, where every word carries weight and means something. Keegan is a sculptor of language and story, and that shines so clearly here in Foster. One of the great literary fiction books.

Buy a copy of Foster here!

Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan

small things like these

Small Things Like These is a tiny miracle. A beautiful piece of literary fiction bound so tight, packed with many simple truths — some painful — that it is fit to burst. At its heart, this is a novel about the everyday acts of goodness performed by honest people versus the twisted, monstrous, ironically sinful behaviour of organised religion.

The sins of the church are only made worse by the collective silence of a complicit community who turn their noses up to beggars as they march themselves to Mass. It’s the run up to Christmas, 1985, and our protagonist is Bill Furlong, a simple man with a wife and five daughters. Bill spends these days delivering coal and wood to local homes and buying presents for his girls with his wife.

As this short novel progresses, we learn about Bill’s childhood; about how his mother had him young, how she claimed not to know who his father was, and how they were both saved by the kindly woman for whom Bill’s mother worked.

We spend a satisfying chunk of the novel in Bill’s childhood memories, while also learning about his work, his family, and his community. In these days leading up to Christmas, Bill begins to butt heads with the church. He finds the courage of kindness to stand up to their lies and their sins, in spite of the collective silence of his small community.

Small Things Like These is a powerful novel in a small package; a novel that shows how kindness is instinctive and infectious, and is not taught by the church.

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Penance by Eliza Clark

penance eliza clark

Penance is a remarkable subversion of the thriller; a meta-fiction presented as a piece of true crime nonfiction written by a man named Alec Z. Carelli. Carelli is a journalist-turned-crime writer, and after being embroiled in controversy, suffering the loss of his daughter to suicide, and his previous two books flopping, he decides to write about a tragic, infamous case of child murder.

That murder took place on the night of the 2016 Brexit referendum, in the fictional seaside town of Crow-on-Sea in North Yorkshire. Three teenage girls, who all attended the same high school, tortured their classmate — Joan Wilson — inside a beach chalet, before dousing her in petrol and setting her alight.

Penance is fiction presented as investigative journalism, written in a mostly epistolary style: a collection of interviews, accounts, transcripts, and blog and social media posts. The novel opens with a detailed account of the evening of the murder, before then spending the rest of its time telling the stories of the three murderers.

Penance is a remarkable piece of crime fiction. A book that brilliantly captures the myriad experiences of British teenagers, both at home and at school. It explores the effects that pop culture has on us, that the Internet has on us; the often dizzying divide between our online and offline worlds and experiences.

It also cynically investigates the concept of true crime writing and the effects that it has, both on narratives and broader culture and, more specifically, on the lives of those involved. Penance is a novel like no other; its epistolary style and savvy examination of the effects of true crime make it one of the most unique and impressive literary fiction books of recent years.

Buy a copy of Penance here!

Private Rites by Julia Armfield

Private Rites by Julia Armfield

Following the enormous success of her debut novel, Our Wives Under the Sea, Julia Armfield’s Private Rites is a more subtle and literary affair, yet one that is also far larger in scope. This is an apocalypse novel set in a Britain that has been flooded by rising sea levels and endless rainfall. Yet, unlike many apocalypse stories, this one depicts a slow, almost dull collapse, and there is something so chilling and bleak in that.

Capitalism remains; people still commute and work their day jobs, only they must do so with difficulty. Everything is too expensive now, and travel is almost impossible. Our protagonists are three sisters from a King Lear-inspired family. Their father—an architect who designed homes that can adapt to the changing climate—has died, and that death forces these near-estranged sisters back together.

Family drama meets apocalyptic tale, Private Rites is a deeply bleak tale that settles into your bones. Written with heft and poetic consideration, it is a novel that will surely be studied in the future.

Normal People by Sally Rooney

normal people rooney

Irish author Sally Rooney’s second novel, Normal People, became an overnight literary sensation upon its publication. Called a modern day Jane Austen by some readers and critics, Rooney is a writer exploring the ebb and flow of modern-day relationships within the context of capitalism and class.

Normal People follows two teenagers, Connell and Marianne, who develop a fraught kind of romance over the course of the novel. While at school, Connell is popular and admired, and Marianne is meek and unassuming, outside of school Connell is a working class lad and Marianne comes from privilege.

Both are well-read and intelligent, and end up attending university together, where they shift and change and struggle in different ways. Normal People is a literary romance novel about class divides, social struggles, and the rapid ways in which we grow, learn, and change as individuals and within our relationships.

Buy a copy of Normal People here!

Second Place by Rachel Cusk

second place cusk

Rachel Cusk’s Second Place is a stunning literary exploration of one woman’s place in her own world, reminiscent of the style and tone of Virginia Woolf. Our protagonist, M, once fell in love with the paintings of a man known only as L. Years later, M lives with her husband Tony on a remote and marshy patch of English coastland.

Now that their daughter is at university in Germany, and they have a “second place” on their land where guests can stay, M and Tony invite this great painter to stay with them and paint the local landscape. M second-guesses her life, comes to see herself as something else. Or rather, she examines herself closely for the first time and doesn’t love what she sees.

For much of the novel, we come to know M through her opinions of others, through her examination of the world around her; but we learn almost nothing about M herself. Second Place has us considering what a person is made up of; how we define ourselves, fit into the world, find our place in it, take up space in it, especially as women.

Second Place is one of the more subtly feminist literary novels you’re likely to read, but it is all the more impactful and beautiful for that subtlety.

Buy a copy of Second Place here!

Violets by Kyung-sook Shin

Translated from the Korean by Anton Hur

violets kyung sook shin

Kyung-sook Shin is one of South Korea’s most beloved and revered authors, and Violets is a subtle work of feminist literary fiction. This novel is a story about female friendships in the modern day, and about the insidious, quiet, eerie, near-invisible ways in which men subtly abuse women on a daily basis.

Violets begins with its protagonist, San, as a young girl in 1970. San was born and raised in a small rural village and, growing up, was a lonely social outsider. In the book’s first chapter, San shares a moment of tender intimacy with her best friend. For San, this is an awakening. For her friend, it is frightening and wrong.

As an adult in Seoul, San takes a job as a florist. There she develops a sweet friendship with her coworker, who soon moves in with her. But San also learns about the power and violence of men. She comes to see how men violate the spaces and bodies of women on a daily basis, in a way that seems almost invisible. With their voices and motions and posture, men invade women’s worlds without a thought.

Violets is a smart feminist literary novel that has the power to reshape how we all see the social dynamics at play between men and women. The physical and verbal weapons softly used by men to scare, suppress, and intimidate the women in their lives. Violets is a piece of literary fiction that leaves a mark, but also provides readers with a tender and beautiful narrative.

Buy a copy of Violets here!

Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut

slaughterhouse five

Kurt Vonnegut was a genius of postmodern 20th century literature, and his experiences as a World War II veteran and survivor inspired his 1969 magnum opus, Slaughterhouse-Five. The novel tells the story of Billy Pilgrim, who saw the same traumas of war that Vonnegut saw, but was also abducted by aliens and put in a zoo on the planet Tralfamadore.

Slaughterhouse-Five is an anti-war literary science fiction novel that utilises absurdism, time travel, and alien abduction to make its point. It is a deeply moral and philosophical literary novel, detailing the effects of war on the human psyche. It asks big questions related to purpose, life, and death.

There is nothing quite like Slaughterhouse-Five, one of the great anti-war novels and a true masterpiece of American literary fiction.

Buy a copy of Slaughterhouse-Five here!

Sinking Bell by Bojan Louis

Sinking Bell by Bojan Louis

Written by Diné Native American poet, writer, and teacher Bojan Louis, Sinking Bell is a short collection of eight literary stories which explore and expose the raw and difficult lives of Navajo people in the modern day. All of these stories are set in and around the town of Flagstaff, Arizona, and the tell the stories of labourers, addicts, artists, wanderers, and even ghosts.

One story centres around a relapsed addict who attends a writing workshop and becomes enamoured with a white woman whose prose is undeniably electric. Another follows a labourer who is, in Of Mice and Men fashion, looking for a way to break free of the capitalistic cycle that has ensnared him. One follows the tragic life of a boy whose parents separated, leaving him desperate for money and willing to do whatever he has to for it.

These are discomforting and honest tales about people struggling to keep themselves and their families together, moving in and out of poverty, and facing racism at every turn. They are powerful, unflinching stories of truth and reality that will affect you on the deepest level.

Buy a copy of Sinking Bell here!

Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes

Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes

Flowers for Algernon is a perfect example of how literary themes and form can be used within the context of science fiction, blending the two splendidly. The novel for which Daniel Keyes is best remembered is a true masterpiece of science fiction, using the genre to explore themes of value, intelligence, and human rights.

Our protagonist, Charlie, is an “intellectually disabled” man in his thirties who works in a bakery. Charlie is soon made a test subject for intellectual development. The first test subject was the titular Algernon, a mouse who underwent experimental surgery with impressive results, and Charlie will be the first human test subject.

As the novel — written in an epistolary style as Charlie’s diary — progresses, we see his intelligence grow, and with it his observations, his relationships, and his vocabulary. Charlie’s development from a man of lower-than-average intelligence to one of genius status leads us to question the ways in which we treat one another based on our intelligence.

This is a sci-fi novel with valuable themes to consider, and the ways in which Keyes explores those themes also tug viciously at the reader’s heartstrings. A remarkable masterpiece of the genre, Flowers for Algernon is one of the best sci-fi novels ever written, and likewise one of the greatest literary fiction books of all time.

Buy a copy of Flowers for Algernon here!

What I’d Rather Not Think About by Jente Posthuma

Translated by Sarah Timmer Harvey

what i'd rather not think about jente posthuma

What I’d Rather Not Think About is a beautiful but harsh and difficult piece of literary fiction from an incredible Dutch author, told from the perspective of one half of a pair of twins. Our nameless narrator was born 45 minutes after her twin brother, and the two of them have been inseparable ever since. Growing up as best friends, they both moved to Amsterdam when they turned eighteen.

After her brother came out as gay, the twins remained close, sharing dinners with partners and living close to each other. They had dreams of moving to New York before they hit thirty, which never materialised, and when they were thirty-five, our narrator’s brother took his own life.

This Dutch literary novel, presented as a series of tiny vignettes, digs into a life shared, and considers how a life can be lived when it feels as though half of you has died. Told out of order, as a collection of thoughts and memories, and with a minimalistic form and style, this is a raw literary novel that confronts death without apology.

At turns warming, funny, and heartbreaking, What I’d Rather Not Think About takes us on a journey across the emotional spectrum as we are faced with death, loss, separation, and isolation.

Buy a copy of What I’d Rather Not Think About here!

Bellies by Nicola Dinan

bellies nicola dinan

Bellies, the debut novel from London-based transgender author Nicola Dinan is at once a story of love and an inversion of love, presenting readers with a complex tale of evolving queer relationships in the modern day. When the novel begins, Ming and Tom are two boys at university together. Tom is newly out, and Ming has dreams of being a playwright.

They hook up and soon fall in love, spending the rest of their uni years growing ever closer. But when they start living together after graduation, Ming begins to change in ways that scare and confuse Tom. These changes build and create a harsh tension, until Ming at last comes out as a trans woman, and from here the love between them will be tested.

Told from both characters’ perspectives, Bellies is an intimate tale of growth, self-discovery, and understanding. Feelings of confusion, betrayal, and hurt must be unpacked and confronted. This is a novel led by emotion, as these characters grow into themselves, face themselves, and find the strength to better understand each other.

Tender and raw, Bellies speaks to the heart of modern queer culture and queer romances. A necessary piece of transgender literature by an amazing, fresh new trans author.

Much like Sally Rooney’s Normal People, Bellies demonstrates how contemporary culture and queerness have pushed literary fiction to grow, seamlessly blending affecting themes with an emotional tale of love, friendship, and self-discovery.

Buy a copy of Bellies here!

No Longer Human by Osamu Dazai

Translated from the Japanese by Donald Keene

no longer human osamu dazai

Inspired by the author’s own life events, relationships, and his unique way of seeing the world around him, No Longer Human is a heartbreaking masterpiece of Japanese fiction. Our protagonist, a stand-in for Dazai himself, sees ordinary society as something impossible to navigate.

He paints horrifying pictures, eventually turns to drink, and becomes entirely self-destructive and abusive once he reaches adulthood.

This is a novel about a desperately sad person, ill equipped for even surviving daily life. He doesn’t understand people and people don’t understand him. He is selfish, gross, and unlikeable. But at his core, he is desperately sad and doomed to die.

No Longer Human is a meditation on life and death which begs the question: if we cannot fit in, are we doomed to die? A true literary fiction masterpiece.

Buy a copy of No Longer Human here!

In Ascension by Martin MacInnes

in ascension

In Ascension is a literary sci-fi masterpiece that has the potential to change the way you think and feel about the world around you, about what we are, where we came from, and where we might go. In the novel’s first part, Leigh, a Dutch biologist, joins an expedition to the north Atlantic ocean, to explore a deep sea vent that might house lifeforms we’ve never glimpsed before.

The life in this undersea vent, untouched for billions of years, has the potential to behave like a time capsule, taking us back to the earliest forms of life on this planet. What Leigh discovers in the vent takes her to the Mojave Desert, to a job working with a NASA-like space agency that is using a newly-discovered form of fuel to send people to the furthest reaches of our solar system and beyond.

The questions that In Ascension poses, and the incredible discoveries made, ask the reader to deeply consider that old cliche: we are all made of star stuff. In Ascension is a modern sci-fi novel that takes us from the most inaccessible parts of the deepest darkest ocean to the furthest point in our solar system.

And, as we explore these places old and new, big and small, we ask ourselves what we are, where we came from, where we will go, and how it is ultimately all the same. We are all star stuff.

Buy a copy of In Ascension here!

Babel by R.F. Kuang

babel rf kuang

R.F. Kuang’s Babel is a dense piece of historical fiction, an urban fantasy novel, and one of the best dark academia books you’ll ever read. A perfect example of how literary fiction and genre fiction can not only co-exist but also go hand-in-hand in both form and function.

Set in an alternative Oxford of 1836, Babel follows a boy named Robin who was born and raised in Guangdong, China.

When disease leaves Robin without a family, a rich and educated British man sweeps him away to London, educates and raises him, and sends him off to Oxford. There, he studies translation within the walls of Oxford’s tallest building, Babel.

Babel is the beating heart of not only Oxford University, but the entire British empire, the place where precious silver bars are infused with magic, created through the study and manipulation of language.

Robin’s life at Oxford is made more complicated by the illegal actions of a radical group who aim to disrupt and dismantle the British Empire’s silver industry from the inside. As he learns more about the Empire’s international crimes and evils, Robin becomes interested and works with Hermes as their inside man, helping them take small jabs at Babel and its silver-smithing industry.

Babel is an anti-imperialist novel about the ways in which the spread of one nation’s economic and cultural power has laid waste to the rest of the world. It is not subtle; it is undeniably angry, and that anger is justified and brilliantly well-expressed in this incredible piece of literary fiction that blends multiple genres together masterfully.

Buy a copy of Babel here!

Diary of a Void by Emi Yagi

Translated from the Japanese by David Boyd & Lucy North

diary of a void

Diary of a Void is a biting, sarcastic, witty, and dark literary novel about the ways in which society’s treatment of women depends on their situation and what gives them value.

Our protagonist, Shibata, is a twenty-something office worker who, by virtue of being the only woman in her office, is treated like a dog’s body who must fetch coffee for the men. Driven to breaking point, she one day lies and says she can’t do this anymore because she’s pregnant (which she isn’t).

Committed to this new lie, Shibata starts noticing her life improve. Men treat her with more kindness; she is given permission to gain weight and look after herself.

In reality, nobody wants her to look after herself, but rather the baby. This novel reminds us that society sees cis women as vessels for carrying the future, rather than part of the present. A bleak and angry, but sometimes funny feminist piece of literary fiction from Japan.

Buy a copy of Diary of a Void here!

Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin

Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin

This is a literary novel for the digital age; a novel about how people live and work and love now, in a world of entertainment and capitalism. Taking place through the boom of the video games industry in the 1990s, Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow follows two friends-turned-colleagues, Sam and Sadie.

They first met in an LA hospital as kids, bonded over video games, fell out, and later reunited in Boston. One is at MIT, the other at Harvard. And the novel tracks their lives as they begin to design and develop video games together, first as budding indie creators, and later as successful owners of their own company.

This is a commercial and literary novel about the complexities of our relationships, and about the waves that life moves through. The murkiness of love, sex, work, and friendship, and how these different kinds of relationships evolve, break down, and build back up again.

Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow is a wonderful piece of contemporary literary fiction that reflects how our lives and our loves behave in the modern day.

Buy a copy of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow here!

Magma by Thora Hjörleifsdóttir

Translated from the Icelandic by Meg Matich

magma Thora Hjörleifsdóttir

Magma is the debut novel by Icelandic poet Thora Hjörleifsdóttir: a 200-page feminist literary novel written in small vignettes which record the life of a young woman named Lilja. Lilja has entered into a new relationship with a quietly toxic and emotionally manipulative man who remains unnamed, and who becomes something of a gothic monster as the book progresses.

Her partner represents not only the toxic and gaslighting men of the world, but all toxic friends and partners that we have suffered with throughout our lives, regardless of gender or sexuality. Each tiny chapter of Magma jumps forward a little, recording a new moment or stage in their relationship, as Lilja becomes unable to leave, feeling strangely attached to him and convinced that she is in love.

All the while, he controls her, gaslights her, and builds a shell of paranoia around her until she feels cocooned, trapped, lost, and dependent. It’s dark, difficult, and too familiar for many of us. Magma is a mesmerising work of feminist literary fiction that warns us all against the power and tactics used by toxic people to remove our autonomy and grind us down.

Buy a copy of Magma here!

Death Valley by Melissa Broder

death valley melissa broder

Melissa Broder’s third novel is the most intimate, confessional and literary novel she has ever written. Death Valley tells the story of a protagonist who feels very much like an author surrogate. She is an author, forty-one years old, and struggling to handle the limbo state her father is currently in.

Sick and in hospital, he is close to death but we have no idea if and when he will die. Her mother is being a nuisance and she herself feels like a nuisance to her father. She also has a husband back home who has been struggling with a unique illness for almost a decade.

Using the excuse of needing to do research for her new novel — one which sounds suspiciously similar to the very thing we are reading — she heads out into the California desert to get away and clear her head. She hikes the trails and begins to experience feverish and surreal things.

The imagery and themes explored here are myriad, and very much up for interpretation, but this is a very personal novel that is clearly wrangling with the idea of a person having a role to play when it comes to the death of a loved one.

A departure from her previous works, Death Valley is a deeply raw story, through which Broder has exposed her insecurities, doubts, and self-hatred. An excellent work of literary fiction.

Buy a copy of Death Valley here!

The Grip of It by Jac Jemc

the grip of it jac jemc

It’s common for literary fiction to blend with genres like sci-fi and dystopia, but far less so when it comes to horror. Though there’s no reason for this, literary horror is a rarity. The Grip of It, however, shows why literary horror should be a far more popular thing. This is a modern-day haunted house story written with weight and beauty. Its language shifts between evocative and enigmatic.

We follow Julie and James, a married couple who decide to leave the city and buy their first house in the countryside. They are spurred to leave by James’ gambling addiction; looking to widen the gap between him and temptation. Once settled into their house at the end of a road and the edge of a forest, Julie and James begin to forget the name of the estate agent they worked with, and which one of them did the research and viewings for the property.

They also hear strange and conflicting stories about the house and its previous residents from new friends and colleagues in town. Soon enough, the house itself begins to haunt them. Rooms appear and disappear; noises start and stop without a source; gaps, holes, and pillars are discovered but have no purpose.

And then there’s their elderly and reclusive neighbour who watches everything they do and never leaves his home. The Grip of It shifts perspective back and forth between Julie and James, with both of their narratives written in the first person and present tense, creating an immediacy and inertia to the novel’s pacing.

And with the chapters averaging 3-4 pages each, the momentum of this literary horror novel is intense, making for a fantastic page-turner.

Buy a copy of The Grip of It here!

Mrs. S by K. Patrick

mrs s k patrick

Set in an old-fashioned boarding school, Mrs. S tells the story of a nameless Australian who has moved to England for work. There, she meets the headmaster’s wife, the titular Mrs. S, and begins a journey of growing obsession. Our protagonist is unsure of herself. She wears a binder and enjoys being seen as masculine, but she doesn’t have the language to express how she feels or what she wants for herself.

She identifies as a lesbian and begins to see Mrs. S as more than an object of obsession — perhaps this beautiful, charming woman might be able to guide our protagonist to her true self, to unlock something in her. Mrs. S has a very specific and rare style of presentation: run-on sentences and paragraphs that don’t differentiate between narration and dialogue.

Experimental form and style like what we see in this novel is part-and-parcel of literary fiction, as is a lack of character names, but these elements don’t work for all readers. Characters are named for their jobs and no proper nouns are used. The all-female school’s student body is described as a faceless mass which K. Patrick simply refers to as The Girls.

This makes the characters and setting feel as though they are floating in a vacuum, outside of time and space. This is a nowhere place in which our protagonist is trapped, trying to understand herself and what she wants. Her obsession with Mrs. S grows. She is lustful, jealous, curious, and eager to know this woman better, despite not knowing herself at all. Mrs. S is an answer, a distraction, a muse, so many things to her.

There are few literary fiction books as captivating, intimate, claustrophobic, and sensual as Mrs. S; a true modern masterpiece of queer fiction.

Buy a copy of Mrs. S here!

Finger Bone by Hiroki Takahashi

Translated from the Japanese by Takami Nieda

finger bone hiroki takahashi

Finger Bone is one of those rare novels that transcends its genre; a masterpiece of Japanese war fiction that encourages us to wrestle with that age-old question: where is the good in warfare? It’s 1942, and our nameless protagonist is a young, Japanese soldier in Papua New Guinea. As this short novel progresses, we watch him make and lose friends, connect with frightened locals, and shrug off injury and illness.

Taking place half in a field hospital and half in the thick of the jungle, Finger Bone is beautifully, harshly reminiscent of the poems of Wilfred Owen. A raw tale about the darkest, bleakest aspects of warfare. This is about innocent men suffering fatal wounds, struggling to overcome malaria, forging bonds, and watching those bonds get severed without warning.

At no point are politics discussed in real detail, and that’s what makes us ponder the grand purpose of war. All we see here are men suffering, and trying to keep their spirits high, as well as those of their friends and comrades. Few war novels have such a raw, powerful, painful effect on the reader as Finger Bone does, and it does so in such a short space of time. Read it in one sitting, and it’ll change you forever.

Buy a copy of Finger Bone here!

The Delivery by Margarita García Robayo

the delivery margarita garcia robayo

Colombian-born, Argentina-based author Margarita García Robayo has written several celebrated novel, including the excellent Holiday Heart, and The Delivery is perhaps her finest achievement.

A deeply thoughtful, borderline surreal piece of literary fiction, The Delivery presents us with a nameless narrator-protagonist who was born in Caribbean, lives in Buenos Aires, and is hoping to relocated yet again to the Netherlands.

She regularly talks with her sister, who remained living at home with their mother and has very little of interest to discuss, but she does occasionally send our protagonist frequent care packages. When the novel begins, she has sent over an enormous crate, which our protagonist doesn’t even want to deal with. Before she has a chance to get rid of it, however, it opens itself up and inside is her mother.

From this strange and disarming moment, the novel takes on a subtly surreal sheen, as our protagonist goes on with her daily life as a freelance writer, and her mother lives there like a ghost, bringing up or reframing memories from the past.

The Delivery is a wonderful piece of literary fiction that calls into question the role of family, and that of memory. It asks us to wrangle with our own human needs for space, for distance, for a world of our own, and the things that we must separate ourselves from in order to achieve what we think we need or want.

Buy a copy of The Delivery here!

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50 Life-Changing Classic Books to Read Now https://booksandbao.com/best-classic-books-of-all-time/ Mon, 26 Jun 2023 13:58:06 +0000 https://booksandbao.com/?p=22235 Declaring anything one of the best books of all time is a bold statement that we are sure will be met with plenty of disagreement from fellow readers. That said, what you’ll find amongst these very best classic books are novels that have stood the test of time and become beloved, well-studied, well-revered works of literature for decades — even centuries.

This list of the best classic books of all time is divided into two categories: classics published before 1900, and classics of the first half of the 20th century. If you’re interested in modern classics, published from the second half of the 20th century until today, you can find them right here.

best classic books ever

Must-Read Classic Books (Pre-20th Century)

These are classics that have shaped the world of literature for more than a century. In some cases, hundreds of years. Many of these classic novels started genres, documented moments from times long since passed, and cemented their authors as timeless artists to be remembered for ages to come. These are the best classic books of all time, every one of them an unmissable gem in the world of literature.

The Odyssey by Homer

Translated by Emily Wilson

the odyssey homer

The Odyssey, along with The Iliad, is one of the oldest works of literature still widely known and read to this day, even still receiving new translations into various languages. Homer was an Ancient Greek poet, and it is widely assumed that he was the author of these texts. Rather than a typical novel, The Odyssey is an epic poem, divided into twenty-four chapters, or “books”.

The Odyssey follows Greek hero Odysseus as he returns to his home nation of Ithaca after the end of the Trojan War. Along with The Iliad, The Odyssey has been adapted dozens of times in various forms of media and literature.

The events and players of The Trojan War are some of the most recognisable in the Western literary canon, and have remained so for an incredible 2,800 years. It’s difficult to overstate the power and influence of this text within the world of fiction and storytelling across all of Western history.

Buy a copy of The Odyssey here!

The Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu

Translated from the Japanese by Kencho Suematsu

the tale of genji

Not only was The Tale of Genji the first Japanese novel, but it is widely considered to be the first novel ever written anywhere in the world. That alone makes it one of the most important and best classic books, as well as the impressive fact that it was written by a woman.

Penned by the Kyoto noblewoman Murasaki Shikibu in the 11th century CE, The Tale of Genji takes us on a journey that follows the son of an emperor: Hikaru Genji. Genji is no longer in the line of succession and spends much of the novel’s story forming and then ruining relationships with various women in Kyoto. 

The novel is a fascinating insight into the lives of Japan’s nobility back when Kyoto was the capital of Japan. It’s also a witty and smart novel that still holds up as one of the best classic books of all time, anywhere in the world.

Buy a copy of The Tale of Genji here!

Monkey King: Journey to the West by Wu Cheng’en

Translated from the Chinese by Julia Lovell

monkey king journey to the west

Journey to the West is perhaps the most beloved and iconic Chinese novel ever written. A 16th Century classic of Chinese literature, Journey to the West has been adapted countless times. Wu Cheng’en’s classic Chinese novel is a wild and rollicking adventure story that begins with the hilarious and ridiculous antics of the powerful titular ruler Sun Wukong the Monkey King.

Sun Wukong travels and studies and gets ever stronger until he has mastered death itself and ends up picking a fight with every angel in heaven. He is then sealed beneath a mountain for 500 years by the great Buddha himself. The rest of the novel follows the titular journey to the West, as a young monk is tasked by heaven to deliver some scriptures from China to India.

Early on his travels, he stumbles across the sealed Monkey King, frees him, and takes him on as an apprentice in an attempt to reform the untameable Sun Wukong. There is so much raw energy and hilarious banter poured into every line, making this new abridged translation of Journey to the West a must-read, and one of the best classic books of all time.

Buy a copy of Journey to the West here!

Crime and Punishment by Fyodr Dostoyevsky

Translated from the Russian by Michael R. Katz

crime and punishment

Written in pre-revolutionary Russia by legendary 19th century Russian author Fyodr Dostoyevsky, Crime and Punishment is a classic and a masterpiece. While Notes from Underground was his breakout work of fiction, Crime and Punishment, his first full novel, propelled him to fame.

Our protagonist, Rodion Raskolnikov, is planning to kill an elderly woman for the valuables in her home, in order to climb out of poverty and rise to greatness. However, after killing her, he is distraught and traumatised by his own actions.

Much like Dostoyevsky’s other works, this remains a classic of Russian fiction. A book that encourages contemplation and societal observation.

Buy a copy of Crime and Punishment here!

Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy

Translated from the Russian by Richard Pevear

anna karenina

19th century Russian author Leo Tolstoy is primarily remembered for two classic works of fiction: War and Peace and Anna Karenina. The latter is a Russian epic novel published in 1878, set against a backdrop of change and progress in Russia and across the world. The titular Anna Karenina is a wealthy socialite who is engaged in an affair with a count named Vronsky.

The novel follows this affair, as they leave for Italy and Anna leaves her child behind, before eventually returning to face gossip and scandal.

This is a deeply political novel that explores the roles and behaviours of people in the Russian upper classes, as well as how invention and political change alters the social landscape of Europe. An enormous epic and a classic of Russian literature, Anna Karenina remains one of the best classic books ever written.

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Les Miserables by Victor Hugo

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo

Perhaps better known today is Schönberg and Boublil’s perfect musical adaptation of Les Miserables, but Victor Hugo’s original novel also remains a literary masterpiece.

Les Miserables follows the life of released former convict Jean Valjean, originally imprisoned for stealing bread to feed his family. We follow Valjean’s struggles over the course of several years, beginning in 1815, as he meets other memorable and, at this point, iconic characters.

As fans of the musical will know, the novel eventually takes readers through to the French Revolution and the June Rebellion of 1832. This is an enormous epic French novel about social class, French history, law, and so much more. One of the greatest novels of all time, Les Miserables remains a must-read classic of French literature.

Buy a copy of Les Miserables here!

Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes

Translated from the Spanish by J.M. Cohen

Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes

Often considered the very first modern novel, the Spanish epic Don Quixote is a staple of the European literary canon. Published in two parts, ten years apart (the first in 1605 and the second in 1615), Don Quixote is to literature what Shakespeare is to theatre.

Generally considered to be a comic novel, Don Quixote follows the story of a Spanish nobleman named Alonso Quijano.

Quijano has lost touch with reality after reading too many stories of romantic chivalry, and reinvents himself as a knight-errant, the titular Don Quixote. He takes a farm labourer as his squire and sets out on a series of adventures in order to restore chivalry to the land.

Buy a copy of Don Quixote here!

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

frankenstein mary shelley

Frankenstein is one of the best classic books ever written, and is also this writer’s favourite novel of all time. Widely considered to be the first science fiction novel, Frankenstein is also a key piece of literature within the gothic canon. Beyond that, it’s also a biting allegory for parental failure and abandonment.

The titular character Victor Frankenstein is an arrogant young student of science who has been traumatised by the death of his mother. While studying natural philosophy, Frankenstein takes it upon himself to build a man out of body parts exhumed from local graveyards.

When he succeeds in bringing life to that man, he is immediately frightened by his creation and flees, leaving the creature to wander alone and discover the world for himself. Frankenstein is a true masterpiece of gothic and science fiction literature; a work of beauty and power and perfection.

Buy a copy of Frankenstein here!

Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë

Wuthering Heights Emily Bronte

Another essential work of 19th century gothic fiction, Wuthering Heights was Emily Bronte’s only published work; a novel that is now considered a classic and a masterpiece.

Wuthering Heights is a gothic tragedy that twists the concept of romance into uncomfortable shapes. Set in the rugged and wild moors of Yorkshire, the novel takes place in a pair of homes. Our protagonists are a dysfunctional family of cruel and jealous people who love, hate, lust after, take revenge on, and even haunt one another.

The book begins with a trio: brother and sister pair Catherine and Hindley Earnshaw, and their adopted brother Heathcliff. Cathy and Heathcliff gradually fall in love while Hindley treats Heathcliff like a slave. But their love is fated to fall apart, leading to so much death and despair.

The writing in Wuthering Heights is explosive in its poetic drama, and these characters are monstrous and cruel people. A true gothic masterpiece, Wuthering Heights is one of the best classic books ever written.

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Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë

jane eyre

One of the most beloved 19th century novels, Jane Eyre tells the story of the titular Jane as she takes a job as a governess at the remote manor Thornfield Hall. Her employer, Edward Rochester, is an enigmatic man with whom she gradually falls in love. But Rochester harbours a bleak and horrible secret that will eventually wrench them apart.

Before she takes the job, we follow Jane’s childhood and years of study, where she is constantly rejected by both her family and her classmates.

In many ways, Jane Eyre is both a sorrowful and a hopeful novel, toeing the line between the romantic and gothic genres of 19th century literature. A beautiful, eventful novel Jane Eyre remains one of the best classic books of all time.

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The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë

the tenant of wildfell hall

The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is a romantic drama full of scandal, humour, excitement, lust, aggression, and entertaining exaggeration. It’s also one of the first feminist novels; the story of an autonomous woman raising a child alone in a rundown gothic house, painting, and making a living to support herself and her son.

Helen is a single mother, a presumed widow, who has taken up residence in the cold and derelict gothic manor: the titular Wildfell Hall. As our narrator-protagonist, Gilbert Markham, gets to know her, he gradually falls in love.

His infatuation comes in spite of every other member of their community distrusting Helen and spreading horrid rumours about her. And when Gilbert finds a reason to believe those rumours, Helen presents him with her diary. From there, the novel switches to Helen’s perspective, as we learn the story of who she was and how she ended up in this place.

The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is far less gothic and bleak than Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights, and instead toes a line between the signature Brontë gothic vibes and the wit-soaked romance of Jane Austen.

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The Black Spider by Jeremias Gotthelf

Translated from the German by Susan Bernofsky

the black spider gotthelf

Published in German in 1842, The Black Spider is the most celebrated work of Swiss author Jeremias Gotthelf. A 100-page gothic horror novella with bleak, dark religious themes.

Like many other gothic works of its time, The Black Spider begins with a framing device: a community in an idyllic valley are celebrating the baptism of a newborn babe. During the celebrations, an elderly man — who has lived in the same house in the valley all his life — is caught staring ominously at a particularly old and blackened wooden post in his home.

Encouraged to tell the story of the house, he gives in and tells the tale of an evil lord, his knights, and the peasants who suffer under him. The lord’s serfs have been forced to build the lord’s castle, while their own crops suffer. The peasants are then tempted by the aid of a mysterious hunter, dressed all in green, who offers to help them in exchange for the valley’s next newborn child — a child which must not have been baptised.

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Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift

Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift

Gulliver’s Travels is one-of-a-kind. A weird and wonderful work of satire by a writer of impressive imagination.

Published in 1726, in the midst of European global colonisation, Gulliver’s Travels follows the strange journeys of titular protagonist Lemuel Gulliver. In the book’s first part, Gulliver washes ashore on the land of Lilliput, home to a people who are less than six inches tall.

In its second part, the inverse occurs when he discovers the land of Brobdingnag, in which he is now tiny and the residents stand at more than seventy feet in height. Gulliver’s Travels is a fantastic satire of the adventure story, and remains one of the most beloved classics of the English canon.

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North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell

north and south elizabeth gaskell

Too often overshadowed by its contemporaries — namely the works of the Brontes and Jane Austen — Elizabeth Gaskell’s North and South remains one of the best classic books of its period. This novel is Pride and Prejudice with teeth; equal parts romance and political drama.

The titular north and south are our protagonists, the rich and entitled southerner Margaret Hale and the heartless capitalist northerner Mr. Thornton. Over the course of the novel, their romance takes some ugly turns while the unionisation and revolt of Thornton’s factory workers takes centre-stage.

North and South is a Victorian novel that, much like the works of Charles Dickens, shines a light on the lives, struggles, and conditions of working class people in industrial England.

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Journey to the Centre of the Earth by Jules Verne

Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne

French author Jules Verne is considered one of the godfathers of science fiction literature, and rightly so. His books are true classics of the genre, and his classic tale Journey to the Center of the Earth is my own personal favourite; a short sci-fi novel that elicits repeated reactions of excitement and wonder from the reader.

The story follows a German professor and his nephew, who, after translating an old Icelandic text, set out on an expedition to find a crater in Iceland that might lead to the centre of the planet.

What they find is real, and as they journey deeper, they see impossible wonders; the most memorable of which is a vast ocean inside a cavern. While traversing this subterranean sea, our protagonists come into contact with prehistoric creatures: an ichthyosaurus and a plesiosaurus.

Journey to the Center of the Earth is a thrilling adventure of discovery, one of the great works of Victorian sci-fi and one of the best classic books of all time.

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Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll

Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll

It’s not often that we at Books and Bao talk about children’s fiction, but Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is a true classic. This is a surrealist masterpiece, a book that pays tribute to the wild and unpredictable imaginations of children. A strange tale of colourful characters, impossible events, and a delightful lack of logic.

Everyone knows the story of Alice; this is a book that has been adapted countless times, into animation, film, comic books, and even video games.

All for good reason. In many ways, this is the perfect children’s story. A girl tumbles into a world where anything is possible and imagination reigns supreme. One of the best classic books of all time, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland really is a book to stoke the imagination.

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Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen

pride and prejudice jane austen

Jane Austen remains one of the most beloved authors in English history, and for good reason. While she wrote a handful of outstanding books, it’s her second novel, Pride and Prejudice, that remains her magnum opus.

Pride and Prejudice is a sharp, witty, sarcastic, biting, scathing, sardonic gem on a novel that relentlessly pokes fun at everything from the class system to patriarchal values; from stuffy English tradition to family life.

While it takes pleasure in being scornful and cynical, Pride and Prejudice is also a perfectly-written, joyously-executed novel of budding friendship and romance. The story of prejudiced Elizabeth Bennet and proud Mr Darcy really is a compelling, engaging, and captivating tale of love against all logic.

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Emma by Jane Austen

Emma by Jane Austen

While Pride and Prejudice (above) unequivocally remains Austen’s most famous and beloved work, Emma is also a strong fan-favourite. An often laugh-out-loud funny satire of middle-class social behaviour.

Like Pride and Prejudice, Emma has seen multiple adaptations (perhaps most famously Amy Heckerling adored 1995 movie Clueless). The novel tells the story of the titular Emma Woodhouse, a busybody who prides herself on her immaculate matchmaking skills.

Much of the plot involves Emma’s goading of her friend Harriet Smith to romantically pursue their local vicar, Mr. Elton, despite Harriet’s preferred interest in the farmer, Robert Martin, who wishes to propose to Harriet. Emma’s interference backfires when the vicar falls in love with her instead, and expresses disgust at any idea of romantic involvement with Harriet.

Emma is a fantastic pseudo-romantic social satire that paints a vivid picture of a small world of social climbers in rich detail. One of the most beloved and best classic books of its time.

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Great Expectations by Charles Dickens

Great Expectations by Charles Dickens

Charles Dickens was the most prolific and beloved author of Victorian England; a man whose legacy is deservedly staggering. Dickens wrote sixteen novels and many great short stories, several of which were themed around Christmas.

Of all these timeless tales, his most famous and celebrated novel is Great Expectations. Written later in his life, Great Expectations was Dickens’ thirteenth novel. In it, we follow Pip, an orphaned boy whom we first meet in a graveyard. We follow Pip’s strange life as he aids an escaped convict and falls in love with the adopted daughter of a woman who lives in her wedding dress.

We continue to follow Pip as he comes into money and moves from Kent to London, studies, grows, and encounters both struggles and heartbreak. A true classic of Victorian fiction, Great Expectations is one of Dickens’ greatest achievements, and one of the best classic books of the 19th century.

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David Copperfield by Charles Dickens

david copperfield charles dickens

Another beloved Dickens novel is David Copperfield. In fact, this was often said to have been Dickens’ own personal favourite; the novel he was proudest of having written, what he called his “favourite child.” It is also a semi-autobiographical novel about Dickens’ own life, from childhood to adulthood; what he himself called “a very complicated weaving of truth and invention.”

Told in the first person, the novel follows Copperfield’s life from birth — raised by a single mother after his father died before his own birth — into his childhood. A fight with an abusive stepfather lands David in a boarding school. While there, his mother dies in childbirth and soon enough David is sent to work in a factory, as Dickens himself did as a child.

The novel continues to follow Copperfield’s life into his adult years, and we meet a broad cast of colourful characters along the way, as one would expect in a Dickens novel. David Copperfield remains one of the most famous and admired works of British literature and one of the best classic books of all time.

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Dracula by Bram Stoker

Dracula Bram Stoker

Since 1897, when Bram Stoker’s Dracula was first published, the novel has morphed our cultural zeitgeist with regards to vampires, mythology, and monsters in general. An entirely epistolary tale, written from myriad perspectives, about an intensely alien and evil force that can work as a stand-in for so many things, thematically.

On the surface, Dracula is an exciting horror-thriller about a young Englishman named Jonathan who is held prisoner in the castle of a strange Romanian count, and at one moment almost eaten alive by the strange vampire women who live there.

From there, perspectives shift and we frantically turn the page as Dracula escapes aboard a ship, slowly picks apart the crew, and arrives in England to terrorise the town of Whitby. And one of his victims is the friend of the fiancée of Jonathan, Dracula’s initial captive.

But this is also a novel about shifting times, about immigration, about the role of the woman in society and in the family. It’s about the queer, the other. It’s a lot of things, and that has helped the novel and the vampire itself remain relevant and imaginatively exciting for more than a century.

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The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson

Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson

This little gothic novella was penned by Scottish author Robert Louis Stephenson, who is perhaps best known for his children’s book Treasure Island. Published in 1886, decades after the likes of Frankenstein and Wuthering Heights, The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde is a short but powerful and impactful gothic sci-fi story.

You’d be hard-pressed to find someone who doesn’t know the basic premise of this story: a scientist who drinks a potion to turn himself into an angry, monstrous thing.

Despite its length, The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde packs in a lot of characters and events, and is written with a poetic and dramatic flair which the gothic genre all but demands. Much like Frankenstein before it, this is a novel that blends the gothic and the science fiction to create one of the most iconic and best classic books ever written.

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Silas Marner by George Elliot

Silas Marner by George Elliot

Written by Victorian author Mary Ann Evans, who wrote all of her novels under the pseudonym George Elliot, Silas Marner is a beloved classic of its time.

Elliot was known for her realism, setting all of her novels in small towns and villages in the English countryside. Her novels remark, in detail, on the intimate lives of provincial people in Victorian England.

Silas Marner, her second novel, was published in 1861 but set several decades earlier, and follows the troubled life of its titular protagonist, a man named Silas Marner. Marner is a weaver who lives a secluded life in a small rural community where nobody pays him much mind.

However, he was once a member of his local church in a larger town some miles away, but he was falsely accused of stealing his church’s funds. Losing so much in the process of these accusations, Marner uplifted his life and retreated into obscurity. Silas Marner is a fantastic novel about the drama of small-town Victorian life, and remains one of the best classic books of the English canon.

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The Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

Published in 1719, Robinson Crusoe is generally considered to be the first English novel, and was originally published with its protagonist as the author, leading early readers of its first edition to assume it a piece of nonfiction.

Written in a biographical style, Robinson Crusoe tells the story of a castaway who finds himself stranded for almost thirty years on an island where he encounters cannibals and mutineers. In the book’s early parts, we learn about Crusoe’s obsession with the sea which, despite having already been shipwrecked as a child, draws him back to grand adventure.

This adventure eventually leads him to Brazil, and then eventually to the infamous wrecking on an isolated island off the coast of Venezuela where he is stranded for twenty-eight years. Robinson Crusoe is a true classic of English literature, especially with it being considered the very first English novel.

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The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole

the castle of otranto

Horace Walpole was a delightfully eccentric man. For example, he converted two London cottages into his own gothic castle. And it was in this house that Walpole had the dream which inspired The Castle of Otranto, which most consider to be the very first gothic novel, published in 1764.

The novel’s story centres around Princess Isabella, whose young betrothed is suddenly crushed by a giant knight’s helmet, which inexplicably falls from the sky. She must then escape before Manfred, her fiancé’s father and lord of the castle, divorces his current wife and forces Isabella to marry him instead.

Reading this novel, it’s amazing to see how the gothic genre continued to grow and evolve, how its tropes were solidified and further explored. As the fist ever gothic novel, The Castle of Otranto remains one of the best classic books of all time.

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Little Women by Louisa May Alcott

little women

A beloved American children’s novel, Little Women has charmed readers of all ages for generations. Over and over again, no matter how many years go by, children read this book and become enchanted by its characters and events, without fail.

Based on the author’s own childhood growing up with her own sisters, this is a semi-autobiographical coming-of-age story that has delighted readers for generations.

The March sisters are icons of American literature, with countless readers identifying with a particular sister and finding comfort and camaraderie in their small adventures. Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy experience so much adversity, loss, sorrow, and hope throughout the novel.

And Little Women continues to be adapted to the big screen by filmmakers every generation or so, rekindling our love for Louisa May Alcott’s original novel. A true classic American tale, Little Women is one of the most beloved and best classic books of all time.

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The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde

the picture of dorian gray

Beloved Irish writer Oscar Wilde has an enormous legacy. While he wrote many wonderful plays and poems, The Picture of Dorian Gray was Wilde’s only novel.

This is another story so well-known in popular culture that most of us know its premise: a man who doesn’t age has a portrait of himself in the attic that ages on his behalf. Outside of its powerful premise and the exciting moral decline of its titular protagonist, the beauty of this gothic novel lies in its writing.

The Picture of Dorian Gray is a magical tale. You can open up any page, read a line, and be captivated by its poetic beauty. A staggering achievement that doesn’t waste a single word, feeling, or moment; The Picture of Dorian Gray is one of the very best classic books ever written.

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The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins

The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins

Often overshadowed by his more successful contemporary, Charles Dickens, Victorian author Wilkie Collins remains an incredible force within English literature. And his magnum opus is, without a doubt, The Woman in White. This is a work of dark detective fiction; one of the earliest of its genre. A novel which paved the way for so much great detective fiction in the years and decades to follow.

The Woman in White begins in London, with the first of several point-of-view characters, the teacher Walter Hartright helping the mysterious titular woman in white find her way. He is soon informed that this distraught woman has escaped from an asylum, and so the mystery begins to unfold.

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The Time Machine by H.G. Wells

the time machine hg wells

It’s incredible to consider that time travel stories have a point of origin, and that this origin dates back to 1895. Wells’ original science fiction novel set the stage for all the great time travel stories that would soon follow.

An inventor builds himself a time machine, and that machine carries him forward in time. Our scientist arrives in the year 802701 CE, an eerie future in which human evolution split into two very different groups. The first group are the naive, child-like Eloi, who live in blissful peace and harmony, with all their needs provided to them. The other group live underground, and they are the cannibalistic Morlocks, who feed on the Eloi.

Wells was critical of many aspects of European society during his time, and his novels were allegorical of the things he disagreed with. This can be be seen here, with The Time Machine being a critique of class disparity and social inequality. An incredible and indispensable science fiction story and one of the best classic books of the 19th century.

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The Count of Monte Cristo Alexandre Dumas

The Count of Monte Cristo Alexandre Dumas

French author Alexandre Dumas is best-known for his novels The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo. The second of which is an adventure novel, originally serialised in the mid-1840s.

Set during the time of the Bourbon Restoration, The Count of Monte Cristo tells the story of a young first mate about a ship called the Pharaon. Edmond Dantes is falsely accused of treason by several members of the ship’s crew, and is imprisoned in a fortress.

There, he is told of a treasure by a fellow prisoner who eventually dies. Once Dantes is released, he hunts down this treasure and uses it to exact his revenge as the titular Count of Monte Cristo. A beloved French novel and one of the very best books of all time, The Count of Monte Cristo remains a must-read.

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Moby-Dick by Herman Melville

Moby-Dick by Herman Melville

Written by American author Herman Melville and published in 1851, Moby-Dick is a novel whose premise and themes have become embedded in public consciousness. Everyone knows the concept of a person’s “white whale”, and most people know the general plot of Moby-Dick.

A crewman aboard the whaling vessel Pequod recounts the story of his captain, Ahab, a man with a single-minded ambition to take revenge on an enormous white whale. That whale, named Moby Dick, took Ahab’s leg, and now the captain can think of nothing but getting the revenge he seeks. The white whale is his obsession, and it blinds him to everything else.

But Moby-Dick is also a love letter to the sea and to sailing, full of so much detail about life as a sailor. One of the great American novels, Moby-Dick remains a must-read and one of the best classic books of the 19th century.

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Tess of the d’Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy

Tess of the d'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy

Written and published towards the end of the 19th century, Tess of the d’Urbervilles remains a classic of English literature. A surprisingly bleak and morose novel, Tess of the d’Urbervilles remains a classic of English literature to this day.

The novel follows the titular Tess as she goes from tragedy to tragedy. She suffers abuse, loses her child, toils in obscurity, falls in love, and suffers heartbreak and betrayal. Not for the faint of heart, Tess of the d’Urbervilles remains a classic but is certainly not an easy read.

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The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne

The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne

Published in 1850 and set two centuries earlier, The Scarlet Letter is an early work of American historical fiction. The titular scarlet letter is a brand forcibly worn by the book’s protagonist, Hester Prynne, after she gives birth to a child out of wedlock.

The scarlet letter, an A which stands for adultery, brands her an outcast in the puritan colony where the novel is set. A classic piece of American fiction which looks back at the history of American colonialism and religious puritanism.

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Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert

Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert

Much like his contemporary, English author George Elliot (above), 19th century French author Gustave Flaubert was a celebrated author of the realism genre of his period.

The most celebrated and well-remembered of his works is Madame Bovary. The novel begins with Charles Bovary, a young medical practitioner who marries a spiteful woman. When she dies, he is able to court a young woman named Emma whom he had previously met while treating a patient.

Emma is a romantic young woman with dreams of luxury and social excitement, but her marriage to Charles quickly becomes stale and she is left disenchanted. Madame Bovary is a novel about escaping boring provincial life with the hopes of finding a more exciting life. A classic of the French literary canon and one of the very best classic books from France.

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Essential Classic Books of the 20th Century

These books were all published during the first half of the 1900s, and have gone on to become true classics. Staples of high school classrooms and university lecture halls, these are true classics of the modern world. Many of these classics are American and British, but you’ll also find classics from around Europe and Asia, too. If you’re looking for the best classic books from after the turn of the 20th century, these are your must-read novels.

The Trial by Franz Kafka

The Trial by Franz Kafka

Kafka’s novels and short stories focus on the ways in which post-industrial European society undermines, confuses, and disempowers working men. His stories examine the methods and tactics of law, bureaucracy, and social rules which render ordinary working class people frightened and impotent.

The finest example of this is The Trial, which tells the story of a man named Josef K, who is one day very suddenly arrested. Josef has done nothing wrong, to his knowledge, and is not told what his crime is supposed to have been.

He is imprisoned, then freed, told to await instructions and further information, and failed over and over again by an absurd system. There is a bleak and dark humour to The Trial, as our man fails to ever understand what is happening to him, and nonsensical events continue to pile on top of one another.

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Ulysses by James Joyce

Ulysses by James Joyce

Written in 1922 and covering an impressive 700 pages, the modernist Ulysses follows a single day in the life of the iconic protagonist Leopold Bloom. Throughout the novel, Bloom continues to be on the move, journeying between various appointments and encounters across Dublin.

The novel’s title, the romanised name for Odysseus, title character of Homer’s The Odyssey, establishes the similarities between the events and emotions of Bloom and Odysseus. A wonderfully strange and simple masterpiece of modernist fiction, Ulysses remains one of the best classic books of all time.

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Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

John Steinbeck was one of the great American writers, and his short masterpiece Of Mice and Men remains a flawless novel about the curse of the “American Dream”.

Of Mice and Men follows two men — the sharp and savvy George, and the simple giant Lenny — who have been moving from farm to farm looking for work. George wishes to free himself from the cycle of labour by saving enough money to eventually build a self-sustaining home and plot of land to call his own.

However, this is the dream of countless men, and capitalism’s rules and methods guarantee that breaking from this cycle is a rarity, if not an impossibility. But George is different; he has Lenny by his side to help him make more money and work harder than most men can.

Of Mice and Men is an American tragedy, a novel that keenly exposes the lies of the American Dream, and of the cycles of Western capitalism. A true 20th century masterpiece and one of the best classic books ever written.

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The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Great Gatsby, set and published during the roaring twenties, is a short novel that has enchanted readers for a century. The novel follows Nick, a Yale alumnus who has moved to New York City and rents a place on Long Island beside a luxurious estate.

This grand house is owned by the enigmatic and eccentric Jay Gatsby, a wealthy man who hosts frequent soirees but never actually appears at them himself. As the novel progresses, Nick eventually meets and befriends Gatsby, and learns his life story.

Gatsby’s endeavours, and the wealth he has accrued, have all been in service to his obsession with a woman who lives nearby, a lost love from his youth named Daisy. The Great Gatsby is a masterful novel about the American Jazz Age, class, and the American Dream. A beautiful novel that continues to mesmerise new readers.

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Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf

Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf

Virginia Woolf is a legend of 20th century English literature. A modernist writer and member of the famed Bloomsbury Group. Alongside her other novels Orlando and The Waves, Mrs. Dalloway is a classic of the modernist genre.

The novel takes place over the course of a single day in the life of a privileged woman, the titular Mrs. Dalloway. We begin in the morning, as she busies herself with preparing for a party she is due to host that same evening. Over the course of the novel, we learn about her life, her childhood, and her marriage.

Mrs. Dalloway, published in 1925, was one of the great works of English literature from the early 20th century and remains one of the essential classic books of British literature.

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Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

brave new world aldous huxley

Like many of the best works of dystopian fiction, Brave New World presents ideas and warnings that remain as poignant and thought-provoking today as they did when the book was published a century ago.

The biggest and most obvious political theme that Huxley’s novel tackles is eugenics. In the future World State which he imagines, humans have formed a dystopian society based on an intelligence-based hierarchy. This has become possible through reproductive engineering that uses artificial wombs and the philosophy of eugenics to create a caste system in which various classes of people are placed and kept.

In this world, the assembly line is revered as one of the great technological and political leaps forward, and so the calendar is marked by its invention. Despite its age, and how far technology has advanced since its publication, it is truly remarkable how much Huxley anticipated and presented in this book, both about technology and about various political philosophies.

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1984 by George Orwell

1984 george orwell

One of the great literary treasures of the 20th century is George Orwell’s 1984. While his Russian Revolution allegory Animal Farm, and his charming memoir Down and Out in Paris and London each remain masterpieces, it’s 1984 that stands tallest.

A warning against the willingness of corrupt politicians to hoard power and wealth, and to control the populace via misinformation and media language, 1984 is a perfect novel. This is a novel that teaches readers to look for the warning signs of fascism as it rises.

The world of 1984 is an England ruled by oligarchs who invade the privacy of all residents with cameras and microphones, and who change the news to suit their needs. Our protagonist, Winston, seeks to resist the corrupting, brainwashing tactics of Big Brother and the UK government.

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No Longer Human by Osamu Dazai

Translated from the Japanese by Donald Keene

no longer human osamu dazai

Inspired by the author’s own life events, relationships, and his way of seeing the world around him, No Longer Human is a heartbreaking masterpiece of Japanese fiction, written shortly before Osamu Dazai committed suicide.

Our protagonist, a stand-in for Dazai himself, sees ordinary society as something impossible to navigate. He paints horrifying pictures, eventually turns to drink, and becomes entirely destructive as an adult — towards himself and those around him.

This is a novel about a desperately sad person, ill equipped for even surviving daily life. He doesn’t understand people and people don’t understand him. He is selfish, gross, and unlikeable. But at his core, he is desperately sad and doomed to die.

No Longer Human is beautifully written, and one of the best classic books to have come out of Japan in the first half of the 20th century.

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Alone in Berlin by Hans Fallada

Translated from the German by Michael Hofmann

alone in berlin fallada

German author Hans Fallada remains one of Germany’s most prestigious writers. From his autobiographical The Drinker to this, his magnum opus, Fallada was one of the great European writers of the 20th Century. Alone in Berlin is a dense and epic novel, originally published in Germany in 1947 (the same year as No Longer Human).

Set in Berlin in 1940, Alone in Berlin follows the story of a working class couple, Otto and Elise Hampel. Fallada’s novel explores the frightening spread of fascism from the inside out, as privacy becomes impossible and the threat of arrest is a daily possibility.

Alone in Berlin is less about war than it is about how the average German attempted to resist the rise and spread of Nazism, risking their life to rebel and stem the tide of fascism. An amazingly tense and chilling novel, Alone in Berlin is a masterpiece of tone and plotting that remains one of the best modern books of the 20th century.

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The Makioka Sisters by Junichiro Tanizaki

Translated from the Japanese by Edward G. Seidensticker

The Makioka Sisters by Junichiro Tanizaki

Often compared to the works of the pre-revolution Russian masters, as well as revered British authors like Jane Austen, The Makioka Sisters is a Japanese masterpiece. Set in Osaka, published during World War II and set in the years before its outbreak, Junichiro Tanizaki’s magnum opus is a family drama epic about class divides and societal shifts.

The novel follows the titular Makioka family, a once wealthy and large Kansai family whose fortune has rapidly declined. This is also the case for many families, as Japan’s class system and societal traditions begin to shift due to globalisation and the looming spectre of war.

While the eldest two of four Makioka sisters are married, the family’s future hangs on the successful marriage of third sister Yukiko. Junichiro Tanizaki was, and remains, one of Japan’s most celebrated and revered 20th century authors, and The Makioka Sisters is his great masterpiece.

Buy a copy of The Makioka Sisters here!

Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier

rebecca du maurier

In Daphne du Maurier’s magnum opus, the titular Rebecca is dead; this is the first tantalising thing to know.

Our protagonist is the nameless second wife of Maxim de Winter, a wealthy Englishman who resides in the country estate of Manderley. His first wife, Rebecca, died, and her memory haunts every corner of Manderley, as well as the thoughts and behaviours of the husband whom she was survived by.

Our protagonist feels constantly at odds with the dead Rebecca, having to live up to her legacy, especially as she is undermined by the hateful housekeeper, Mrs Danvers. Danvers loved Rebecca, and Maxim is troubled by thoughts and memories of his deceased first wife, and our protagonist must survive in this toxic and tense world.

Few gothic novels have the power and the legacy of Rebecca, a true masterpiece of the 20th century and one of the very best classic books of the gothic genre.

Buy a copy of Rebecca here!

Endless Blue Sky by Lee Hyoseok

Translated from the Korean by Steven D. Capener

endless blue sky

The story of Korean novel Endless Blue Sky begins with our protagonist, the writer Ilma, travelling up to Manchuria for the umpteenth time for business and, while he is there, engaging with a Russian dancer, Nadia, whom he is deeply enamoured with.

Conversing mostly in English, their relationship blossoms quickly; and Nadia, through Ilma, has fallen in love with the fascinating world of Joseon, demanding to be stolen into it so that she might discover its fashion, its theatre, and its art for herself.

Lee Hyoseok was one of the more fascinating writers of early 20th century Korea; a man of thrilling political philosophies and a delightfully European approach to storytelling.

Endless Blue Sky is a joyous Korean novel, full of eccentric characters and a love story that twists and turns with real human depth and agency as it moves on at a swift click. A forgotten but essential Korean novel that stands strong alongside the best classic books of its period.

Buy a copy of Endless Blue Sky here!

And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie

And Then There Were None

Agatha Christie was the queen of the murder mystery novel; an author of crime fiction, gothic fiction, and thrillers. Her career as an author spanned half a century, and amongst all of her great works, And Then There Were None is often heralded as her finest achievement.

While many of her books star the legendary Hercule Poirot or Miss Marple, this is a standalone Christie novel, set on an isolated island off the coast of Devon. Our protagonists have all been drawn there by a letter. When they arrive, a recorded voice is played, claiming that each of them has committed a murder.

From here, the guests begin to die one by one, and so a game of survival and escape begins, all the while their enemy and captor is unknown.

Short and swift, moving at a brisk pace, And Then There Were None is one of the most exciting thriller books you’ll ever read. An exciting, bloody, and stressful read; this novel is the definition of a page-turner, and is one of the greatest works of crime and thriller fiction ever written; one of the best classic books of its genre (if not the very best).

Buy a copy of And Then There Were None here!

The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

Comparable to Lewis Carroll’s Alice’ Adventures in Wonderland in terms of its global popularity, The Little Prince has inspired young readers for decades.

Published in the 1940s and full of iconic lines that are still regularly quoted today, The Little Prince tells the story of a spacefaring boy, the titular little prince. Alongside our narrator, who has crash-landed his plane, we meet our little prince in a desert. There, after befriending the narrator, he tells us his curious life story.

This story concerns growing flowers on tiny planets and visiting worlds full of problems caused by adults acting carelessly. It’s an uplifting tale of friendship and loneliness that has resonated with readers for many years, and remains one of the best classic books of the 20th century.

Buy a copy of The Little Prince here!

Snow Country by Yasunari Kawabata

Translated from the Japanese by Edward G. Seidensticker

snow country kawabata

Yasunari Kawabata was one of the great authors of 20th century Japan. This Nobel Prize-winner hand endless love for the world around him and its aesthetics. Many of his novels have the feel of a bell chime, opening with a loaded image that continues to resound throughout the rest of the story before drawing to a close with the final pages of the book.

Snow Country opens with a train ride through the mountainous countryside in which the narrator, staring out the window, superimposes the reflected face of a beautiful female passenger onto the darkening night sky and landscape outside.

Kawabata’s sparse yet wholly poetic opening is a masterstroke of foreshadowing in a novel that will confront the relationship between art, beauty, lust and love We are presented with a near ethereal landscape, shown through a fragmented narration in which the main character finds himself unable to truly feel present before the beautiful geisha he has an affair with.

Buy a copy of Snow Country here!

The Stranger by Albert Camus

The Stranger by Albert Camus

Albert Camus was a Nobel Prize-winning author and philosopher. His first and most famous novel, The Stranger, is divided neatly into two halves. In the first, our protagonist, Merusault, learns of his mother’s death and attends her funeral.

He doesn’t mourn or feel anything at all, and over the next several days, the indifferent and detached man enters into a new relationship, makes acquaintances, and commits a murder. In the novel’s second half, Merusault is in prison, and his indifference and his acceptance of the random chaos of things is closely examined.

This was the first work to explore Camus’ absurdist philosophy, and remains a classic of French literature and one of the best classic books of our modern age.

Buy a copy of The Stranger here!

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85 Outstanding Historical Novels to Read Right Now https://booksandbao.com/best-historical-fiction-books-ever-written/ Fri, 09 Jun 2023 10:28:18 +0000 https://booksandbao.com/?p=22112 Historical fiction is a brilliantly broad genre of fiction, with the potential to span so much of human history and culture. Because of this fact, many of the best historical fiction books come from far and wide — from Latin America to Japan, and everywhere in-between.

But, of course, the UK has a particular affinity for historical fiction, so many of the novels you’ll find on this extensive list are British. This is a celebration of historical fiction, showcasing the breadth and scope of the genre; how creative its authors are and what they can do with our rich histories.

best historical fiction books

Must-Read Historical Novels

You’ll find here novels that explore periods as well-trodden as the two World Wars, and ones as rich as China’s Ming Dynasty. Through these historical fiction books, you’ll meet Henry VIII, William Shakespeare, Madame Tussauds, Abraham Lincoln, and so many more.

You’ll spend time in a French asylum, on the wide plains of Argentina, and the battlefields of Ancient Greece. These are some of the best historical fiction books you’ll ever read; books that will take you across so much of this world’s rich, vibrant, and tumultuous history.

Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel

Wolf Hall hilary mantel

Wolf Hall manages to be many things. For many readers, it is the defining book of the historical fiction genre, at least in the UK.

Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall and its direct sequel, Bring Up the Bodies, both won the Booker Prize, while the final book of the trilogy, The Mirror and the Light, was shortlisted for the Women’s Prize. The Guardian newspaper called Wolf Hall the best novel of the 21st Century (so far).

Wolf Hall is, undeniably, a masterpiece of historical fiction. It’s dense and its language can be challenging, but it is beautiful, clever, and enthralling. Telling the fictionalised biography of the legendary English politician Thomas Cromwell, Wolf Hall throws readers into the fraught and frightening world of Henry VIII’s court.

Mantel paints Cromwell as a more sympathetic character than history has done, and uses that altered perspective to tell one of the most engaging historical novels ever penned. Few novels have made as much of an impact on their respective genres as Wolf Hall has; unquestionably one of the best historical fiction books of all time.

Buy a copy of Wolf Hall here!

Little by Edward Carey

Little by Edward Carey

Edward Carey is a true talent, and his books are a gift to contemporary literature. Little, a fictionalised biography of Madam Tussauds, is his finest work.

Little follows the life of Marie Grosholtz, from her birth in Alsace, France in 1761, through her adolescence and deep into her adulthood. We follow Marie, nicknamed Little, as she loses her father, and soon after her mother, before spending most of her life as the ward, student, and apprentice of an eccentric anatomist.

Dr. Curtis teaches Marie everything there is to know about human anatomy, and the two travel through much of central and western Europe before eventually settling in Paris. As Little progresses, we experience the French Revolution and see the deepest innards of the Palace of Versailles, all through the eyes of the woman who would become Madame Tussauds.

Both an intimate and subtly gothic novel and a wildly epic biography, Little is one of the very best historical fiction books ever written.

Buy a copy of Little here!

Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell

hamnet maggie o'farrell

Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet, which won the Women’s Prize for Fiction 2020, is a fictionalised retelling of the life of Agnes Hathaway, wife of William Shakespeare, as well as the tragically short life of their son Hamnet, whose death inspired the creation of the play Hamlet.

Gorgeously crafted, Hamnet shifts between the wider biography of Agnes as she meets and marries The Bard, and shorter chapters that detail the final days of Hamnet’s life. There are supernatural whispers throughout; the framing and pacing jolts and twists unapologetically; Shakespeare himself is never given a name, with the prose remaining firmly on the other people in his life.

Hamnet is a personal favourite novel of mine, especially within the genre of historical fiction. It does so much so well. Expertly plotted, gorgeously written, with dynamic and tragic characterisation. A must-read historical fiction book.

Buy a copy of Hamnet here!

Love and Fury by Samantha Silva

love and fury samantha silva

Like Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet, Samantha Silva’s Love and Fury is a historical novel that shines a light on a woman often overshadowed by someone close to them who found greater fame. In this case, that person is pioneer feminist and mother of Mary Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft.

Often simply contextualised as the Frankenstein author’s mother, Mary Wollstonecraft is also credited as being one of the Western world’s first feminist writers, having famously penned A Vindication on the Rights of Woman.

Beyond that, however, little is ever said about Mary Wollstonecraft. As Love and Fury demonstrates, however, she had an incredible life of her own. Wollstonecraft spent most of that life educating — and fighting for the education of — young British women at a time when women’s education was seen as pointless at best by the men in power.

Love and Fury is a historical novel that shows the true strength of Mary Wollstonecraft’s life and deeds beyond the book she is most famous for.

Buy a copy of Love and Fury here!

The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro

the remains of the day ishiguro

Written by my own personal favourite author, Kazuo Ishiguro, The Remains of the Day is a historical novel about regret and human malleability. The Remains of the Day begins with our protagonist and narrator, a butler named Stevens, setting out on a road trip across England.

Stevens has worked at Darlington Hall for many years and his new employer, a nouveau riche American, happily encourages him to take a vacation while he himself is away in the US on business. Stevens plans to reunite with Darlington Hall’s former housekeeper, a woman whom he clearly had deep feelings for.

Stevens, however, has always been married to his job. He is a rigid, unmovable traditionalist with a particular attitude towards life, work, and class; one that he deems right and proper. This stern and conservative outlook has cost Stevens so much potential joy, and now he has a chance to right those wrongs.

This is a truly elegant and beautiful literary masterpiece, and a must-read piece of historical fiction.

Buy a copy of The Remains of the Day here!

An Artist of the Floating World by Kazuo Ishiguro

an artist of the floating world ishiguro

Before he wrote The Remains of the Day, Ishiguro focussed his attention on the country of his birth, and wrote the heart-wrenching historical novel An Artist of the Floating World. This novel takes us to a time shortly after the end of World War II and the fall of the Japanese Empire, and its story follows the life and memories of an aged and once-renowned ukiyo-e painter named Ono.

Ono has had a long and revered career as an ukiyo-e artist but, when war began brewing, he strayed from the teachings of his master and turned his hand to making propaganda posters. With the war over, Ono and his works are now a symbol of embarrassment. His family, neighbours, and old friends look at him with shame.

An Artist of the Floating World is a masterpiece, not only in its setting and its themes of shame, political corruption, and time’s ability to change us. An Artist of the Floating World presents a challenge of perspective and sympathy rarely explored so well in literature. This Ishiguro novel is another masterpiece of literary fiction and historical fiction.

Buy a copy of An Artist of the Floating World here!

All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr

all the light we cannot see

All The Light We Cannot See, which won the Carnegie Medal and Pulitzer Prize, has become one of the giants of modern American literature. Set against the backdrop of war-ravaged France, All The Light We Cannot See tells the story of Marie-Laure, a blind French woman, and the path that leads her to the orphaned Werner, a member of the Hitler Youth.

The glue that holds this historical novel together is its lovable cast of characters, including Marie-Laure’s father, a miniaturist and keeper-of-keys at the Museum of Natural History. The relationship between him and his daughter is a deeply moving one, as is the story of young Werner, who witnesses the effects of Nazism from the inside, and from a young age.

All The Light We Cannot See is one of the most powerful, moving, and satisfying American novels of this century, and one of the best historical fiction books we have.

Buy a copy of All the Light We Cannot See here!

Babel by R.F. Kuang

babel rf kuang

Babel is one of the most raw, powerful, politically aggressive, and savvy historical novels you’ll ever read; one that also mixes in dark academia and a sprinkle of urban fantasy. Set in Oxford, 1836, Babel tells the story of a boy from Canton (Guangdong) China who narrowly escapes dying of cholera with the rest of his family as he is whisked away by a rich and powerful white man.

This man is Professor Lovell, an English academia who brings Robin to London, teaches him Greek and Latin, encourages his studies in translation, and then sends him off to Oxford University.

There, Robin is enrolled in the Royal Institute of Translation, housed in the tallest tower in Oxford, the titular Babel. Robin is also recruited into the ranks of a radical political group known as Hermes, who seek to disrupt the British Empire and its economic powers in order to free its annexed and strangled nations.

Babel is a masterpiece of historical fiction that tackles the monstrous, inhuman actions of the British Empire head-on. It’s a novel with teeth and claws, and an absolute must-read.

Buy a copy of Babel here!

Perfume by Patrick Süskind

Translated from the German by John E. Woods

perfume patrick suskind

What begins with one of the most alluring opening lines soon spirals into a gorgeously twisted tale of death and strangeness, written and translated with staggering beauty. Perfume tells the tale of the 18th century French orphan Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, who slipped from his mother while she worked at a fish market and then promptly died. And while his beginnings are bleak, he soon grows into an unusual kind of monster.

Grenouille has the uncanny ability to identify smells from miles away. His nose is unnaturally attuned, and he will eventually kill for the smells he desires most. We watch him grow up, become apprentice to a perfumer in Paris, and eventually leave when he grows tired of other people. But the smells of certain women drive him to commit terrible crimes in this blend of historical fiction and poetic fantasy.

Perfume is a grotesque novel about the intersection between death and obsession, as well as the corruption of power and dominance. An unsavoury yet addictive work that proves to be an entirely compulsive read.

Clytemnestra by Costanza Casati

clytemnestra

While we at Books and Bao love ourselves some Greek Mythology, and there are many great retellings of the Greek classics out there right now, this is about historical fiction. And one of the best of these historical novels set within Ancient Greece is Costanza Casati’s Clytemnestra.

This is a dark, angry, intimate, epic that follows the life of the titular Clytemnestra, a Spartan princess who is known for being the wife and murderer of Agamemnon, king of Mycenae.

Clytemnestra begins with our protagonist’s youth, growing up alongside her sister Helen, falling in love with a decent man, and eventually having his son. But we know that, eventually, she will be married to the bloodthirsty tyrant king Agamemnon; her sister Helen will marry his brother and be stolen to Troy by Paris, thus beginning the Trojan War.

This masterpiece of historical fiction covers all of this and so much more, sparing none of the tragedy that befalls our protagonist. A tense, angry feminist masterpiece of a novel, Clytemnestra is a must-read; one of the most essential historical fiction books on the shelves right now.

Buy a copy of Clytemnestra here!

Read More: The Best History Books Ever Written

Nettleblack by Nat Reeve

nettleblack

Nettleblack is the debut novel by non-binary British author Nat Reeve; a laugh-out-loud funny and delightfully charming novel in so many surprising ways. Taking influence from Shakespeare, Dickens, and Agatha Christie, and also reminiscent of the settings found in the film Hot Fuzz and the show Schitt’s Creek, Nettleblack is an absolute delight.

Nettleblack is set in the late 19th Century and tells the story of Henry Nettleblack, youngest daughter of a family who made their fortune developing a medicinal tincture. When Henry’s eldest sister wishes to marry her off into the gentry, she runs away from home, and an absurd twist of fate lands her in the ranks of a quirky, odd local vigilante group who call themselves the Dallyangle Division.

There, she meets and works clumsily alongside a host of eccentric characters with names that would make Dickens jealous and personalities lifted from Shakespeare’s finest comedies. One of these characters is Pip Property, a wonderful dandy of a non-binary character.

Nettleblack warms and entertains in equal measure; it is a celebration of strangeness and difference. It congratulates those of us who don’t fit the status quo and gives us a wonderful world to escape to.

Buy a copy of Nettleblack here!

In Memoriam by Alice Winn

In Memoriam by Alice Winn

Alice Winn’s debut novel feels, in its tone and execution, like a time capsule. The feeling of public schoolboy life, the forbidden love between two young men on the verge of adulthood, and the cruel, cold, uncaring nature of life in the trenches of the Great War — all of it is brought to life through thoughtful language that dances between unrelenting, unapologetic viscerality and witty, friendly banter.

This is the story of Gaunt and Ellwood, upper-class lads in their teens, arrogant and charming, each madly and secretly in love with the other. When Gaunt’s German mother persuades him to enlist in order to stop the rumours that their family are spies, Ellwood follows him into the trenches. What follows is a romance that blossoms in the unlikeliest of places.

In Memoriam is a war novel that is as kind as it is unkind, written with gusto and humour. The love and friendship on display is comforting, and the exposure of war and trench life is exactly as harrowing and discomfiting as it should be. A powerful piece of historical war fiction.

Buy a copy of In Memoriam here!

The Mercies by Kiran Millwood Hargrave

the mercies kiran millwood hargrave

Kiran Milwood Hargrave is one of the most exciting and beloved authors of the UK today. Having written several celebrated YA novels, The Mercies was her first novel for adults, and it made waves upon its publication.

Inspired by true events, The Mercies is set in 1617 Norway — specifically the island of Vardo. The book begins with a freak winter storm taking the lives of every man from the island community — all were fishermen, and all were tragically at sea when the storm suddenly hit.

Vardo is now an island of women. Soon enough, a man of God arrives from Scotland to “take control”. He has brought with him his wife, a woman inspired when she finds a community devoid of men. The Mercies is written with astonishing prose. A truly gorgeous novel, from beginning to end. It is the perfect length, expertly paced, utterly flawless in its writing and atmosphere.

Buy a copy of The Mercies here!

The Dance Tree by Kiran Millwood Hargrave

The Dance Tree

Kiran Milwood Hargraves’ follow-up to The Mercies was the riveting and strange The Dance Tree: a historical novel about patriarchy, superstition, and oppression.

Set in 16th Century Strasbourg, The Dance Tree follows Lisbet, a young woman who has been struggling to carry a child to term. She is pregnant again, and desperately praying that this one will last. Her husband’s sister was sentenced to seven years of penance for a sin nobody will mention, and she is set to return during this blisteringly hot summer.

Amongst these big changes, the town has also been taken by a strange “disease” as women walk into the town square and start to dance. They dance for days until collapsing, and then dance some more. Kiran Millwood Hargrave continues to prove herself an author of some of the very best historical fiction books coming out of the UK right now.

Buy a copy of The Dance Tree here!

The Confessions of Frannie Langton by Sara Collins

the confessions of frannie langton

The Confessions of Frannie Langton  is one of the most impactful historical novels of recent years; all the more impressive considering it is a debut novel. Sara Collins is a Black British writer and ex-lawyer who also penned the screenplay for the TV adaptation of her novel.

The Confessions of Frannie Langton begins with our protagonist on trial for murder. It’s 1826, she was born and educated on the plantations of Jamaica, and she has since worked as a maid for the wealthy Benham family in London. Mrs Benham, a woman Frannie dearly loved, is dead, and it’s Frannie who stands to hang for the murder. But did she do it? And if so, why?

A truly mind-bending tale of race, class, empire, love, queerness, and so much more. A true modern classic amongst the very best historical fiction books.

Buy a copy of The Confessions of Frannie Langton here!

The Square of Sevens by Laura Shepherd-Robinson

the square of sevens

Laura Shepherd-Robinson has made a deserved name for herself writing historical thrillers, but The Square of Sevens is a larger beast than that. While still a novel led by mystery and intrigue, it is less of a thriller and more of an historical drama set in the Bath and London of the 1730s and ’40s.

Our protagonist is a girl named Red, who grew up travelling the roads of England with her father, performing cartomancy using the pseudo-mythical art known as the square of sevens. She never knew her mother, and early in the novel her father dies, but not before urging a kindly and wealthy man to take his daughter in.

This man, Antrobus, raises Red as “Rachel” in a life of comfort, until her life becomes unravelled when she turns sixteen. As she searches for the truth about her parents — specifically who her mother might have been — Red is soon forced to flee to London.

There, she uses her skills to survive and follow a trail that will hopefully lead her to the truth of her family, and so much more. The Square of Sevens is a lengthy and dense historical mystery novel full of intrigue, delivering constant twists and turns that keep the reader on their toes.

Buy a copy of The Square of Sevens here!

Lucky Red by Claudia Cravens

lucky red claudia cravens

Lucky Red is a sapphic historical novel set in the American Wild West of the late 19th century. Our protagonist, Bridget, is a beautiful young redhead whose childhood was plagued with bad luck, to say the least. Bridget was raised by her dumb and useless father, who sold their house for next to nothing. Then, out on the dusty road together, the father and daughter take shelter where he is bitten and killed by a rattlesnake.

Alone, Bridget wanders until she reaches the frontier town of Dodge, Kansas. There, her luck changes as she is taken in by the good and kind women of the Buffalo Queen brothel, where she works and finds a community. She takes to sex work easily, enjoys the gift of food and shelter, and builds a solid bond with the other women at the Queen. And soon enough, she comes to realise that, while men are her work, women are what she loves and craves.

Lucky Red is an exciting historical novel about sex, lust, love, and the bonds between women in small communities where the world is a dangerous, difficult place.

Buy a copy of Lucky Red here!

Pachinko by Min Jin Lee

Pachinko by Min Jin Lee

Min Jin Lee’s Pachinko is a sincerely beloved novel; an epic family saga that takes the reader on a soulful journey through early 20th century Korea and Japan. Four generations of a Korean family take us through their lives in the midst of the tragic and tumultuous annexation of Korea by the Japanese Empire.

Today in post-empire Japan, many zainichi Koreans continue to live, descended from those Koreans who were forced to move to Japan in the years leading up to World War II.

We begin with Sunja, a young and poor Korean who is pulled mercilessly in different directions by the actions and choices of men. As we read, we travel from rural, coastal Korea to both the highest and lowest parts of Japanese society. Pachinko is an incredible family saga and one of the best historical fiction books of all time.

Buy a copy of Pachinko here!

Lady Macbeth by Ava Reid

Lady Macbeth by Ava Reid

Lady Macbeth is Ava Reid’s feminist reimagining of both Shakespeare’s iconic character and the events of the play itself. Reid’s Lady M, Roscille, is a young French princess who has been sent by her father to marry the Thane of Glammis. There, she is met with brutality—both in the desolate landscape and in the men who roam the halls of Macbeth’s castle. Young and savvy, she must find a way to survive amongst all this hopelessness.

Roscille is believed to be witch-kissed, cursed to doom any man who lays eyes on her; and so she is constantly veiled and behaves in a reserved manner. But she is also savvy, and she will use her intelligence to do more than just survive. She will come to understand and tame this blood-soaked landscape and the murderous men who wage wars on it.

Roscille is a far cry from Shakespeare’s Lady Macbeth. Rather than being the power-hungry puppetmaster, poking and prodding at her cowardly husband, she is a woman out of her depth who must learn to bend this place and its men to her will. Calling this a feminist retelling is a little misleading, since Lady M has always been a beacon of feminine strength. Instead, Roscille is simply a different kind of heroine; one a little more true to history, perhaps.

Beloved by Toni Morrison

Beloved by Toni Morrison

Toni Morrison is widely regarded as one of the greatest American writers, and rightly so. Her novels set a standard for fiction that is hard to match.

Beloved, one of her most celebrated books, was written in 1987 and set in 1873, after the end of the American Civil War. Our protagonists are former slave Sethe and her teenage daughter Denver. Their home is haunted by a ghost which they believe to be that of Sethe’s own eldest daughter.

When a former slave from the same plantation on which Sethe once worked, a man named Paul D, turns up at their home, he drives the ghost away. Paul D then invites the mother and daughter to a carnival, and when they return home, a young woman named Beloved is waiting for them on their front porch.

Beloved is a story of slavery, of its traumas and the ways in which it defines a person, their family, and their community. It is a classic of American fiction, a true masterpiece, and one of the very best historical fiction books.

Buy a copy of Beloved here!

Finger Bone by Hiroki Takahashi

Translated from the Japanese by Takami Nieda

finger bone hiroki takahashi

Novels about World War II are a dime a dozen. Some are excellent; some are forgettable and even offensive (looking at you, John Boyne, you terrible, terrible writer). Finger Bone is one of those rare novels that transcends its genre. This is a masterpiece of Japanese war fiction that encourages us to wrestle with that age-old question: where is the good in war?

Our protagonist is a young, nameless Japanese soldier in Papua New Guinea. As this short novel progresses, we watch him make and lose friends, connect with frightened locals, and survive injury and illness.

Taking place partly in a field hospital and partly in the thick of the jungle, Finger Bone is wonderfully reminiscent of the poems of Wilfred Owen. A raw tale about the darkest, bleakest moments of warfare. This is about innocent men suffering fatal wounds, struggling to overcome malaria, forging bonds, and watching those bonds get cut in the blink of an eye.

Few war novels have such a raw, powerful, painful effect on the reader as Finger Bone does, and it does so in such a short space of time. Read it in one sitting, and it’ll change you forever.

Buy a copy of Finger Bone here!

For Thy Great Pain Have Mercy on My Little Pain by Victoria MacKenzie

for thy great pain have mercy on my little pain

Easily one of the most raw, beautiful, and poetic historical fiction books you’ll ever read, For Thy Great Pain Have Mercy on My Little Pain is a true triumph of feminist literature. This 160-page novel tells the story of two medieval women who existed at the same time, both of whom wrote two valuable texts that were almost lost to time — one of which was the first known book written in English by a woman.

Julian saw a series of visions of Christ at a young age. This, and the loss of so many loved ones to disease, led her to become an anchoress, locked away in a church cell for decades. In this holy and revered, but dismal and oppressive role, Julian hears the stories and confessions of those who visit her window.

Margery, a younger woman, has also seen visions of Christ, and even takes to the street to share them with the public. This behaviour is risky, and makes her a villain to friends and strangers alike. A truly beautiful piece of feminist historical fiction, this novel is one-of-a-kind and a must-read, whether you’re a fan of historical fiction books or not.

Buy a copy here!

Our Hideous Progeny by C.E. McGill

our hideous progeny

For their debut novel, Scottish author decided to write a spiritual sequel to Frankenstein. That kind of choice takes guts to make, but C.E. McGill proved they could do it.

Set in the 1850s, at a time of scientific change and advancement in Europe, Our Hideous Progeny follows Victor Frankenstein’s great niece, Mary. She and her husband are desperate to make names for themselves in the world of science — specifically geology and palaeontology.

At a time when the newly-discovered fossils of prehistoric creatures have taken the world by storm, for a woman to discover that her great uncle, mad though he may have been, might have been able to reanimate a dead thing and conquer death, is a very exciting thing to learn.

Mary and her husband Henry also have their own marital issues. She lost a newborn child and he has been secretly gambling away their money instead of dealing with his grief. Then there’s the subtly growing friendship, and potentially romantic bond, between Mary and her husband’s younger sister.

Our Hideous Progeny is a novel that juggles so much — speculative science, gothic themes and atmosphere, whispers and backstabbing, betrayal and hope and, perhaps most importantly, dinosaurs.

Buy a copy of Our Hideous Progeny here!

At Night All Blood is Black by David Diop

Translated from the French by Anna Moschovakis

at night all blood is black david diop

At Night All Blood is Black, which won the International Booker Prize in 2021, is a heartrending historical novel by Senegalese-French author David Diop. This World War I novel tells the story of Alfa, a Senegalese man stationed in the French trenches.

When the novel opens, Alfa is cradling the dying body of his friend Mademba, whose body has been torn open. From here, At Night All Blood is Black uses the backdrop of trench warfare to explore the relevant themes of racism, humanity, and masculinity.

This is a story of binaries: the in-group and out-group; us vs. them; Black and white; hero and coward. This is a French historical novel that explores the toxic side of male camaraderie and how racism continues to live and thrive even while staring death in the face.

While you do need a steeled mind and a strong stomach to read it, At Night All Blood is Black is certainly one of the best historical fiction books of recent years.

Buy a copy of At Night All Blood is Black here!

The Miniaturist by Jessie Burton

the miniaturist

Jessie Burton’s debut novel, The Miniaturist, remains her most beloved and successful novel; a piece of historical fiction that propelled her into the realm of admired and respected contemporary British authors. Set in Amsterdam, 1686, at the height of the Dutch East India Company’s power, The Miniaturist follows Nella, the young wife of the successful merchant trader Johannes Brandt.

As a wedding gift, Brandt presents Nella with a detailed and beautiful miniature copy of their home, which she is invited to decorate and add to by visiting an enigmatic local miniaturist who will provide what she needs.

The Brandt home is one of secrets and paranoia. Johannes’ sister Marin also lives there, and she is a particularly venomous and closed-off woman whom Nella is fearful of. As revelations come to light and Nella begins to understand her husband and his family better, her world begins to shift and fall off its axis.

The Miniaturist is an exciting, exhilarating read, defined by its twists and revelations. One of the most successful historical novels of this century, and for good reason.

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Ithaca by Claire North

ithaca claire north

Renowned author of science fiction novels Claire North (pseudonym of Catherine Webb) turned her attention to Greek history and mythology to bring us a feminist retelling with Penelope, wife of Odysseus, at its heart. Odysseus has been absent for eighteen years. He sailed with an army to fight in the Trojan War, and while other leaders and warriors returned, he never has. And so, the suitors have come knocking.

As she sits and weaves a funeral shroud, Penelope is inundated with suitors looking to marry her and take Odysseus’ place on the throne of Ithaca. Her son, Telemachus — who never knew his father — insists that Odysseus will return, and raiders are threatening the delicate peace of Penelope’s kingdom.

The story of Ithaca is told by the goddess Hera, and she provides us with a host of colourful, mostly female, characters, fleshing out the world of Ithaca and the life of Penelope. Ithaca is an excellent piece of Greek mythology retold with a feminist twist, and one of the best historical fiction books of recent years.

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The Bewitching by Jill Dawson

the bewitching

Written by renowned author Jill Dawson, The Bewitching is a literary historical novel based on real events which took place in the Cambridgeshire village of Warboys in the late 1500s.

After village local Alice Samuel visits her new neighbours, the Throckmortons, she is inexplicably accused of witchcraft by their daughter Jane, who has recently been suffering from fits. Though her accusation is strange and baseless, it planets a seed, and the family begin to wonder if Alice has in fact somehow cursed Jane and other members of the Throckmorton family.

We watch their suspicions grow through the eyes of their faithful maid, Martha, while also occasionally turning to Alice to better understand her life, her husband, and the village itself. This is a beautiful literary novel about paranoia, suspicion, patriarchy, and power; one of the smartest and best historical fiction books of recent years.

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The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett

The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett

Historical fiction, by its definition, can take us almost anywhere in time, but many often focus on more recent centuries.

Ken Follett’s colossal historical epic, The Pillars of the Earth, takes us all the way back to 12th century Britain. Its sequels jump forward in time until we reach the Elizabethan period. Despite its setting, the town of Kingsbridge, being fictional, many of the novel’s other elements are factual and delightfully detailed.

This is a novel that follows the building of a cathedral in the aforementioned town, and is set against a civil war known as the Anarchy, which was fought between England and Normandy. The war lasted for fifteen years and serves as the backdrop for this novel, with many historical events, such as the infamous sinking of the White Ship, being captured in this novel.

Much like Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall, this is a novel that dramatises the politics and people of a time in British history that is so far from us today, it almost feels like legend. An incredible epic, and one of the most beloved and successful historical fiction books to have ever come out of the UK.

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The Manningtree Witches by A.K. Blakemore

The Manningtree Witches

The Manningtree Witches, one of my own personal favourite novels, begins in 1643, in a place almost devoid of men, after so many went off to fight in the English Civil War. We follow Rebecca West and her bitter mother Beldam West, as they come face-to-face with the Witchfinder General.

This is a novel which reveals the blackest hearts of men and the true power and reason behind the witch hunts of Europe and America. But The Manningtree Witches is also a novel about family ties and female friendships; about the power of community bonds in the face of oppression.

We follow a battle between the powerful and the vulnerable, the men and the women, the suspicious and the suspect, the strong and the weak. The Manningtree Witches is a beautiful short novel about patriarchy, written with wit and strength and stunning language that evokes the time period perfectly. One of the most poetically beautiful and best historical novels you’ll ever read.

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The Glutton by A.K. Blakemore

the glutton ak blakemore

A.K. Blakemore’s second historical novel continues her immaculate trend of injecting poetry into prose, and writing tales of tragedy and hardship with so much beauty and elegance.

The Glutton is based on the real-life story of Tarare, a young Frenchman born near Lyon in the year 1772. When the novel begins, Tarare is in his late twenties and on his deathbed, telling his tale to a nun who believes him an offence; an abomination, but who is curious enough to listen and learn about The Bottomless Man.

Tarare is said to have been a scrawny man with an unslakable hunger; a man who gained fame by publicly eating live animals, household objects, and possibly even a human child. All of this hearsay is injected into the novel, and we read on as Tarare is born, raised, leaves home, and wanders headlong into the French revolution.

The Glutton is a stunningly written tale full of gruesome events, visceral language, and unforgivable acts. But it’s also a politically-charged tale of class and poverty. This is the unbelievable tale of a young man growing up, being beaten and abandoned, finding a family, and witnessing a revolution. Easily one of the best historical fiction books of recent years.

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The Mountains Sing by Nguyen Phan Que Mai

The Mountains Sing by Nguyen Phan Que Mai

For fans of Pachinko (above), The Mountains Sing is a sweeping family saga set against the tumultuous and disastrous backdrop of change and war in 20th century Vietnam. Here, we follow the Tran family across decades of political shifts, beginning with their relocation from their own rural farm to the city of Hanoi during the rise of Communism.

This leads to the beginnings of the Vietnam War, which tears the Tran family apart as some of the men travel to Ho Chi Minh to bear arms and fight. Nguyen Phan Que Mai herself has discussed the difficulties of writing this novel in English, and the pride she felt in writing something so comprehensive.

She has mentioned how the family’s matriarch is the grandmother she had always wished for, and how this novel was born from her own experiences living through the Vietnam War. A wonderfully personal tale, but also one that takes us across generations and landscapes, painting a vivid and uncomfortably real image of 20th century Vietnam.

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The Adventures of China Iron by Gabriela Cabezon Camara

Translated from the Spanish by Fiona Mackintosh and Iona Macintyre

the adventures of china iron

Another favourite of mine, The Adventures of China Iron is a unique kind of historical novel; one that prioritises queer joy in the face of patriarchy. Set against the wild and rugged landscape of 19th century Argentina, this is the story of a young woman, after all hope has left her, finding love and adventure in spite of the odds.

The titular China Iron was abused. She married and sired the child of a singer who left her. She gave that child up. Now, she is alone on the road, with nothing to her name.

As her true story gets underway, China is picked up on the road by a Scottish woman named Liz, who is looking to make her fortune in this new and mysterious land. Soon after their journey begins, China begins to crave Liz. She is a woman who feels a great deal – she lusts and yearns; she wants to love and be loved.

The Adventures of China Iron is a proudly queer and feminist book that, rather than getting angry, laughs in the face of the rigid, conservative, patriarchal status quo.A wonderful adventure across a picturesque landscape, a tale of queer and feminist liberation, and one of the best historical fiction books you’ll ever read.

Buy a copy of The Adventures of China Iron here!

The Vaster Wilds by Lauren Groff

the vaster wilds

Lauren Groff’s intensely emotive and visceral novel about a nameless English girl taken across the ocean to the New World, only to continue her life of servitude and confront both deathly cold and famine, before escaping into the wilderness, is one of the most immersive historical novels you’re ever likely to read.

This is a transportive novel that is light on plot. Instead, it simply places us in the mind of a girl in the 17th century who has fled her colonialist settlement in the dark of night. We follow her as she battles the cold and her own hunger, as she marvels at the natural world, and as she muses on her relationship to her land, her people, and her faith.

Through flashbacks, we learn about her life in London, the people she served, and what happened to cause her to flee. Groff’s language stuns and immerses; it is harsh and poetic. This is a truly immersive and transportive tale of survival, fear, grief, and god. A difficult read but a sincerely stunning one.

Buy a copy of The Vaster Wilds here!

The Wolf Den by Elodie Harper

The Wolf Den by Elodie Harper

When we think of Pompeii, most of us think of its destruction by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, but here in The Wolf Den, Elodie Harper presents us with the Pompeii that was. The Wolf Den tells the story of a brothel and a woman named Amara, sold after the death of her beloved father. This is a story of one woman’s survival; Amara uses her own wits, wiles, and strengths to live against the odds.

The Wolf Den is a staggeringly successful piece of historical fiction that explores the unique strengths of a woman, rather than painting her as strong by the archetypal male standards and frameworks.

This is a book that puts the spotlight on sex workers, reminding us of their strengths, their tenacity, their fight. It’s also a novel about friendship, as Amara makes friends for different purposes, as cynical means of survival and also as bonds to keep herself and others alive and proud. The beginning of an epic trilogy, The Wolf Den is one of the most refreshingly unique and spirited historical fiction books out there.

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The Court Dancer by Kyung-sook Shin

Translated from the Korean by Anton Hur

The Court Dancer Kyung-Sook Shin

Based on a true story — set in the final years of 19th century Korea as China, Russia, and Japan are threatening the nation trapped between them — The Court Dancer is a love story. This is the romantic tale of a man and a woman from two different worlds, colliding in a moment of beauty.

And while that is true, this is also the tale of a woman born without a family, adopted into the courts of the Joseon Dynasty, romanced by a French diplomat, and whisked away across the waves to foreign shores. All the while, she is trying to find the time to understand who she is, what she is, and what she wants out of a life that has never really been hers.

Written by one of South Korea’s most beloved and celebrated authors, The Court Dancer is a story about the commodification of cultures, their art, and even their own people. It is about the ways in which colonists and powerful men wilfully forget the humanity of those they treat like toys and property.

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Mary and the Birth of Frankenstein

Translated from the Dutch by Laura Watkinson

mary and the birth of frankenstein

Mary and the Birth of Frankenstein is a dedication to the life and the genius of Mary Shelley by Dutch author Anne Eekhout, set across two different summers during the teenage years of the Frankenstein author’s life. The first of these summers is 1812, when Mary was only fourteen. The second is 1816, the infamous summer spent at Lake Geneva with her husband and their friend Lord Byron.

That summer of 1816 led to the creation of Frankenstein, as the group challenged one another to write horror stories and read them by the fire. We spend time with Mary as she deals with the loss of her first-born child and the fear that her newborn son William might share the same fate.

The summer of 1812 was spent in Dundee, where Mary bonded with a grief-stricken girl of her own age. The two became fast friends, and that friendship eventually blossomed into something far more romantic and intense. We read about this summer in a series of journal entries from the young Mary herself.

Mary and the Birth of Frankenstein is a gorgeous piece of gothic historical fiction about a young woman dealing with loss, learning about herself, falling in love, and so much more, all before she ever wrote her masterpiece.

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The Empusium by Olga Tokarczuk

Translated from the Polish by Antonia Lloyd-Jones

The Empusium by Olga Tokarczuk

Set in 1913, Nobel Prize-winner Olga Tokarczuk’s brilliantly feminist tale of historical horror, The Empusium, follows a young Polish man named Wojnicz, who is suffering with tuberculosis and so has arrived at a treatment centre up in the mountains of Germany. During his stay, he talks with the other men, many of whom often enjoy discussing how women are inferior in both body and mind.

But early in the novel, the wife of the centre’s owner is found dead, presumably by suicide. Her death leads to a series of strange events, and compounds the conversations being had by the men there. These men also imbibe a strange concoction that does strange things to their minds. The story becomes more unhinged as the absence of women is felt so strongly. Another work of genius by Tokarczuk.

The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

the book thief zusak

Written by Australian author Markus Zusak, The Book Thief is his most successful and celebrated novel. If you haven’t read this novel, you might have seen its very good film adaptation, starring the charismatic Geoffrey Rush and Emily Watson. Narrated by Death itself, The Book Thief follows the life of a young German girl named Liesel.

Similar to Hans Fallada’s Alone in Berlin, this is a novel about ordinary German civilians looking on helplessly as their country becomes corrupted by the spread of fascism. The novel begins with Liesel losing her brother and being adopted by a kindly couple: Hans and Rosa, before befriending a local boy named Rudy.

The book’s name comes from Liesel’s small act of rebellion as she saves a book from a bonfire as the Nazis engage in their infamous book-burning. This is a dense and engrossing novel full of heart; a strikingly human piece of historical fiction.

Buy a copy of The Book Thief here!

The Corset by Laura Purcell

the corset laura purcell

Laura Purcell is an incredible British author who brings so much life to the genres of gothic, horror, and historical fiction, and The Corset remains her sharpest work. A dual narrative split between a young wannabe scientist from a middle-class family and an incarcerated girl who believes she has magically murdered several people, The Corset is a dizzying and exquisite historical novel.

The narrative of this book shifts back and forth between the interviews and life events of one woman, and the biographical flashbacks of the other, as she explains how she ended up in prison with the label of “murderess”. The question of whether or not anything supernatural at all is going on is such an alluring one. The Corset is a true page-turner and one of the best historical fiction books of today.

Enticing, mysterious, enigmatic, and engrossing, The Corset is a novel that encompasses many different genres, and it does so with flourish and expertise.

Buy a copy of The Corset here!

The Whispering Muse by Laura Purcell

the whispering muse

Laura Purcell has been writing excellent gothic, horror, and historical novels for a while, but her fifth foray into the genre — The Whispering Muse — might be her masterpiece. Set in a West End theatre during the 19th century, The Whispering Muse follows a young woman named Jenny who has been hired as the dresser for the theatre’s lead actress.

But Jenny has been hired under the condition that she keep a close eye on Lilith, whom the wife of the theatre’s owner believes cannot be trusted. As she gets closer to both the owner’s wife and the talented actress Lilith, Jenny finds that her loyalties are torn.

Making things more difficult is the rumour that Lilith is in possession of a cursed item, and has made a deal with tragic muse Melpomene in order to secure success as an actress. The Whispering Muse is a daring and dark novel, even amongst other great gothic novels. It plays with the reader and the characters in ways only a gothic novel can.

Buy a copy of The Whispering Muse here!

The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead

The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead

Colson Whitehead’s masterpiece The Underground Railroad won the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and the Arthur C. Clarke Award. This is an amazing piece of American historical fiction that reimagines the titular Underground Railroad as an actual underground network of train lines.

We follow Cora, a slave in the 19th century American South, who escapes her Georgia plantation with the help of fellow slave Caesar. The pair hunt for the Underground Railroad and encounter both friends and enemies along the way. They commit desperate deeds to ensure their survival.

This is an incredible work of American historical fiction that has since cemented Colson Whitehead as one of the great American writers of the 21st century.

Buy a copy of The Underground Railroad here!

Regeneration by Pat Barker

regeneration pat barker

Arguably best known for her feminist retelling of the Trojan War, The Silence of the Girls (below), Pat Barker also penned an illuminating trilogy of books about World War 2: the Regeneration trilogy. Written in the early 1990s, this trilogy of historical novels consists of Regeneration, The Eye in the Door, and The Ghost Road.

Inspired by the lived experiences of her own grandfather, a World War I soldier, Regeneration explores the effects of war on the minds of those soldiers that live through it. Regeneration also features fictionalised versions of real-life WWI poets Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Own.

Set in Craiglockhart War Hospital in Edinburgh, this is an anti-war novel that follows psychiatrist Dr. W.H.R. Rivers, as well as the aforementioned Sassoon and Owen, as soldiers in the hospital are being treated for PTSD (what we once called shell shock). Regeneration and its sequels remain some of the best historical fiction books of all time.

Buy a copy of Regeneration here!

The Silence of the Girls by Pat Barker

The Silence of the Girls by Pat Barker

Pat Barker’s harsh but illuminating feminist historical novel retells the story of Homer’s classic The Iliad from the perspectives of ordinary people, rather than heroes. The Silence of the Girls retells the story of the Trojan War from the perspective of Briseis — queen turned captive turned prize for Achilles as one of many spoils of the war.

Pat Barker has a knack for taking eras and stories that typically focus on the masculine and the heroic, and putting the focus instead on the tragedy of it all. She did it with Regeneration and World War I (above), and she’s done it again with The Silence of the Girls.

This is one of the most powerful classic retellings you’re ever likely to read; a novel that highlights the darkest, most desperate, most deplorable acts of warfare. A feminist piece of historical fiction of the highest calibre.

Buy a copy of The Silence of the Girls here!

The Leviathan by Rosie Andrews

the leviathan rosie andrews

Set in 1643, during the English Civil War, The Leviathan is a creeping, gothic piece of historical fiction that will have you gripping the pages like the wheel of an out-of-control car.

Our narrator protagonist, Thomas Treadwater, is a young man who has returned from the war to his father’s rural farm. His younger sister is rather out of sorts because she believes that their new servant has been seducing and manipulating their ageing father.

On occasion, chapters shift forward to Thomas as an old man, married and comfortable, but haunted by something in his house. Something which he must periodically feed and watch over.

The Leviathan is Laura Purcell meets Stuart Turton with a glorious and delightful campness and atmosphere reminiscent of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. One of the most fun and thrilling historical novels you will ever get your hands on, and one that you’ll definitely tear through at pace.

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Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi

homegoing yaa gyasi

To consider that American author Yaa Gyasi’s Homegoing is a debut novel is simply mind-blowing. This is an extraordinary debut work of fiction, the kind you so rarely see. Homegoing is an enormous epic novel which spans continents and decades, generations of lives and the entire history of the United States.

Homegoing begins with two sisters, and the threads which lead on from their lives. These are lives that they had next to no control over, and yet shaped not only what they would become, but what the generations that followed would be. From Ghana to the US, this incredible novel by an extraordinary Black writer is one-of-a-kind, and a real masterpiece of American historical fiction.

Buy a copy of Homegoing here!

Briefly, A Delicious Life by Nell Stevens

briefly a delicious life

Nell Stevens’ debut novel, Briefly, A Delicious Life, is one of the most sensual, sexy, and satisfying historical novels you’re ever likely to read. Similar to Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet (above), this novel places a celebrated male artist at the centre but focuses its attention instead on those sorely overlooked people who surrounded him.

Here, that artist is Chopin, who has contracted consumption and has come to Mallorca for rest and recovery. With him is French author George Sand, with whom Chopin has been having a love affair. Our narrator, however, is the ghost of a young girl who died five hundred years earlier, haunts their new home, and quickly becomes smitten with the beautiful George Sand.

She haunts the Charterhouse and admires Sand from the shadows, digging into her memories and learning more about her — the masculine clothes she wears and the male name she has adopted. Briefly, A Delicious Life is a beautiful historical novel that revels in pleasure: sexual desire, feminine sensuality, delicious food, beautiful scenery.

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The North Water by Ian McGuire

the north water ian mcguire

The often overlooked The North Water is a brutal piece of historical fiction; a must-read for fans of Jack London’s novel The Sea Wolf. Set aboard a British whaling vessel called the Volunteer, this is a simple novel about brutality, depravity, and the ways in which the harshness of nature and humanity can be hard to tell apart.

Aboard this ship, disgraced and broke ex-army surgeon Patrick Sumner must face the inhuman terror of harpooner Henry Drax, a brute who delights in bloodshed. The North Water isn’t for everyone; echoing the brutal tone and style of Cormac McCarthy, this is a novel of intensity and aggression. A one-of-a-kind historical novel.

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The Key in the Lock by Beth Underdown

the key in the lock

The Key in the Lock is an exciting and relatively unique piece of historical fiction, in that it is a drama which doubles as a compelling murder mystery story.

The Key in the Lock is a narrative that is split chronologically. We follow both the adult Ivy, who lost her son in the Great War, and the child Ivy of the late Victorian period, emotionally scarred by a dreadful fire. The mystery of the novel surrounds the fire itself, the boy who died in that fire, and the reasons behind it.

As a child, Ivy was the daughter of the village doctor. When the fire broke out, she and her father were called to the big house, and became tangled in the web of lies surrounding the cause of the blaze.

As an adult, Ivy has not only lost her son, but her husband is also incredibly sick, and as we flit back to the past we see how she and her husband’s relationship initially began. The Key in the Lock is a shining example of both historical British fiction and the legacy genre of murder mystery novels.

Buy a copy of The Key in the Lock here!

Atonement by Ian McEwan

Atonement by Ian McEwan

Not only is Atonement the greatest literary achievement of Ian McEwan’s career, it also received a staggering and beautiful film adaptation from director Joe Wright. Wright is known for his adaptations of literary works, which also include Pride and Prejudice and Anna Karenina, but his talents shone brightest with Atonement.

McEwan’s historical novel moves from pre-war England, into World War II, and ending in 1999. Our narrator-protagonist is Briony, who is writing the novel at age 77. We spend time in her pre-war childhood and learn about her relationships, the lies she tells, and the mistakes she must live with.

We also watch her grow up through World War II, and see how the actions of her childhood continue to reverberate throughout her life, and the lives of those around her. An intimate, sensitive, and provocative novel, Atonement remains one of the very best historical fiction books ever written.

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The Pull of the Stars by Emma Donoghue

the pull of the stars emma donoghue

The Pull of the Stars made a huge splash upon its release, rightly so, and is now unquestionably Emma Donoghue’s most successful novel. The Canada-based Irish author penned a story of love in a time of war and disease. Set in a Dublin hospital during World War I, as the Spanish Flu slowly ravages the British Isles, Julia Power is a nurse who must help young mothers and comfort those stricken by this strange new illness.

Over the course of just three days, Nurse Power meets two women — one on the lam and the other a new volunteer — and their stories tangle together into a kind of melody that sings louder and louder as The Pull of the Stars progresses. A unique book amongst war-based narratives, this is a claustrophobic and intimate tale that ranks highly amongst even the very best historical fiction books.

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Haven by Emma Donoghue

Haven by Emma Donoghue

Following the massive success of The Pull of the Stars (above), Donoghue dug even further back in time to the 7th century. Haven is a historical novel that tells the story of the founding of Skellig Michael, an isolated island off the coast of Ireland. Today, Skellig Michael is perhaps best known for its use in The Last Jedi as the place where Luke Skywalker retreated into hiding.

In the 7th century, however — as Donoghue tells it in Haven — the island was discovered by a priest and two monks after the priest experienced a prophetic dream. Haven is the story of that dream and the subsequent journey the three men undertook. A beautiful tale of faith and discovery, Haven is a truly unique novel amongst the best historical fiction books.

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North Woods by Daniel Mason

north woods daniel mason

North Woods is a literary piece of historical fiction that traces the life of the United States via the history of a single home and the many people who occupy it over the course of four centuries.

We begin with a runaway couple of Puritans who make a home for themselves in a New England log cabin. Soon enough, the husband is gone and the wife, now elderly, helps a woman and her child escape capture. Jumping forward several decades, the house becomes the home and livelihood of an English soldier who swaps his rifle for a shovel and grows a successful apple orchard.

After this, we follow his daughters, then the lonely life of a lovelorn painter, and so it goes until we reach the present day. And many of these interconnected stories of lives lived are written in an epistolary style: journals, letters, reports, newspaper clippings, and more. A stunning work of literary historical fiction.

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The Revolt by Clara Dupont-Monod

Translated from the French by Ruth Diver

the revolt clara dupont-monod

French historical novel The Revolt retells the story of the 12th century queen of France and England, the legendary Eleanor of Aquitaine. This short novel covers the majority of her life, and injects the narrative with themes and an atmosphere reminiscent of Mantel’s Wolf Hall and Shakespeare’s Macbeth.

But what makes The Revolt so smart in its telling is the novel’s narrative perspective. The Revolt is told to us by Richard Lionheart, son of Eleanor. This tight and pacey medieval epic begins with Richard painting a vivid picture of his mother: her opportunistic mind and her venomous words.

Eleanor of Aquitaine is married to Henry Plantagenet, king of England, and she has just decided to gather three of her sons and start a revolt against her own husband, their father. The Revolt is one of the very best historical novels. It succeeds at everything that makes a novel great.

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The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid

the seven husbands of evelyn hugo

The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo follows the story of Monique Grant, an unknown magazine reporter chosen by reclusive Hollywood icon Evelyn Hugo to write her biography.

As Monique delves into Evelyn’s glamorous and scandalous life, she uncovers tales of ambition, friendship, and forbidden love spanning from the 1950s to the 1980s.  As the two women form a connection, it becomes apparent that their lives intersect in tragic and irreversible ways.

This captivating historical novel takes readers on a journey through the glamour and depravity of old Hollywood, exploring the harsh realities of fame and the struggle of confronting the truth, no matter the cost. This is an American historical novel that really took the world by storm upon its release, and for good reason. It remains a captivating tale and a must-read.

Buy a copy of The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo here!

The Bass Rock by Evie Wyld

the bass rock evie wyld

Interweaving three narratives, set in three time periods, The Bass Rock is a gothic historical novel about family, duty, mental health, and patriarchal oppression.

Our first thread takes place in the modern day, with Viv — a grieving woman with a lot of trauma and an attachment to alcohol — having been tasked with clearing out her family home in Scotland. The home was once inhabited by her grandmother, Ruth.

In her own narrative — set in the aftermath of World War II — Ruth is married to a widower, is playing stepmother to his two sons, and is also grieving the recent loss of her brother. Our third narrative thread carries the reader back to the 18th century, with a woman named Sarah having been accused of witchcraft by her local village, and running for her life with the help of a vicar and his son.

The unravelling of these threads leads to a haunting, twisted, gothic narrative about oppression, toxic masculinity, vulnerability, and abuse. The Bass Rock is dark, unsettling, and tied together with incredible writing and plotting. An exquisite piece of historical fiction.

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The Cautious Traveller’s Guide to the Wastelands by Sarah Brooks

The Cautious Traveller's Guide to the Wastelands by sarah brooks

One of those rare novels that blends multiple genres with a seamless kind of grace, The Cautious Traveller’s Guide to the Wastelands is a dark, horror-tinged work of fantastical historical fiction. The novel is set entirely (or more-or-less entirely) aboard the Trans-Siberian Express at the end of the nineteenth century. But in this alternate history, Siberia is a dangerous and strange land in which monsters dwell and an illness can warp the minds of unsuspecting people.

Our protagonists are a Russian woman with ties to the train company, a young Chinese orphan who knows nothing but the train, and a disgraced English naturalist. As they journey from Beijing to Moscow, the three encounter dangers and mysteries, and we learn more and more about the train itself and the dangers that lay beyond it, out in that so-called “wasteland”.

Claustrophobic and foggy, The Cautious Traveller’s Guide to the Wastelands is a tantalising work of fantastical, gothic, alternative history. It keeps mystery at its core in order to make itself a real page-turner, but it is also full of heart, as we come to know and attach ourselves to these three likeable protagonists.

Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood

Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood

Canadian author Margaret Atwood made a name for herself with her 1985 novel The Handmaid’s Tale, a modern classic that will live on forever. She has also proven herself adept at writing speculative science fiction, as well as historical fiction. Alias Grace, winner of Canada’s Giller Prize and shortlisted for the Booker Prize, is a fictionalised account of the real-life murders of Thomas Kinnear and his housekeeper Nancy Montgomery in 1843.

Through retelling and fictionalising this story, Atwood created the character of Dr. Simon Jordan, who interviews our protagonist, Grace Marks, who has been convicted and imprisoned for the murders. The interview takes us through Grace’s life as Jordan searches for proof that Grace is not a criminal, but rather a hysteric.

While it isn’t her most famous novel, Alias Grace remains a beloved piece of fiction from Atwood and one of the most well-loved and best historical fiction books.

Buy a copy of Alias Grace here!

Pandora by Susan Stokes-Chapman

pandora

Set during the Georgian period of UK history, Pandora is a somewhat fresh take on the genre of British historical novels, merging UK history with Greek mythology.

Our protagonist, the titular Pandora (who goes by Dora), is a young aspiring jewellery artist who lives with her oppressive uncle in an antiques shop once owned by Dora’s parents. Helen and Elijah were accomplished and respected antiquarians, but they died at a dig in Greece when Dora was a child.

Since then, her uncle has reduced the reputation of their shop to tatters by swindling their clientele with cheap tat, much to Dora’s deep disgrace and ire.

Dora’s uncle, however, has recently obtained an important find: a Greek jar (or pithos). Dora is curious about what he is up to, and is also in desperate need of inspiration for her art if she wants to find success as a jewellery designer. These two curiosities lead her to enlist the help of Edward Lawrence, an aspiring antiquarian. Together, they will learn the origins of this jar and what her uncle plans to do with it.

An exciting mystery that blends Greek history, art, and mythology with the Georgian period to wonderful effect. An essential British historical novel.

Buy a copy of Pandora here!

The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje

the english patient

Written by celebrated Canadian author Michael Ondaatje, The English Patient is a multi-award-winning novel that also inspired a multi-award-winning film adaptation. Set during the Italian Campaign of World War II, The English Patient remains one of the most influential pieces of wartime historical fiction. The titular English patient is an assumed Englishman burned beyond recognition.

The story of The English Patient moves between our patient’s pre-burn memories and the current events set in an Italian monastery, in which he is being looked after by a Canadian nurse named Hana. Universally celebrated and dearly beloved, The English Patient is essential reading and one of the very best historical fiction books ever written.

Buy a copy of The English Patient here!

She Who Became The Sun by Shelley Parker-Chan

she who became the sun

She Who Became The Sun is a genderqueer retelling of the origin story of one of China’s most iconic historical figures: Zhu Yuanzhang, founding emperor of the Ming Dynasty, and a fantastic piece of Chinese historical fiction.

Set in 14th century China, She Who Became The Sun takes the story of Zhu Yuanzhang — the legendary tale of a peasant-turned-monk-turned-rebel-leader-turned-emperor — and transmutes it into a beautiful fantasy-inspired genderqueer epic.

In its first chapter, She Who Became The Sun shows us a peasant family on the brink of starvation. Though a fortune teller has told the father that his son will find greatness, the father and son are soon killed, and all that’s left is the fateless daughter.

This daughter takes the name Zhu Chongba, the name of her brother, disguises herself as a man, seeks refuge at a monastery, and from there rises up through the ranks of a rebel army as they gain power against the Mongols who currently occupy China. There are few historical novels as epic in scale and scope as this one, and the fact that it is a beautiful genderqueer story makes it all the more exciting and tantalising.

Buy a copy of She Who Became the Sun here!

Fingersmith by Sarah Waters

fingersmith sarah waters

Sarah Waters has made a name for herself as an author of queer historical romance novels, mostly set in or near the 19th Century. And the beefy Fingersmith is, by far, her most popular work. Serving as the inspiration for Korean film director Park Chan-wook’s masterpiece The Handmaiden, Fingersmith is a work of absolute beauty. One of the most iconic historical novels in existence.

The titular fingersmith is a London thief named Sue; an orphan and a survivor raised to steal from the rich. When her enigmatic associate, known to everyone as Gentleman, comes to her with a job, she gladly accepts. The job takes Sue to a country estate, wherein she must play the role of maid to a naive young heiress while Gentleman slowly begins to court her for a fortune that he will eventually split with Sue.

Unfortunately, Sue begins to fall in love with the rich heiress, and what follows is an incredible series of impossible-to-predict twists and turns. Fingersmith is one of the most gorgeously-written historical novels ever published. Poetic prose dances on the page. And it is a celebration of raw, queer love, to boot.

Buy a copy of Fingersmith here!

Human Acts by Han Kang

Translated from the Korean by Deborah Smith

Human Acts by Han Kang

Legendary Korean author was celebrated the world over for her daring and subversive novel The Vegetarian, which won the International Booker Prize in 2017. But it’s her experimental and bleak novel Human Acts, set amidst the Gwangju Uprising of May 1980, that presents her work at its most brazen and difficult.

The Gwangju Uprising was a moment of intense political change, as the people of South Korea rose up against their government’s military dictatorship. Our protagonist is the dead boy Kang Dong-ho, and this short novel takes us from 1980 to the present day via the people who knew him and the lives they have led.

Feverish and strange, but also raw and heart-wrenching, Human Acts stands alone amongst other best historical fiction books as something truly monumental and rewarding.

Buy a copy of Human Acts here!

Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders

Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders

George Saunders is celebrated for his craft as a writer of short stories, but his debut novel, Lincoln in the Bardo, immediately struck a chord with readers and went on to win the Booker Prize. A bizarre and charming piece of historical fiction which I have read multiple times, Lincoln in the Bardo follows the son of Abraham Lincoln, William, as he is caught in a space between life and death.

This space, the titular bardo, is part of buddhist belief, and here is used by Saunders to explore the grief of Lincoln, and as a means of flexing the author’s craft as a storyteller. As we follow young William, we meet other ghosts caught in the bardo whom he befriends, and we also see glimpses of the world of the living, and how Honest Abe is coping with the loss of his son.

This is a beautiful and delightfully unique piece of historical fiction unlike anything else you’ll ever read. Surreal but not off-putting, this is one you’ll never forget.

Buy a copy of Lincoln in the Bardo here!

Sistersong by Lucy Holland

sistersong lucy holland

Upon its release, Sistersong was a very welcome surprise addition to the modern library of historical novels: a medieval novel with sprinklings of magic. Inspired by an English folktale from the era in which it’s set, Sistersong tells the tale of three siblings, all children of King Cador. Britain is divided and the Saxons are at the gate.

What sets Sistersong even further apart as a historical novel is the fact that one of the king’s three children — our three protagonists — is a transgender man. Queer people of all kinds, including my own fellow trans people, have always existed, and that should be proudly celebrated and explored through historical fiction.

Sistersong is a thrilling, political, dynamic tale of family, sisterhood, and war. A real treat amongst the very best historical fiction books.

Buy a copy of Sistersong here!

Outlawed by Anna North

outlawed anna north

Outlawed is an outstanding and joyous piece of American historical fiction. Set in the often romanticised and exhaustingly masculine world of the Wild West, Outlawed is a novel that tells the story of an outlaw gang of women, led by a non-binary character known only as The Kid.

Similar to The Adventures of China Iron (above), this is a queer feminist historical novel that celebrates women and non-binary people. This historical novel t emphasises joy and freedom rather than decrying the sexist state of the world.

Outlawed follows the story of Ada, daughter of a midwife who fails to get pregnant herself. Soon, she is ostracised and sent to a convent, from which she escapes, only to fall in with the Hole in the Wall gang. Ada’s story is tragic and uplifting in equal measure, with the gang itself being a true inspiration to readers looking for some fun and adventure in the best historical fiction books.

Buy a copy of Outlawed here!

Washington Black by Esi Edugyan

washington black

It’s challenging to make a novel as fun to read as it is hard-hitting and powerful, but Esi Edugyan has pulled it off with aplomb with her historical novel Washington Black. Washington Black is as much an adventure novel as it is a piece of historical fiction, telling the tale of a young slave boy on a sugar plantation. The titular Washington Black is owned by one brother and freed by the other.

The second brother, an inventor, takes Black as his assistant as he builds a flying machine that will free them from their plantation island. From there, the journey is fraught with perils and Washington Black must face a dangerous world alone, learning and growing along the way.

Washington Black is the perfect example of how to tell a hard-hitting story about slavery from the perspective of a young Black boy, all without sacrificing the thrill of adventure and the fun of the journey. 

Buy a copy of Washington Black here!

The Doll Factory by Elizabeth Macneal

the doll factory

Elizabeth Macneal has become a modern legend of historical fiction, and that all began with The Doll Factory. Set in 1850s London, this historical novel follows Iris, an aspiring young painter who is asked to model for Louis Frost, on the condition that he also becomes her art tutor. Iris has also, however, become a source of obsession for the collector Silas. And it’s here that the story darkens as his obsession grows.

The Doll Factory was a breakout hit that propelled author and potter Elizabeth Macneal into literary stardom in the world of historical novels, and rightly so.

Buy a copy of The Doll Factory here!

Circus of Wonders by Elizabeth Macneal

circus of wonders

Elizabeth Macneal’s second novel, Circus of Wonders, is very appropriately titled. What you see is what you get here.

Beginning in an English seaside village in 1866, Circus of Wonders starts with Nell, a young woman with a body covered in unsightly birthmarks. The locals ostracise her; Nell’s family patronise her. But, one day, the circus comes to town. And with it comes hope. Perhaps. Nell’s father sells her to Jasper Jupiter’s circus, but after a brief period of anger and upset, Nell comes to realise that she is happier here than anywhere else she’s ever been.

Circus of Wonders splits its narrative between Nell, Jasper, and Jasper’s brother Toby. It chronicles the circus’ rise to fame, mostly thanks to the fame that Nell quickly finds. Gorgeously written and full of vibrant, diverse characters, Circus of Wonders is a real highlight of the historical fiction genre.

Buy a copy of Circus of Wonders here!

Anatomy: A Love Story by Dana Schwartz

anatomy dana schwartz

Set in a plague-infested Edinburgh of the 1800s, Anatomy asks the question: What if Frankenstein was a love story? That question may be enough to reel in a crowd of readers; it was certainly enough for me, at least.

Our protagonist, Hazel, is the daughter of a wealthy family, and she has aspirations of becoming a physician. Similar to Frankenstein himself, she and her mother known death too well, and Hazel hopes to somehow conquer it. But she lives in a man’s world, and becoming a doctor isn’t easy.

Soon enough, Hazel meets Jack, a resurrection man. He spends his nights digging up bodies to sell to science, and Hazel offers to pay Jack to bring bodies to the makeshift lab she has set up in the basement of her family’s castle. From the novel’s subtitle, we know that Hazel and Jack will eventually fall in love. And there is also a wonderfully gothic, possibly supernatural villain for them to eventually go up against.

Anatomy is a true love letter to gothic fiction, and a wonderfully imaginative piece of historical fiction. Part gothic, part romance, all fun. And its sequel, Immortality, continues Hazel’s story, moving her to London and into the royal court. There, she will meet real historical figures like Lord Byron and uncover a strange society of secret individuals.

Buy a copy of Anatomy here!

The Foundling by Stacey Halls

the foundling stacey halls

Another modern legend of historical fiction, Stacey Halls made an immediate name for herself with her debut historical novel The Familiars. But it’s her second novel, The Foundling, that really cemented her legacy in the world of historical fiction books.

The Foundling begins in 1750s London, with a young girl named Bess giving up her newborn daughter to the infamous Foundling Hospital, promising to return for her when she has the money and the stability.

Several years pass by and, when Bess finally lives up to her promise, she learns that her daughter has already been retrieved from the hospital. What follows is a quiet, subtle tug-o-war between Bess and a rich, reclusive Londoner. Easily Halls’ most accomplished and beautifully-written historical novel, The Foundling is both touching and thrilling in equal measure.

Buy a copy of The Foundling here!

Mrs. England by Stacey Halls

mrs england stacey halls

Quickly following The Foundling is Stacey Halls’ third novel, Mrs England. The titular Mrs England is a rich Yorkshire woman who lives with her husband at a rural estate. Our protagonist, however, is a nurse from Birmingham who has trained and worked in London.

Unable to move abroad for work due to family responsibilities, Nurse May takes up a job caring for the four children of the England family. But Mrs England is an enigmatic source of great suspicion. This is a book that twists and turns as paranoia closes in like a fog. Both a delightfully original piece of historical fiction and a beautiful, dynamic homage to the gothic greats (most notably, Charlotte Bronte).

Buy a copy of Mrs England here!

The Office of Gardens and Ponds by Dider Decoin

Translated from the French by Euan Cameron

office of gardens and ponds

The story goes that it took legendary French author Didier Decoin fourteen years to write and perfect this most wonderful of historical novels.

Set during the Heian Period of 12th Century Japan, at a time when Kyoto – the former capital – was known as Heian Kyo, Miyuki is a fisherman’s wife. Her husband, Katsuro, is twice her age and the greatest carp-catcher in their hometown of Shimae.

After catching a batch of fine koi, Katsuro drowns. Beyond being their town’s fisherman, Katsuro was also given the job of carrying twenty koi to the capital, where they would be used by the emperor as sacred decoration in the Imperial Palace’s ponds.

Now that Katsuro is dead, his grief-stricken widow, Miyuki, must take up the task and make the month-long journey, on foot, to the capital, carrying the finest koi. What begins as a strange and exciting journey across the Japanese landscape soon becomes a fierce novel about the commodification of the poor by the rich.

Buy a copy of The Office of Gardens and Ponds here!

Now She Is Witch by Kirsty Logan

now she is witch

Set in an unspecific medieval time and place, Kirsty Logan’s Now She Is Witch is a revenge tragedy about witchcraft, patriarchy, and religious persecution. Lux is a young woman who has returned home from a sanctuary where she was being punished for some crime or misdemeanour, but she finds her home ruined and her mother killed.

Lux and her mother were cunning women who existed at the edges of society, useful to but not trusted by regular people. Now, those people have accused them of witchcraft and she has nothing left keeping her in what remains of her home.

She soon meets Else, an enigmatic young woman who is on her way to a stronghold in the north; there, she will take revenge on the local lord by killing him. Lux decides to accompany Else, given her lack of anything else to do. This is the story of women, shunned and accused and abused by the patriarchy, taking revenge on the religious and powerful men who oppress, hunt, and kill them.

Buy a copy of Now She Is Witch here!

Silence by Shusaku Endo

Translated from the Japanese by William Johnston

silence endo

Shusaku Endo was a Japanese Roman Catholic — a rare thing in Japan — who wrote this beautiful piece of Japanese historical fiction about faith and religious discrimination in Japan. 

Silence was also later adapted to the big screen by the legendary Martin Scorsese. Silence is set during the Shimabara Rebellion of the 17th century. It tells the story of several religious European men in Japan who were all based on real historical figures. Our protagonist is Sebastiao Rodriguez, a Portuguese priest who has come to Japan to help the Christian population who have been forced underground.

It’s a moving tale of Japanese historical fiction that builds in intensity and does a great job of staying dynamic as its writing style shifts from journals to letters to traditional narration. A beautiful piece of Japanese historical fiction that fans of the genre need to read.

Buy a copy of Silence here!

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer & Annie Barrows

the guernsey literary and potato peel pie society

Adapted into a film of the same name starring Lily James, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society is a truly charming piece of historical fiction. Written in an epistolary style as a series of letters sent back and forth between characters, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society follows the story of Juliet Ashton.

Ashton is an author who, after the end of World War II, receives a letter from a man named Dawsey Adams, a member of the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, which served as a cover for islanders breaking curfew during the German occupation of Guernsey.

One of the most charming pieces of WWII historical fiction, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society is a very charming and worthwhile read.

Buy a copy of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society here!

The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco

Translated from the Italian by William Weaver

The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco

Umberto Eco was a legend of Italian literature, beloved the world over for his fiction and his nonfiction writing. Eco wrote many incredible works of fiction, history, and political philosophy during his life, and his wisdom continues to live on. The Name of the Rose, originally published in 1980, remains Eco’s most famous work; a novel set in the medieval Italy of 1327.

A wildly clever, almost metafictional piece of historical fiction, The Name of the Rose asks readers to ponder scripture, power, and the power of literature itself. This novel is dense, placing us in a medieval abbey and asking us to familiarise ourselves with the customs and behaviours of that time and place.

On the face of it, this is a medieval mystery novel, a piece of detective fiction, but beneath all of that are intense discussions about theology. Intense but rewarding, The Name of the Rose is a classic of the historical fiction genre.

Buy a copy of The Name of the Rose here!

My Best Friend’s Exorcism by Grady Hendrix

my best friend's exorcism

Historical fiction and horror don’t hold hands as often as you might expect. They’re both surprisingly prudish in that respect. However, American horror author Grady Hendrix got a jump on the ’80s nostalgia trend of recent years, writing a horror novel set in the 1980s that also very much feels as though it was written in 1985.

Here, Hendrix is tackling the trope of high school drama, smartly setting it in a decade when that trope was all the rage in fiction, especially movies.

Our protagonists are two best friends who (as part of a larger group of four girls), met in a clumsy way at age ten and have been mostly inseparable ever since. One night, the four of them decide to try hallucinogenic drugs and one girl, Gretchen, goes missing for the entire night. When Abby finds her best friend, she isn’t behaving right; she’s changed.

Something terrible happened to Gretchen during those few hours, and she is now constantly reliving the horrors of it while also losing control of herself, shifting, becoming unfamiliar, and even manipulating those around her. My Best Friend’s Exorcism is a frantic, dynamic, satisfying historical novel that pays homage to its era and escalates to a frightening crescendo. American ’80s nostalgia and horror done right.

Buy a copy of My Best Friend’s Exorcism here!

The Animals at Lockwood Manor by Jane Healey

the animals at lockwood manor

It’s 1939 and World War II has begun. In a bid to protect the rare and valuable taxidermies of London’s Natural History Museum, 30-year-old protagonist Hetty Cartwright has been tasked with moving the animals to a rural estate where they should be safer. That estate is the titular Lockwood Manor, run by Major Lockwood and his daughter Lucy.

Lucy’s mother and grandmother were lost at once in a tragic accident, and Lucy herself is a fraught and frail thing; her father is boisterous and mean-spirited. This is a novel that crawls along slowly and purposefully, dropping breadcrumbs and feeding the mystery. Ghosts and curses are whispered about; flashbacks to Lucy’s childhood answer some questions while presenting new ones.

Hetty must contend with patriarchy, bureaucracy, and her own unavoidable magnetism towards Lucy as she becomes increasingly confused and made vulnerable by the things that go bump in the night.

Buy a copy of The Animals at Lockwood Manor here!

Cunning Women by Elizabeth Lee

Cunning Women Elizabeth Lee

Set at a period of British history when William Shakespeare was alive, King James had written a book on black magic and witchcraft, and superstition controlled the fears and actions of men, Cunning Women is a feminist tale as well as a story of forbidden love.

One of the most exciting historical fiction books of recent years, Cunning Women is set in a small village with an even smaller, broken hamlet at its edge. This dead hamlet is home to a family of cunning women who use their knowledge of herbs and the land to aid and cure the very people who fear and hate them.

The eldest daughter of this family meets and begins to fall in love with a boy from the richest family in the village. Meanwhile, her brother causes trouble and stirs up the ire of the local folk. Love, lust, hate, rage, and fear all slowly collapse into one another in this fantastic piece of British historical fiction.

Buy a copy of Cunning Women here!

The Mad Women’s Ball by Victoria Mas

Translated from the French by Frank Wynne

the mad women's ball victoria mas

Set in 1885 Paris, The Mad Women’s Ball is one of the most hyped French novels of recent years, translated expertly by the legendary Frank Wynne.

This is a short piece of feminist historical fiction inspired by the treatment of women by the European patriarchy for the past several centuries. Our first protagonist is a nurse named Geneviève who works at the Salpêtrière asylum in Paris. Geneviève is a devout believer in the science practised by Dr Charcot, who runs the asylum and is progressing psychology and psychotherapy with the hopes of healing the troubled minds of the women who enter his asylum.

Our second protagonist is Eugénie, the young daughter of a bourgeois and conservative Parisian man. Eugénie is a bold, brash feminist who has no interest in marriage and traditional gender roles. She wants to live her own life by her own rules. Her father does not like this; nor does he like the fact that she can see and hear ghosts.

Eugénie is taken to the Salpêtrière asylum by her father and brother after she convinces her grandmother that she can see the ghost of her grandfather. She proves it, too, but her father cares not whether it is true or false. Either way, she belongs in an asylum.

The Mad Women’s Ball traces only a few weeks of the lives of Geneviève and Eugénie, leading up to the titular Mad Women’s Ball, in which the patients of the Salpêtrière asylum will dance and perform for the delight of Paris’ foul gentry.

Buy a copy of The Mad Women’s Ball here!

Wakenhyrst by Michelle Paver

wakenhyrst michelle paver

In the world of historical novels, one can never have too many books set in lonely old houses, filled with echoes, shadows, and unhappy women. Wakenhyrst is another such gothic book, set in the marshy Fenlands of Suffolk. Wakenhyrst is an Edwardian gothic historical novel. It begins with its protagonist, Maud, as an old isolated woman.

Newspaper clippings report on the strange goings-on at the house when she was a girl, and this leads us back into her childhood and the strange occurrences she experienced. This historical novel is gothic in the extreme: Maud is raised motherless by an oppressive father; her father finds a painted medieval devil in the local graveyard; whispers abound concerning the house and the family.

Buy a copy of Wakenhyrst here!

The Lost Ones by Anita Frank

the lost ones anita frank

As is clear from the works of Laura Purcell (above), many of the best historical novels are gothic, horror, or supernatural in their setting. This is further proven by the success of Anita Frank’s The Lost Ones. Set after the events of World War I, The Lost Ones follows the story of Stella, an ex-nurse who lost her lover to the war. Now, she is living with her sister Madeleine on Madeleine’s impressive but daunting country estate.

Madeleine, however, is being haunted by the sounds of a child, and Stella begins to hear them, too. The mystery of who the child is (or was), and what they want, propels the mystery of this historical fiction gem forward at an incredible pace.

The Lost Ones is a historical novel of big themes; it tackles war, loss, trauma, responsibility, deception, and a lot more. It’s also a loudly feminist text, and all the stronger for it.

Buy a copy of The Lost Ones here!

The Secrets of Hartwood Hall by Katie Lumsden

The Secrets of Hartwood Hall by Katie Lumsden

The Secrets of Hartwood Hall is a love-letter to Victorian literature; specifically the great gothic novels of that time period. This is a book of atmosphere, of place and space, of secrets, of paranoia and suspicion and memories. Our protagonist, Margaret Lennox, is not yet thirty but has already and recently been widowed. Now, she is returning to her previous work as a governess.

Her new place of work is the secluded Hartwood Hall, and her employer a paranoid and secretive woman named Mrs Eversham. As Margaret teaches and bonds with Mrs Eversham’s son, Louis, she becomes intrigued by her employer’s strange behaviour and the secrets of this lonely house; the reasons why locals don’t talk about it or ever see Mrs Eversham.

Margaret also develops an interest in the gardener, Paul, a village man who has a lot of love for the house and for Louis. And the more she becomes tied up in this world, the more secrets appear, and the more Margaret becomes wrapped up in them. Secrets abound in Hartwood Hall, a fantastic piece of historical fiction.

Buy a copy of The Secrets of Hartwood Hall here!

The Book of Lost Names by Kristin Harmel

the book of lost names

A delightful piece of commercial WWII historical fiction, The Book of Lost Names is one of the best historical fiction books for readers looking for something light and easy but with real emotional weight. The Book of Lost Names follows Eva, a Jewish Parisian and daughter of two Polish immigrants. As the Nazis tear through Paris, Eva’s father is abducted but she and her mother escape to a small town in the shadow of the Alps.

The titular book of lost names is one that Eva creates as she forges the papers of French Jews for them to be ferried to safety across the border and into Switzerland. This is a historical novel about love and family, about safety and vulnerability, about the long-reaching effects of war and fascism.

Buy a copy of The Book of Lost Names here!

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13 Must-Read K-Pop Books (for Idol Stans Everywhere) https://booksandbao.com/best-k-pop-books-and-novels/ Tue, 06 Jun 2023 23:04:00 +0000 https://booksandbao.com/?p=21545 K-pop (or Korean pop) continues to shape the global music scene with its infectious melodies, intricate dance routines, and inspiring fashion.

This vibrant genre has stolen the hearts of millions around the world (myself included).

best k-pop books

As fans, there’s always a desire to dive deeper into the fascinating world of idol culture, it’s larger than life, and the stakes couldn’t be higher.

If you want stories of glitz and glamour that delve into the hard work and passion that fuels this phenomenal music scene, then this curated list of must-read books for K-pop fans is everything you need.

Whether you’re looking for the captivating tales of trainee experiences and the inner workings of the K-pop industry, cozy K-pop romances that interweave idol drama and heartfelt connections, or darker tales that delve into the shadow of unhealthy obsessions, our selection of must-read K-pop books has you covered.

Best Books for K-Pop Fans

For those who see music as a way to forge genuine connections and find solace in vibrant communities, these K-Pop books serve as love letters to the power of fandom (one is even about exactly that).

Each story allows you to immerse yourself in the enthralling fictional world of idols, with their own loveable protagonists and bold plot lines. So, what are you waiting for? Go (Go Go)!

1) XOXO by Axie Oh

xoxo axie oh

This wholesome YA novel XOXO centres on Jenny, a dedicated cellist who unexpectedly falls for K-pop idol Jaewoo after a chance meeting in a noraebang in K-Town Los Angeles.

Their paths cross again in Seoul when Jenny attends an elite performing arts academy while her mum takes care of her grandma for a few months. With Jaewoo’s dating restrictions as a K-pop star and lead singer of the popular band XOXO, they must decide if their love is worth risking their careers and friendships.

A low-stakes contemporary forbidden romance, XOXO will immerse you in the K-pop industry and make you fall in love with Seoul and the group of friends Jenny makes there.

Buy the book here

Read More: 16 Best Korean Manhwa (Webtoons)

2) On BTS: Pop Music, Fandom, Sincerity by Lenika Cruz

lenika cruz on bts

A love letter to the Korean pop sensation BTS and a celebration of their fandom. As senior culture editor at The Atlantic, Cruz explores the group’s rise to global stardom, attributing their success to authenticity, artistry, and social awareness.

Through her personal journey into the BTS fandom, Cruz highlights how the non-English-speaking band has ushered in a more inclusive era in the music industry.

A wonderful introduction to the fandom and culture for new ARMY while being a true expression of love that will satisfy long-time fans.

Buy the book here

3) K-Pop Confidential by Stephan Lee

kpop confidential stephan lee

This book is unreasonably addictive and throws you into the realities of debuting as an idol and everything the industry entails while seamlessly weaving in Korean phrases, cultural insights, and a secret romance.

Candace Park, a Korean-American girl, secretly auditions for a spot in a girl group at a top K-pop company.

As she navigates the strict trainee program in Seoul, she struggles with industry rules, complex relationships, and maintaining her family’s expectations.

Faced with the challenges of becoming an idol, Candace must decide if her dreams of stardom are worth risking her friendships, future, and beliefs.

A fast-paced coming-of-age novel that provides an intriguing insight into the world of K-pop.

Buy the book here!

4) K-Pop Revolution by Stephan Lee

kpop revolution stephan lee

The sequel to K-Pop Confidential, K-Pop Revolution is just as thrilling and fast-paced, perhaps even more so.

Now a rookie idol, Candace navigates the glamorous world of idols with her boyfriend YoungBae, as part of the new hot girl group THE GIRLS.

In response to the events in the first book, Canadance aims to transform the industry with the help of her label, S.A.Y.

However, when a rival girl group threatens their debut and online bullies target her, Candace must decide the cost of standing up for her beliefs.

Amidst these challenges, she realizes she cannot face these struggles alone and must rely on the support of those around her. The development of her relationship with her mother was particularly satisfying.

Buy the book here

Read More: Best Korean Books (in Translation)

5) Shine by Jessica Jung

shine by jessica jung

K-pop legend Jessica Jung — a former member of Girl’s Generation — introduces us to the glamorous, high-stakes world of idols, where one girl must navigate the challenges of success, love, and self-discovery.

Shine follows the story of 17-year-old Korean American Rachel Kim, who was recruited by DB Entertainment, one of Seoul’s largest K-pop labels. Despite the strict rules of training and perfection, Rachel strives to become a star.

However, she soon discovers the industry’s dark side with dramatic scandals and exploitation. As she questions her strength to be a winner, Rachel develops feelings for K-pop star Jason Lee, who understands her aspirations.

If you’re interested in learning about trainee life and pre-debut challenges faced by idols, this book offers valuable insights.

It also highlights the stark realities girl groups confront and the double standards between girl and boy groups.

Buy the book here.

6) Idol Burning by Rin Usami

Translated from the Japanese by Asa Yoneda

idol burning

Idol Burning, the prestigious 2020 Akutagawa Prize winner, is a slim, fast-paced, and powerful Japanese story of idols and obsession.

The story follows a high school girl whose life revolves around her favourite male idol, her oshi, Masaki. Her world is shaken when he faces a massive social backlash after punching a female fan.

The novel delves into idol culture, cancel culture, and the complexities of being a devoted fan. With its honest and transparent portrayal, Idol Burning explores both the healthy and unhealthy aspects of idol fandom.

Although this novel focuses on J-pop, anyone who has spent any time as a K-pop fan, or just spent a day on idol stan Twitter, will appreciate what this book is doing.

Buy the book here

7) Comeback: A K-Pop Novel by Lyn Ashwood & Rachel Rose

comeback lyn ashwood

The first in a series Comeback: A K-Pop Novel is an addictive book that chronicles the life of Emery Jung, known as M, a member of the ascending K-pop band NEON.

His celebrity status brings both adoration and scrutiny, with even minor missteps potentially leading to widespread controversy.

The narrative intertwines with the story of Alana Kim, who abandons her passion for music while grappling with a personal tragedy and retreats to her family in Korea.

A chance encounter with M disrupts her seclusion, and they find themselves collaborating to avert a scandal that threatens NEON’s rising fame.

As they navigate the tumultuous terrain of fame, friendship, love, and recovery, they learn that balancing love and a high-profile career in K-pop is no easy feat.

Buy the book here

8) Once Upon a K-Prom by Kat Cho

once upon a kprom

A must for K-drama fans, the whimsically named Once Upon a K-Prom introduces Elena Soo, a young girl who feels perpetually eclipsed by the success and popularity of those around her.

Content with her work at the local community center, which provides her a sense of belonging, she has no interest in the prom frenzy consuming her school.

Her life takes a bewildering turn when Robbie Choi, her childhood best friend, now an international K-pop sensation, asks her to prom resurrecting old feelings.

Elena must now grapple with the idea of attending prom with Robbie, which would entail navigating throngs of screaming fans, online trolls, and persistent paparazzi, a scenario far removed from her idea of a perfect prom night.

Buy the book here

Read More: 12 Best Korean Cookbooks

9) I’ll be the One by Lyla Lee

I'll be the one

Skye Shin is a vibrant girl determined to defy societal norms and prejudices to become the first plus-sized K-Pop star.

Despite the societal, media, and even familial pressures that discourage her from drawing attention due to her size, Skye audaciously pursues her dream of joining the glamorous world of K-Pop.

As she outperforms thousands of contestants in an international reality TV competition, she is plunged into a world filled with grueling practices, thrilling performances, and unexpected idol fame.

She also contends with the industry’s harsh beauty standards and finds unexpected romance with fellow competitor, Henry Cho.

Amidst all this, Skye remains steadfast in her mission to win the competition while remaining true to herself. Filled with diversity and beautiful writing, Skye Shin is a character very easy to fall in love with.

Buy the book here

10) Idol Gossip by Alexandra Leigh Young

idol gossip

In Idol Gossip we meet Alice Choy who, along with her younger sister Olivia, indulges in weekly karaoke sessions in Myeongdong, Seoul.

After leaving her life and singing lessons behind in San Francisco due to her diplomat mother’s move, these sessions become her sole musical escape.

Her talent catches the attention of a scout from Top10 Entertainment, a major K-pop company, leading to an opportunity at their Star Academy.

Alice must navigate cultural differences, inflated egos, and the rigorous training regime of K-pop, hoping to lead her group to perform before a massive crowd of 50,000 fans.

However, her journey is further complicated by a powerful blogger and antis.

This fun and easy to read debut novel explores themes of individuality and conformity, ambition and authenticity, resonating with K-pop fans and anyone striving to elevate their talent.

Buy the book here

11) How to Speak KPOP: Mastering the Most Popular Korean Words from K-POP by Jungho Park

how to speak kpop

How to Speak K-POP is a unique language learning guidebook offering an enjoyable and simple way to learn popular Korean words and phrases often found in K-pop culture, dramas, and movies, but absent from regular Korean language textbooks.

The book also helpfully provides a comprehensive understanding of the cultural context behind these words and phrases.

This includes visual representations of the links between English and Korean, a detailed explanation of popular Korean words, pronunciation guides, and real-life examples.

The book even includes Romanized pronunciations of words and thoughtful examples to help you sound like a native speaker and a true K-pop fan.

Buy the book here

12) Astral Season, Beastly Season by Tahi Saihate

Translated from the Japanese by Kalau Almony

astral season beastly season

This is the darkest novel on this list, though not overly graphic, and another focused on the world of J-pop but one K-pop fans will appreciate.

Centreed on the division between two junior high students, Yamashiro and Morishita, who are both obsessed with an underground pop idol, Mami Aino.

When Mami commits a gruesome murder, the boys unite to free her from punishment, despite their differing perspectives on her.

Morishita embarks on a murder spree to take the blame for Mami’s crime, leading to a fast-paced, 70-page story of violence.

Buy the book here

13) Y/N by Esther Yi

Y/N by Esther Yi

A new K-Pop book for fans of literary fiction, Y/N is a novel that explores the life of a Korean American woman residing in Berlin who becomes infatuated with an idol named Moon.

Her fascination leads her to write fanfiction where readers can immerse themselves in an imagined relationship with Moon. This obsession drives her to Seoul when Moon suddenly retires, disappearing from public view. The protagonist’s quest in Korea results in a series of misunderstandings and missteps, culminating in a surreal encounter with the elusive star.

Yi’s debut novel questions the boundaries between high and mass art, presenting a unique portrayal of modern loneliness and the quest for individuality in the face of globalization.

Buy the book here

Thank you for reading. Learn more about Korean food and culture in our Korean Snacks, Korean Ramen, and Seoul Guides.

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The 67 Scariest Horror Novels Ever Written https://booksandbao.com/best-horror-novels-ever-classic-contemporary/ Sat, 20 May 2023 12:04:45 +0000 https://booksandbao.com/?p=21981 Horror stories are important to us, but it can sometimes be difficult to say why. The voyeuristic thrill of seeing others in danger and fearing for their lives or their sanity; the unique opportunity to get close to death and danger while remaining safe.

Horror is a genre like no other, and the best horror novels are the ones which frighten us in ways that others can’t, or fail to do. Horror is also a genre that can be as mindlessly grotesque, or as smartly political and allegorical, as the author chooses.

best horror novels ever

Many of the best horror novels of all time are ones that blend genres together, mixing horror with the gothic, thriller, and science fiction genres. Here, you’ll find all of that and so much more. We’ll cover the best horror novels from the far-reaches of the genre, right up to the present day. These are the best horror novels ever written, both classic and contemporary.

Must-Read Classic Horror Novels

Horror stories have existed for as long as there have been stories, with so many tales of folklore — from Europe to Japan — focussing on the monstrous and the supernatural. Here, we are focussing on the best horror novels published before the 21st Century, beginning with the early years of gothic horror.

If you wish to journey back through the history of horror literature and discover the scariest stories ever written, these are the best horror novels from the genre’s past.

Note: Some of the classic horror stories in this part of the article are short stories, rather than full novels. They have still been included because their authors were more known for short stories than for they were full novels, and they are equally important works within the horror genre.

Read More: Essential Modern Horror Novels (Not by Stephen King)

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

frankenstein mary shelley

Frankenstein is nothing short of a miracle. The origin point of science fiction, the pinnacle of gothic fiction, and a turning point for horror stories. Written by a teenage Mary Shelley, after she fell in love with renowned poet Percy Shelley and spent many nights by the fireside, sharing tales with him and Lord Byron.

This is a novel about death and abandonment. An arrogant young man cannot let go of the loss he feels when his mother passes, and so he studies science in order to conquer death itself. In secret, he searches graveyards and digs up parts of people, stitching them together into something new, into which he eventually sparks fresh life.

Upon seeing his monstrous creation, Victor Frankenstein flees, leaving the confused but intelligent creature to wander alone, frightened but eager to learn. As the creature observes people, is feared and chased away, it becomes bitter and vows revenge on its “father” for abandoning it.

Shelley’s wanton use of deliciously vibrant and gothic language leads to some truly thrilling moments of terror and fright, as the monster stalks and torments its creator. A masterpiece of the gothic, of science fiction, and one of the very best horror novels ever written; it remains perfect to this day.

Buy a copy of Frankenstein here!

The Black Spider by Jeremias Gotthelf

Translated from the German by Susan Bernofsky

the black spider gotthelf

Originally published in 1842, The Black Spider is the most celebrated work of Swiss author Jeremias Gotthelf. A 100-page gothic horror novella with bleak, dark religious themes. Like many other gothic works of its time, The Black Spider begins with a framing device: a community in an idyllic Swiss valley are celebrating the baptism of a newborn babe.

During the celebrations, an elderly man — who has lived in the same house in the valley all his life — is caught staring ominously at a particularly old and blackened wooden post in his home. Encouraged by the revellers around him to tell the story of the house, he gives in and begins the story proper: a tale set in the valley’s medieval period. A tale of an evil lord, his knights, and the peasants who suffer under him.

The lord’s serfs have been forced to build the lord’s castle, while their own crops suffer. And just when they think they are free to till their own soil, he gives them one last task: plant a courtyard of trees. The peasants are then tempted by the aid of a mysterious hunter, dressed all in green, who offers to help them in exchange for the valley’s next newborn child — a child which must not have been baptised.

From here, The Black Spider goes to some wild, strange, and frightening places. It’s easy to see how this novella might have inspired many of the great horror writers that appear further down this list. The Black Spider, one of the best horror novels of its age, is a dark and twisted tale with a clear message from the author: be a good God-fearing Christian, or else.

Buy a copy of The Black Spider here!

Dracula by Bram Stoker

Dracula Bram Stoker

Bram Stoker’s Dracula is another iconic starting point for horror fiction. Vampires have been a staple of Halloween thrills for decades, and that trend started here, with Dracula. While Stoker’s gothic horror masterpiece wasn’t the original vampire story, or even the first vampire novel, it is certainly the most well-known and celebrated, to this day.

This is the novel that turned the vampire into a larger-than-life hunter of humans, drinker of blood, a monster to be fought and defeated. An epistolary horror novel soaked in dread and shrouded by fear and anxiety, Dracula is a novel all about fear of the other, fear of the unknown, and feeling vulnerable and frightened.

This is the novel that firmly established the rules of vampire lore in popular culture, even down to their aesthetics and behaviour. It’s rare that one incredible novel can have such a marked impact — not only on the genres of gothic, horror, and vampire tales, but also on modern fiction in general.

Beyond all of that, Dracula remains one of the best horror novels to this day. Dense, dynamic, fuelled by panic and claustrophobia. With Dracula, Stoker explored fear of the “other”, of the outsider, of the stranger, of those who are different from us, and how that fear manifests.

Buy a copy of Dracula here!

The Tell-Tale Heart by Edgar Allan Poe

The Tell-Tale Heart by Edgar Allan Poe

While this is, in fact, a short story, rather than a full novel, there is no way to write a list of the best horror novels ever and not include the works of gothic legend Edgar Allan Poe. And Poe’s best works were his short stories (his poetry is far from top-notch, in this writer’s opinion — except for The Raven, of course). Those stories include the iconic The Fall of the House of Usher, The Black Cat, and what many consider his finest horror story, The Tell-Tale Heart.

This 1843 short story can be read in its entirety over at The Poe Museum, and it tells the story of a nameless narrator who has killed the old man they live with. The spent nights plotting the murder, and then dismembered the body and hid its pieces under the floorboards.

But their nervousness and anxiety soon manifest as a heartbeat that they can hear beneath the boards, thumping louder and louder. Eventually this drives them to the brink of madness before they finally confess, tearing up the floorboards to reveal the body.

Buy a copy here!

At the Mountains of Madness by H.P. Lovecraft

At the Mountains of Madness by H.P. Lovecraft

To this day, cosmic horror is an ever-expanding realm that continues to be explored by imaginative creators within the mediums of prose, comics, TV, film, and video games. Without Lovecraft, we likely wouldn’t have the works of Stephen King and Neil Gaiman, Batman comics as they currently exist, and so many of the best horror and sci-fi books and movies.

At the Mountains of Madness is a Lovecraft tale that is as beloved as it is epic in scope. This horror novella is set in Antarctica, and follows a geologist named Dyer as he and a team of researchers discover a lost ancient city under the continent.

Dyer’s first-person account is a warning to anyone who might be tempted to do as he did, that they should not go to Antarctica (which, incidentally, was always a fascinating place and topic for Lovecraft himself). The city they discover is millions of years old and built by the extraterrestrial Old Ones (a staple of Lovecraft’s stories), who also built strange artificial lifeforms.

This, like so many other Lovecraftian tales, evokes just as much awe, curiosity, and excitement in the reader as it does fear, dread, and confusion. It’s a special kind of horror that makes us feel dwarfed, insignificant, and invisible. And it’s for his visions of cosmic horror that Lovecraft remains one of the best horror writers of all time.

Buy a copy here!

The Turn of the Screw by Henry James

the turn of the screw henry james

This gothic horror story is set primarily in a country house called Bly (the story served as the inspiration for Mike Flanagan’s The Haunting of Bly Manor Netflix series).

Bly is the home of a rich man who has been charged with caring for his niece and nephew following the tragic deaths of their parents. The nephew, Miles, is sent to a boarding school which he is eventually expelled from, while the niece is left at Bly to be cared for by our governess protagonist.

After starting her job at Bly, the governess begins to see a pair of ghostly figures in the house, and learns that they may be the ghosts of two former employees. The Turn of the Screw is a wonderfully enigmatic and alluring gothic ghost story for the ages; one of the most captivating and best horror novels of all time. This is also the horror story that cemented the governess as an iconic trope of gothic horror.

Buy a copy of The Turn of the Screw here!

Carmilla by Sheridan Le Fanu

carmilla

While we can trace vampire mythology back centuries, and its origins are fascinating and captivating, Sheridan Le Fanu’s gothic horror novel Carmilla remains one of the earliest works of vampire fiction in literature. In fact, while many think of Dracula (above) as the progenitor of vampire literature — and who could blame them? — Carmilla was actually published two decades prior to Stoker’s masterpiece, and likely even inspired it.

The vampire is an inherently queer-coded thing, as are so many other aspects of gothic fiction, but Carmilla is far more confidently explicit in this regard, and that makes it stand out as a unique piece of classic horror fiction. This is an early horror novel that established, long before anyone was willing to discuss it, the fact that horror and queerness are inherently linked.

Sheridan Le Fanu also originated the concept of the “occult detective” (footsteps followed by the likes of DC Comics’ John Constantine) in the character of Dr. Hesselius. Any fan of vampire lore and mythology and classic horror fiction owes it to themself to read Carmilla — the original vampire novel.

Buy a copy of Carmilla here!

The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson

The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson

Shirley Jackson remains an inspiring icon of the gothic and horror genres. We Have Always Lived in the Castle is a gothic masterpiece—as is its 2018 film adaptation starring Taissa Farmiga. And with The Haunting of Hill House, which itself has been adapted to both film and TV, Jackson proved herself as much of a horror queen as she was a gothic one.

In this iconic horror novel, we follow two men (one of whom is the heir to Hill House) and two women as they spend several days and nights together in this haunted place. One of the men is a paranormal investigator, eager to prove the existence of ghosts, and as the novel goes on, secrets get revealed, history is unveiled, and things go bump in the night.

But the haunting that happens in Hill House is deeper than it first seems. While the house is certainly haunted by the aforementioned bumps in the night and ghostly apparitions, it’s the way in which the house seeps into the mind of Eleanor, our protagonist, that really unveils the true haunting nature of Hill House.

This is a haunted house novel through and through, one of the most important books of the genre; a novel that has inspired countless writers and will continue to do so. Nobody writes like Jackson did.

Buy a copy of The Haunting of Hill House here!

I Am Legend by Richard Matheson

i am legend

It was with the publication of this 1954 novel that the concept of the vampire began to shift and change in exciting and terrifying ways. I Am Legend also defined the presentation of plague and apocalypse in modern fiction, with a disease that has wiped out untold numbers and turned the rest of us into vampires.

One man survives, boarded up in his Los Angeles home. And over the course of the novel, he, the last human in a society of vampires, becomes the titular legend. This is a clever inversion of vampire mythology. In a world where every surviving person is now a vampire, the one human is, himself, the vampire; the legend; the hunter, the beast.

Not only is I Am Legend an inversion of the vampire mythology and a defining moment in pandemic fiction, it’s also a claustrophobic horror story about vulnerability and survival. One man must continue to survive, but to what end? What is he waiting and hoping for? That existential dread adds so much weight to this already phenomenal horror novel.

Buy a copy of I Am Legend here!

Hell House by Richard Matheson

Hell House by Richard Matheson

Richard Matheson’s Hell House feels like a perfect distillation of the haunted house concept. Four people—two psychic mediums (one of whom barely survived his last visit to the titular Hell House as a teenager) and a scientist/skeptic (along with his wife, who insisted on tagging along)—will spend a week in the former home of a rich sadist in order to prove or disprove the existence of ghosts once and for all.

Hell House is located in rural Maine and its former owner, Emeric Belasco, was a wealthy and psychopathic man who hosted hordes of sadomasochistic people to engage in lengthy parties where the most debauched and evil acts were not only permitted, but encouraged by their host. Now, the house is said to be the most haunted place in the world; a site of murder and suicide. Mysteries hang in every corner of every room in this enormous home.

What will our four investigators find here? How will it affect them? Will they survive? Will they turn on one another? If they do survive, what will be left of them, and will it all have been worth it? To find that out, take a trip to Hell House.

Buy a copy of Hell House here!

Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury

Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury

Ray Bradbury is best-known for his dark, dystopian 1953 novel Fahrenheit 451, a poignant and timely book about the burning of knowledge and literature. But he also wrote some incredible stories within the sci-fi, fantasy, and horror genres, including The Martian Chronicles and the iconic Something Wicked This Way Comes.

This is a kind of urban fantasy novel centred around two teenage boys and their experience with a travelling carnival that visits their small town in the American Midwest. The carnival’s leader, Mr Dark, is an enigmatic creature who allows the secret desires of the townspeople to come true, but is secretly leeching off their lifeforce.

This is one of those horror novels that can only be described by a very specific word, and the word here is sinister. The tone, motivations, and events of Something Wicked This Way Comes are all incredibly sinister, and it remains one of the best horror novels ever written.

Buy a copy here!

The Woman in Black by Susan Hill

The Woman in Black by Susan Hill

The Woman in Black follows a young lawyer named Kipps, who has been tasked with settling the estate of a reclusive old woman who died alone in her isolated home. That home, Eel Marsh House, sits at the edge of the rural coastal town of Crythin Gifford, and Kipps must journey there to attend the woman’s funeral and then spend time at her home as he sorts through her things.

However, the house stands at the end of a causeway, and the rising tide periodically cuts it off from access to the mainland, stranding Kipps there overnight. Locals are reluctant to talk about the house, given the superstitious belief that it is haunted by a ghostly woman in black, and any sighting of her precedes the death of a child.

While there, Kipps encounters the ghost, as well as other strange supernatural occurrences that reveal the history of the house and the identity of the woman in black. One of the most masterfully written horror novels of all time, The Woman in Black is the perfect haunted house story.

Buy a copy of The Woman in Black here!

The Rats by James Herbert

The Rats by James Herbert

James Herbert was a legend of British horror fiction, beloved by other authors of the genre, including Stephen King and Neil Gaiman. Herbert wrote in an almost pulp style, his books packing an aggressive punch and getting straight to the action. Intensity and fear were what drove his fiction.

That intensity can be seen most clearly in his debut novel, The Rats, which many still consider his finest work. Herbert’s horror in its rawest form. The premise, as the title suggests, is simple: London is being overrun by rats — small black ones and impossibly giant ones — that are attacking, and even killing people.

First, the rats attack and kill unassuming drunks and homeless people, then small children and pets. Soon, they are swarming tube stations and schools; injuring, killing, and spreading disease. This book is pure nightmare fuel for anyone with a phobia of rats, but remains almost as chilling and skin-crawling for people like myself who, ordinarily, don’t give rats much thought.

Horror plays on our fears, but also our vulnerabilities, and that’s what The Rats does so hauntingly well: it makes us feel vulnerable. And that’s where true terror lies, which is why The Rats remains one of the best horror novels of all time.

Buy a copy of The Rats here!

Pet Sematary by Stephen King

Pet Sematary stephen king

It is impossible to talk about the best horror novels ever and not pay particular attention to the works of Stephen King. While he has written fantasy novels and thrillers, he is best known and loved for his horror novels, and one of his best is Pet Sematary, a novel that has seen two film adaptations.

A family moves to a small Maine town with a strange secret. The woods behind the Creed family’s new home hides a burial ground which can bring the dead back to life. But those dead things do not come back the same. They are changed. They are wrong.

If you know the novel, you know the line, “Sometimes dead is better”. It sums up the novel’s tone and themes simply and eloquently. This is, without a doubt, one of the scariest novels King ever wrote, making it one of the best horror novels ever by that token.

That said, it’s also a potential tear-jerker. The idea that we can raise our pets and loved ones when they die is something many people wish for. However, this masterpiece of a horror novel shows us why sometimes, well, dead is better. A fantastic horror novel and the ultimate take on the monkey’s paw mythology.

Buy a copy of Pet Sematary here!

IT by Stephen King

it stephen king

IT is a colossal novel; the longest on this list and a true epic. Not only is IT a monumental horror novel; it is also a coming-of-age novel and a real piece of americanna.

We begin with a  group of young misfit kids — the Losers Club — who are being terrorised by a demonic clown who calls himself Pennywise. Pennywise hibernates for twenty-seven years, and when he rises he feeds on human fear. We also simultaneously experience the Losers Club as adults, forced to return to the town after another twenty-seven years to confront Pennywise again.

This is a novel that really wears its themes on its sleeve. There is no subtext here. This is a book about childhood fears, growing up, and puberty. Despite its controversial ending, which King has repeatedly defended, IT remains a real horror epic that spans years and presents us with fear in almost all its forms. An homage to fear itself, IT is creative and exhilerating; one of the best horror novels you’ll ever read.

Buy a copy of IT here!

The Shining by Stephen King

The Shining stephen king

An unemployed recovering alcoholic finds employment as a caretaker at the remote and imposing Overlook Hotel over the deserted winter period. The iconic protagonist Jack Torrance drags his wife and son along for company, but they aren’t the only guests at the hotel. There are guests here who don’t want the family to ever leave.

A legendary horror story about isolation and psychosis, The Shining perfectly balances is creeping dread with an upsetting combination of psychology and pure, supernatural terror.

It’s likely you’ve seen Kubrick’s beloved movie adaptation of The Shining, but the novel is a different beast. And in fact, King famously disliked Kubrick’s film. This titlating fact should be enough to entice horror fans to read the novel, even if you’ve already seen the movie. It remains one of his finest horror novels to date.

Buy a copy of The Shining here!

‘Salem’s Lot by Stephen King

salems lot stephen king

Stephen King wrote so many of the best horror novels ever. This is undeniable. But choosing the very best of the best is a tall order. ‘Salem’s Lot, however, is certainly up there at the top.

A writer returns to his hometown to finish writing his newest book in peace and quiet. That’s how this begins. However, a mysterious stranger named Kurt Barlow has recently moved into town and people are quick to notice that he is never seen when the sun is up.

‘Salem’s Lot was one of King’s earliest novels and it shows, for better and for worse. The book is languorously written, echoing the stalking menace of Barlow as he steadily corrupts the townspeople. 

A very fun twist on the vampire mythology, ‘Salem’s Lot reminds modern readers of the haunting and fearsome power of the vampire, a deadly stalker of the night. And, in case you are interested, King has also written several short stories which connect to ‘Salem’s Lot and all of them are excellent reads, arguably even surpassing the original novel.

Buy a copy of ‘Salem’s Lot here!

Rosemary’s Baby by Ira Levin

Rosemary’s Baby by Ira Levin

Overshadowed by Roman Polanski’s film adaptation, starring Mia Farrow, Ira Levin’s original novel Rosemary’s Baby remains a haunting and terrifying piece of horror fiction. In fact, this was the best-selling horror novel of the 1960s, and many consider it heavily responsible for the explosion in popularity of horror fiction in the decades that followed.

The titular Rosemary is married to a struggling actor, and the two have just moved into a New York City apartment in a building with a nasty history. Their neighbours, an odd elderly couple, welcome them to the building and Rosemary’s husband Guy takes a particular liking to them.

When Guy’s career starts looking up, he tells Rosemary — who has wanted to start a family for a while — that he finally feels ready. Rosemary suffers a nightmare in which she is sexually attacked by a monster, and she wakes up with claw marks on her skin and soon learns that she is pregnant. But the pregnancy causes her to become sick and weak.

Rosemary’s Baby is folk horror for the 20th century; a novel about bodily autonomy and individual freedoms; about oppression and control. Chilling and frightening on many levels, Rosemary’s Baby remains one of the most iconic and best horror novels of its time.

Buy a copy of Rosemary’s Baby here!

The Hellbound Heart by Clive Barker

The Hellbound Heart by Clive Barker

Horror fans will immediately be familiar with the iconic 1987 horror film Hellraiser, written and directed by English filmmaker Clive Barker. But Barker started out by writing novels and short stories, and his own Hellraiser film is based on a horror novella he wrote titled The Hellbound Heart.

Before The Hellbound Heart, Barker had written one full-length novel, and his novel writing career continued as he also wrote and directed various movies. The Hellbound Heart is a must-read horror story for fans of ‘80s horror, especially the iconic Hellraiser, for obvious reasons.

The novella begins with Frank, a criminal who has devoted his life to pursuing every kind of personal pleasure, no matter the cost to others. Frank chases a rumour that eventually leads him to a puzzle box which, once solved, opens a rift to a realm of sadomasochistic pleasure; home to a people called Cenobites.

The Cenobites are aesthetically disturbing things that have been warped by their own desires and behaviours. The Hellbound Heart is an iconic piece of pulp horror that is a must-read for horror fans who enjoy the more absurd roads that horror often goes down.

Buy a copy of The Hellbound Heart here!

Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice

Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice

Nobody, since Bram Stoker himself, has written vampires the way Anne Rice did. She single-handedly did so much for the vampire as part of modern mythology and fiction. Interview with the Vampire was Rice’s debut novel, and remains the most iconic and beloved thing she ever wrote. A piece of American gothic horror through and through.

Beginning on a Louisiana plantation in the late 18th century, before moving to New Orleans, Interview with the Vampire traces the life of a vampire who struggles with his own existence. Louis, a plantation owner, was turned by his sire, Lestat, but the two have very different approaches to their condition and their roles as vampires in the human world.

The book’s fame reached new heights with the release of its film adaptation in 1994, directed by Neil Jordan and featuring a star-studded cast that includes Tom Cruise and Brad Pit as protagonists Lestat and Louis. Anne Rice remains a shining example of how to write vampires and make them complex, sexy, and still terrifying creatures.

Buy a copy here!

Ghost Story by Peter Straub

Ghost Story by Peter Straub

Bram Stoker Award-winner Peter Straub was a legend of American horror. Although he collaborated with Stephen King, he was often overshadowed by his contemporaries. Straub’s most fondly-remembered and well-loved novel was the simply and eloquently named Ghost Story.

This was the novel that saw Straub enter the mainstream, and like many great horror novels of its time, it was given the big screen adaptation treatment.

Ghost Story follows a group of four elderly men who have been good friends for fifty years, and have had a tradition of gathering together and telling stories. However, until recently, their group had had five members, but the fifth member was found dead in a bedroom during a party, looking as though he had been frightened to death.

From this moment, the other four men are plagued by nightmares and their investigations lead them to darkness and more death. An iconic and much-beloved book, Ghost Story remains one of the best horror novels of the 20th century.

Buy a copy of Ghost Story here!

The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris

The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris

Thomas Harris’ second Hannibal Lecter book (a sequel to Red Dragon) has become an iconic household names amongst thriller and horror novels. This is largely thanks to the phenomenal success of Jonathan Demme’s Oscar-winning film adaptation of the same name, starring Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins.

That film remains one of the finest book-to-screen adaptations in history, as well as one of the best crime/thriller/horror movies ever made. But Harris’ original novel shines thanks to the author’s writing, and the inspiration he took from real-life cases of monstrous American serial killers from the ’60s to the ’80s.

This is the novel that made both the iconic heroine, Special Agent Clarice Starling, and the iconic villain Hannibal Lecter household names, and Starling actually has far more wit and courage in the novel to boot. Fans of the film owe it to themselves to read Harris’ novel, and readers who have never seen it but are desperate for a blend of crime, thriller, and horror are in for a real treat.

Buy a copy of The Silence of the Lambs here!

The Taking by Dean Koontz

The Taking by Dean Koontz

Speaking personally, despite not having read any Dean Koontz for many years, the author played an integral part in getting me hooked on fiction as a teenager. And Koontz’s novel The Taking remains my most enjoyable reading experience of all of his books. An eerie and discomfiting novel overflowing with dread atmosphere.

The Taking is an alien invasion novel of biblical proportions, which begins with a freak storm and rain that smells like semen. Our protagonists are a couple who are desperate to survive the creeping fog, extraterrestrial visitors, and abductions.

This novel is full of chilling moments, like witnesses abductees either screaming and crying or smiling and laughing as they are lifted into the sky. The book’s end revelation is one that will stay with you, and makes The Taking one of the most underrated but best horror novels you’ll ever read.

Buy a copy of The Taking here!

Watchers by Dean Koontz

watchers dean koontz

Perhaps Dean Koontz’s most beloved and well-regarded novel, especially amongst fans, Watchers is a horror novel that has stood the test of time. This is a novel about shady government facilities, secretive scientific testing, and mysteries that the novels characters and its are desperate to uncover.

Our protagonist is a man named Travis, who is one day wandering a canyon near to his home. There, he meets an intelligent dog whom he names Einstein. Einstein has escaped from a government lab which was running strange tests on him, and Travis helps the dog avoid death at the hands of another escapee: a dangerous creature dubbed the Outsider.

Travis, Einstein, and a woman named Nora whom they soon meet must evade and survive both the Outsider and government agents as they uncover the truth of what is going on. One of Koontz’s classic horror novels, Watchers is a fantastic time for horror fans.

Buy a copy of Watchers here!

Essential Contemporary Horror Novels

Horror is arguably more popular than ever before, with horror cinema having gone through several exciting trends and shifts over recent years. As for horror literature, authors from all walks of life are bringing their own cultural and social influences to the genre, meaning that horror novels are seeing such wonderful diversity.

There’s never been a better time to get into horror fiction than right now, with not only all the classics at your fingertips, but with so many incredible fresh horror authors changing the genre in new and thrilling ways. Here are the best horror novels written this century so far, from authors who are experimenting with horror and changing it forever.

Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk

Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk

American writer Chuck Palahniuk is perhaps best known for writing Fight Club, a novel often dwarfed by David Fincher’s excellent film adaptation. But Palahniuk also wrote one of the most unique horror novels you’ll ever come across; something with an overall plot that also works as a collection of terrifying tales.

Haunted follows a group of writers who are lured to a retreat, and are then locked inside an abandoned theatre and challenged to write a masterpiece. The short stories that follow, separated by chapters that focus on the main narrative, are often intensely harrowing.

The first of these stories, in fact, has become infamous amongst horror fans for being one of the most unsettling and disturbing tales of modern horror. Hopefully, this is enough to pique your curiosity and take a dip into the strange narrative that is Haunted, one of the most underappreciated but best horror novels of our time.

Buy a copy of Haunted here!

Heart-Shaped Box by Joe Hill

Heart-Shaped Box by Joe Hill

Joe Hill might be the son of horror legend Stephen King, but he has also proven himself to be a fearsome force of horror in his own right. His novels Horns and NOS4A2, as well as his award-winning comic book Locke & Key, have all been adapted for film and TV.

However, his debut full-length novel Heart-Shaped Box remains his most spooky and chilling story to date. Our protagonist is the retired rock star Judas Coyne, a man who has built an eclectic collection of morbid fascinations.

But he is taken by surprise when a woman reaches out to him offering to sell him an actual ghost; a temptation which Coyne cannot pass up. The ghost, the seller claims, is that of her father, and it possesses a suit which she sends to Coyne in a heart-shaped box.

After receiving the box, Coyne is soon haunted by the ghost, which proves to be angry and hostile. There must be a reason for this hostility, and for why Coyne was sent this ghost. And he needs to find out quickly, before it’s too late. Heart-Shaped Box is a thrilling horror story by one of the best authors in the business. An unmissable American horror novel.

Buy a copy of Heart-Shaped Box here!

NOS4A2 by Joe Hill

nos4a2 joe hill

This is a vampire novel like no other, lifting its name from the iconic 1922 film Nosferatu. We begin in Massachusetts, 1986, with protagonist Victoria as a young girl. Vic soon discovers that riding her bike across a covered bridge transports her to a lost thing, whatever that thing might be.

One of her journeys takes her to a library where she meets a woman with the power to predict future events using Scrabble tiles. She warns Victoria about the book’s villain: a vampiric kidnapper of children called Charlie Manx, who drives a Rolls Royce and takes stolen children to a place called Christmasland.

Eventually we will arrive in the present day, with Vic as an adult who will eventually need to face the predatory and evil Manx head-on. NOS4A2 is a fantastic novel that places its author on even footing with his father. Joe Hill is a force to be reckoned with and this is one of the best horror novels of a generation.

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The Reformatory by Tananarive Due

The Reformatory by Tananarive Due

An extraordinary work of fiction that reportedly took Due a decade to write, The Reformatory is set in Jim Crow Florida, 1950. Our protagonists are brother and sister Robert and Gloria Stephens. Robert is twelve, his mother is dead and his father chased out of country — and state — leaving his older sister to take care of him, and of herself.

When Robert defends his sister and kicks a white boy, he is sent without trial to spend six months at The Gracetown School for Boys, a hellish place where Black boys work the fields like slaves, are whipped and punished, and are often haunted by the ghosts of boys who have died there. And there are a lot of ghosts at the Reformatory.

We spend Gloria’s chapters watching her do everything in her power to get her brother out, as well as learning more about their family, their town, and the world of Jim Crow Florida. Robert’s chapters take us through the trials and tortures of life at the Reformatory, lorded over by an inhumanly cruel warden who treats the boys as his property and holds many dark secrets of his own. This is a true horror masterpiece that is about so much more than horror.

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Tender is the Flesh by Agustina Bazterrica

Translated from the Spanish by Sarah Moses

tender is the flesh agustina bazterrica

With Tender is the Flesh, Argentinian author Agustina Bazterrica presents us with a haunting vision of the future, inspired by the hidden aspects of our monstrous present.

Protagonist Tejo works at a slaughterhouse which deals exclusively in human meat. A disease supposedly tainted, and mostly wiped out, most non-human animals, and so came a period known as the Transition. This heralded a future time in which human meat production has become an accepted and necessary norm across the entire planet.

The humans that are bred for slaughter are not considered people, and are simply if awkwardly referred to as ‘heads’. The novels allegory becomes clear when we see the conditions in which these humans are kept; conditions which perfectly mirror those in which cattle are kept today.

Tender is the Flesh asks readers to consider how modern-day battery farming, and meat and dairy production, treats non-human animals. The conditions in which they are kept; the ways in which they are raised, tortured, abused, and ultimately killed.

Buy a copy here!

The Twisted Ones by T. Kingfisher

The Twisted Ones by T. Kingfisher

With The Twiseted Ones, Kingfisher has created a piece of folk horror that adds to the always enticing sub-genre of haunted house horror novels. In The Twisted Ones, the house is not haunted from within, but rather vulnerable to something that exists just a little ways outside.

Our protagonist Melissa — Mouse to her friends — has been asked by her eighty-year-old father to clean out and tidy up the home of her recently deceased grandmother. Mouse’s grandmother, who lived to be 101 years old, was a cruel woman who delighted in nastiness for the sake of it. She was also an intense hoarder.

While sorting, Mouse stumbles upon a journal kept by her step-grandfather. This sweet old Welshman died years before his bitter wife did, and his journal reveals just how twisted and cruel she was. But it also reveals that the man was unhinged; he rambles on about twisted creatures and sleeping in the woods nearby.

Mouse’s step-grandfather stayed married to this hateful woman because she somehow kept the monsters at bay, scaring away the things that go bump in the night. Those things are real, they are twisted, and they might be coming for Mouse next.

Buy a copy of The Twisted Ones here!

The Boatman’s Daughter by Andy Davidson

the boatmans daughter

Set in the bayou of Arkansas, The Boatman’s Daughter follows Miranda, a young woman who ferries drugs and contraband up and down the river for a monstrous priest and the corrupt local sheriff.

Ten years ago, Miranda watched her father disappear on a frightful stormy night. He had been tasked with bringing to local witch to the priest and act as midwife as his wife went through labour. The priest’s wife died, and the child was deformed, born with webbed hands and scaly skin. The priest believes he killed the newborn boy, but he has secretly lived with Miranda and the witch ever since.

Now, Miranda is ready to leave the bayou behind and take the boy with her, but she is wrangled into one last job in order to collect the money she’ll need to start a new life.

The Boatman’s Daughter is a dark, strange, claustrophobic novel full of corrupt powerful men who have been morphed into monsters. The southern gothic tone and setting blend beautifully with the poetic prose, making this a horror novel dripping with tension and strangeness.

Buy a copy of The Boatman’s Daughter here!

Whisper by Chang Yu-ko

Translated from the Mandarin by Roddy Flagg

whisper chang yu ko

Whisper is a Taiwanese folk horror novel set in the modern day, inspired by the darker side of Japanese and Chinese mythology. The inspiration doesn’t end with mythology, however; Whisper is also a political novel that explores the rough historical relationship between the nations of Taiwan and Japan.

Whisper’s protagonist is a drunken waste of space; a taxi driver who has all but given up on, well, everything. He and his wife are being haunted by a ghost, and that ghost succeeds in killing his wife in the very first chapter (in a visceral and very discomfiting way).

The ghost itself first manifests as the muttering voice of a Japanese girl, coming through the radio of an abandoned taxi, and its presence repeatedly leads to disaster. Whisper takes us on a journey across both space and time, to many different locations as our protagonist continues to be chased by this haunting presence.

This is one of the best horror novels ever because it gives the reader everything that a horror novel should. There’s creeping dread, body horror, twisted imagery, vivid dreams, and paranoid hauntings, as well as dense and intriguing political and historical themes to consider.

Buy a copy of Whisper here!

How to Sell A Haunted House by Grady Hendrix

how to sell a haunted house

How to Sell A Haunted House smartly blends comedy, terror, and family drama together, creating something relatable and engaging on several levels. Our protagonist is a single mother named Louise, who is touching forty and living in San Francisco.

She learns from her brother, who lives in their South Carolina home town, that their parents have tragically and suddenly died in a car accident. Leaving her daughter in the hands of her ex, Louise returns home to organise the funeral, the wills, and to sell the home she grew up in, but the house has other plans.

At its heart, this is a tale of grief and familial bonds, as well as the inescapable traumas that families generously provide us with, to one degree or another. Smart, witty, and a brilliant reflection of sibling rivalries — both as children and as adults — this novel feels like the next step in American horror.

Fans of ghosts, demons, and hauntings will not be left disappointed, but neither will readers who love getting hooked on addictive family drama. Grady Hendrix has quickly become a big name in Amnerican horror, and for very good reason. How to Sell A Haunted House is not only his best work, but one of the best horror novels of the modern day.

Buy a copy here!

Our Share of Night by Mariana Enriquez

Translated from the Spanish by Megan McDowell

our share of night

Written by legendary Argentinian author Mariana Enriquez, Our Share of Night is a political, cosmic horror masterpiece. This 700-page epic horror novel blends eldritch horror with americanna and dark academia to create something savvy, intensely political, and satisfyingly allegorical.

We begin in early 1980s Argentina, during a period of military dictatorship. Juan is a medium for a powerful global cult known as the Order. Now that his son, Gaspar, is showing signs of the same power his father poseeses, Juan is on the road trying to find a way to keep Gaspar away from the Order, and to give his son a better life than he was able to have.

The Order offers sacrifices to a cosmic entity known as the Darkness, and in exchange is able to maintain power and wealth, as well as eventually reach immortality.

This is a horror novel about the abuse of power, about the rich manipulating the poor and the vulnerable, about the evils of colonialism and corruption. This is a true horror masterpiece that wears its influences on its sleeve while also being so much greater than the sum of its parts. One of the best horror novels you’ll ever read.

Buy a copy of Our Share of Night here!

Everything the Darkness Eats by Eric LaRocca

everything the darkness eats

Everything the Darkness Eats is a modern horror novel like no other, and one which stretches LaRocca’s themes, tone, and style to their limits. Set in a small Connecticut town, we are thrown from character to character as people start to go missing — most of them elderly and disconnected.

Our main protagonists are Ghost, a man who lost his pregnant wife after a car accident, and who is haunted and tormented by a strange spirit that has attached itself to him. And Malik, a gay cop whose home and safety are being threatened when he and his husband are on the receiving end of a series of homophobic attacks.

These two narrative strands, occurring within the same place and time, are seemingly unrelated, until they eventually meet and overlap. And at the centre of it all is an enigmatic but charming old man named Heart Crowley, whose reclusive and strange behaviour threatens the entire town.

Everything the Darkness Eats is an eldritch horror story that seamlessly blends themes both topical and universal; mixing the very real threats and tragedies of homophobia and loss with the timeless fear of the unknown and the impossible.

Buy a copy of Everything the Darkness Eats here!

The Whistling by Rebecca Netley

the whistling rebecca netley

Set on an isolated island off the rugged coast of Scotland in the 19th century, The Whistling stands shoulder-to-shoulder with the other chilling gothic ghost stories of its genre. Rebecca Netley’s novel follows Elspeth, a nanny hired to care for a mute nine-year-old girl who has already seen so much tragedy.

Mary’s mother has died, her last nanny left for the US, and her twin brother William perished in a harrowing accident. Now she can no longer speak, but Elspeth is keen to bond with her and stave off Mary’s sorrow and loneliness.

Unfortunately, the large house on the isolated rock hides sinister secrets, and ghostly sounds are keeping Elspeth up at night. The Whistling is a classic gothic ghost story with a layered story that delivers twist after turn in constant and quick succession.

Every short chapter is an atmospheric rise that leads to a sudden jolt of spine-chilling fear or a twisted revelation that leaves the reader stunned. A fantastic ghost story that sits comfortably amongst the best horror novels of recent years.

Buy a copy of The Whistling here!

A Head Full of Ghosts by Paul Tremblay

A Head Full of Ghosts

The ideal horror novel for fans of possession narratives, A Head Full of Ghosts begins with a young woman returning to her childhood home. She is accompanied by an author who wishes to hear, and then write, Merry’s infamous family’s story.

Merry recounts to the author, and to us, the story of how her older sister began to change when they were younger. Her sister started showing signs of schizophrenia, before the family eventually became the subject of a cult reality TV show called The Possession.

Multiple perspectives and narrative keep this creeping horror novel moving at a breakneck pace, and the events of this story are spine-tingling. This is a modern American horror story through and through, even down to its iconic rural New England setting. One of the best horror novels of our time, and one that cemented Paul Tremblay as a master of modern dread.

Buy a copy here!

Come Closer by Sara Gran

come closer sara gran

At 165 pages, Come Closer packs a lot of strain and pain into a relatively short horror novel, and this means that every word matters; every page is tense and taut, clinging and cloying and claustrophobic. An easy sell for fans of Rosemary’s Baby (above) and Ari Aster’s horror masterpiece Hereditary, this is a modern American novel about demonic possession.

Our protagonist, Amanda, starts to show signs of possession out of the blue. The first one is funny: a report she leaves on her boss’ desk isn’t a report at all; instead, it’s a graphic insult which she doesn’t remember writing. Next, a strange sound starts tormenting her: a tapping within the walls of her apartment which her husband insists only occurs when she is home.

The signs get stranger and more unnerving as the story progresses, and Amanda starts to do her own research and seek answers. But whatever’s happening to her is starting to negatively affect her marriage. Amanda is changing, blacking out, losing control of herself, and she wonders what happens during those blackouts. She is having nightmares, and fears what she’s doing without even knowing it. She’s becoming dangerous.

Come Closer is a fantastic modern horror novel that echoes many of the classic horror stories of the 20th century. A perfect short horror novel, and a must-read for fans of claustrophobic terror and tales of possession.

Buy a copy of Come Closer here!

Maggie’s Grave by David Sodergren

Maggie's Grave by David Sodergren

Imagine what you might get if you threw the movies Paranorman and Hot Fuzz into a blender with an unhealthy heaping of blood and guts, then whizzed it all up without the lid on, splattering every inch of the walls with entrails. That’s David Sodergren’s Maggie’s Grave. But it’s even more than that. It’s also a book about forgotten people in empty places, and about the cruelty of men towards women.

Inspired by the existence of a real grave that marks the death of a witch named Maggie Wall, Sodergren’s grotesque horror novel is set in an all-but-abandoned town in the Scottish Highlands. At the top of a hill outside this town are the broken remains of an isolated cottage and the grave of the innocent and pregnant woman who was murdered there by men who accused her of witchcraft and ripped the baby from her.

Today, the town has a population of forty, and four of them are teenagers who have nothing better to do than drink, fool around, and go bowling. One of these kids has just had a baby, which unwittingly kicks off the events of the novel. Maggie will soon escape her grave and wreak havoc on the town. All she wants is her baby, and she will spill so much blood to get what she wants.

Buy a copy of Maggie’s Grave here!

The Terror by Dan Simmons

The Terror by Dan Simmons

Dan Simmons is known for writing experimental and genre-pushing novels within the realms of science fiction, horror, and thrillers, including the phenomenal Hyperion, one of this writer’s favourite sci-fi novels. His hefty 2007 The Terror, which has also seen a successful TV adaptation, is a piece of historical horror fiction set during an arctic expedition.

Here, Simmons utilises the legendary ship HMS Erebus, as well as the HMS Terror, for which the novel is named. The search for the Northwest Passage, and the crew being hunted across the arctic by an unknown monster, are both obvious references to Shelley’s Frankenstein.

But while he enjoys incorporating the works of other writers, and aspects of real history, into his novels, Simmons is unmatched when it comes to his imagination. Toeing that difficult line between horror and thriller, The Terror is an exhausting and hair-raising epic about dangers that are human, natural, and something else entirely.

Buy a copy of The Terror here!

Tell Me I’m Worthless by Alison Rumfitt

tell me im worthless

Tell Me I’m Worthless is a British horror novel by an incredible transgender author, published by a small indie press, and it jas single-handedly shaken up the world of literature, both within and outside of the horror genre. This is a boldly aggressive political horror novel that holds a mirror up to the twisted and politically corrupt state of present-day Britain.

Our protagonists are a pair of young women who were friends at university, but now are very different people. The schism between them was created the night they and a third friend visited at a haunted house known as Albion (get it?). Something terrible happened at that house, our protagonists blame each other for it. They each claim the other sexually assaulted them in this haunted house.

Now, one of them is a young trans woman haunted by ghosts that represent the twisted state of modern-day Britain. The other is a transphobe who campaigns against the human rights of trans people. The house itself, is also a character in its own right, and we learn a lot about its dark and twisted history as the novel progresses.

Tell Me I’m Worthless is an angry and punk horror novel about transgender rights on a horribly transphobic island. It’s also an imaginative and bold piece of horror fiction. One of the best horror novels of the twenty-first century.

Buy a copy of Tell Me I’m Worthless here!

Brainwyrms by Alison Rumfitt

brainwyrms alison rumfitt

Brainwyrms follows Frankie, a twenty-eight-year-old trans woman living in the UK. In the novel’s first chapter, Frankie is at a kink party, and there we learn about her kink obsession with being impregnated. At the party, Frankie meets the young non-binary Vanya, who has a dark and twisted kink of their own.

In the second chapter, we learn that Frankie survived a terror attack: a middle-aged woman bombed the gender identity clinic in which Frankie worked, and the blast killed one of her colleagues. As the novel progresses, the titular brainworms come into the light, as we meet unsubtle stand-ins for certain transphobic public figures and journalists, and we learn that they have all been infected with some kind of parasite.

The horror of this novel comes in two forms: exploring the darkest possible endgame of transphobia in UK social politics, and the more blunt and visceral body horror of parasitic infection. This is a raw and disgusting novel that requires every trigger warning you can think of. Brace yourself for multiple forms of assault and abuse, as well as vivid depictions of disease and infection.

Brutally, unapologetically upsetting and unsettling, this is another incredible piece of queer horror from Alison Rumfitt, one of the modern queens of the genre; an author writing some of the best horror novels of our time.

Buy a copy of Brainwyrms here!

Boys in the Valley by Philip Fracassi

boys in the valley

Speaking plainly, Boys in the Valley is the most twisted, terrifying, no-holds-barred, unhinged horror novel that I have ever read. And that, of course, is a good thing.

In Pennsylvania at the turn of the 20th century, Peter lives at an orphanage, after watching his father kill his mother, and then himself. Most of the priests are cruel, twisted men, but their sadistic behaviour is the lesser of the evils this book offers up to us.

Unbeknownst to the orphanage’s residents, a local cult has been torturing, sacrificing, and drinking the blood of their victims. One night, the local sheriff knocks on the door of the orphanage and explains to the head priest that he has killed every member of this cult, except for one. That cult member dies inside the orphanage that night, and his death unleashes all manner of hell in the form of possession, torment, torture, and murder.

The events of this incredible horror novel are gruesome, bloody, upsetting, and wild. From cover to cover, this is a gnarly and riotous book full of blood and death. Boys in the Valley is one of the best horror novels of this century, without question.

Buy a copy of Boys in the Valley here!

My Heart is a Chainsaw by Stephen Graham Jones

my heart is a chainsaw

With My Heart is a Chainsaw, Stephen Graham Jones has created a smart and subversive homage to the slasher sub-genre of horror movies. With Jones being a Blackfoot Native American, this horror novel is also something that shines a bright spotlight on the legacy of American brutality against his people.

Our protagonist, Jade, is a young Idaho native, struggling to graduate from high school; her father is abusive, she has zero friends, and she has an obsessive knowledge of slasher films. Jade is a walking caricature of angsty teenage life; she quotes horror films, wears heaps of eyeliner, and has accepted her position as her school’s — and even her community’s — odd outcast girl.

If you like your modern horror books to be smart, literary affairs with dense topical themes; books that play on the horror genre; books that move at a swift click, then this is exactly what you’re looking for. With My Heart is a Chainsaw, Stephen Graham Jones has penned one of the best horror novels of our time; an homage to slashers and so much more.

Buy a copy here!

Sister, Maiden, Monster by Lucy A. Snyder

sister maiden monster

With Sister, Maiden, Monster, Bram Stoker Award-winning American author Lucy A. Snyder has crafted an upsetting, stomach-churning body horror novel about mutation, transformation, and disease. Framed in three interconnected parts, Sister, Maiden, Monster is a pandemic novel set in the near future. An aggressive virus has suddenly started spreading across several major global cities all at once.

Those who catch but survive the virus are then designated Type One, Two, or Three depending on the long-term damage done to their bodies. Our first protagonist, Erin, is an office worker with a long-term boyfriend. After getting sick on the night of their engagement, and eventually recovering, she is designated Type Three.

As the virus spreads, the novels eldritch elements begins to appear. It becomes clear that this virus has been spread by design, that this is an apocalypse novel, and that the eldritch gods are real. Erin soon falls into a lesbian relationship with a Type Two, and the pair enjoy eating the parts of each other they need. And when her story is done, we move to the other protagonists and watch the world steadily fall apart.

Sister, Maiden, Monster is a disgusting, sickening, hard-to-read horror novel that embraces queerness and shifts from disease, cannibalism, and death to Lovecraftian cult horror. Easily one of the most revolting but best horror novels of recent years.

Buy a copy of Sister, Maiden, Monster here!

The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires by Grady Hendrix

The Southern Book Club's Guide to Slaying Vampires by Grady Hendrix

Perhaps Grady Hendrix’s most socially conscious novel, The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires is a book that honours the allegorical strength of the vampire mythology. Much like how Stoker’s Dracula has been read as a metaphor for immigration, queerness, and promiscuity, Hendrix presents us with a terrifying vampiric predator in the form of James Harris: a man who sets his sights on the most vulnerable in society.

Our protagonist, Patricia, is a comfortable middle-class white housewife, as are the other women in her book club. But when James moves to town following the death of his aunt, trouble follows, and Patricia is in the middle of it. Her mother-in-law remembers James from decades ago; children from a poor Black neighbourhood begin to go missing or turn up dead and the police ignore it.

Patricia desperately wants to unearth the truth and expose James as the predatory monster that he is, but with money and charm, the lone vampire is worming his way into her suburban community and forming close ties with the men who call the shots. This is a blistering horror story that places the vampire back into the role of deadly stalker, with a well-executed focus on class and racial disparity.

The Book of Accidents by Chuck Wendig

the book of accidents

The Book of Accidents focusses on a three-person family who have moved from Philadelphia into the family father’s childhood home, following the death of his own father. This home is out in the sticks of rural Pennsylvania, and Nate has had reservations about moving into a home that, for him, only means trauma and bad memories.

However, he chokes all that down and does this for the good of his family, specifically his tender son, Oliver. Nate’s late father was abusive and callous, and Nate — a former cop — takes joy in seeing his father die.

Oliver is a sweet, and empathetic teenager. We watch him make friends with the local nerds at his school, and eventually meet a far rougher punk kid who tempts Oliver down a dark road. It doesn’t take long before strange things start happening in and around the house: images and noises that all point to a typical haunting; this story, however, is far from typical.

The Book of Accidents is a modern horror novel that tests family ties, that explores inherited trauma and cycles of abuse, and also blends the genres of horror and science fiction together in exciting, strange, and unexpected ways.

Buy a copy of The Book of Accidents here!

The Hole by by Pyun Hye-young

Translated from the Korean by Sora Kim-Russell

The Hole Hye-Young Pyun

Not only is The Hole one of the most underrated horror novels you’ll ever read, it is also perhaps this writer’s favourite Korean novel. The Hole is a masterpiece of unsettling, nail-biting terror. A celebration of the fear found in stillness, quietude, and uncertainty.

The Hole opens with a car crash. Our protagonist is fully paralysed, and his wife is dead. His wife’s mother is the only person available to take him in and care for him, but she also blames him for the death of her daughter. We must read on helplessly as our protagonist is trapped in his own mind, unable to move or fend for himself. All the while his mother-in-law digs an enormous hole in the garden.

She is cruel to him, passive-aggressive in her language and behaviour, and when he is left alone he watches as she continues to dig the hole. Terror has never been done so well, not by Stephen King or any other horror author. This is tension like you’ve never felt it.

Reminiscent of Misery in its claustrophobia and minimalism, and carrying the same kind of tension as Austrian horror movie Goodnight, Mommy. If you’re looking for the very best of Korean horror, you owe it to yourself to read Pyun Hye-young’s The Hole. A horror masterpiece.

Buy a copy of The Hole here!

Brother by Ania Ahlborn

Brother by Ania Ahlborn

Echoing classic horror movies like The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Wrong Turn, and The Hills Have Eyes, Polish-American author Ania Ahlborn’s Brother flips the cannibalistic hillbilly trope on its head by seeing this monstrous world from the inside. Our protagonist, Michael, is the adopted son of a people-hunting family who live in an isolated farmhouse where they conduct their horrors.

Michael hates this life, but it’s also all he knows. As we get to know him, we also become intimately familiar with his sensitive, music-loving sister, his psychopathic brother, and his murderous mother. But when Michael meets a local girl who works at a record store in town, suddenly life seems full of possibilities he had never once imagined before. But how can he escape such a blood-soaked day-to-day life?

Brother is a chilling, claustrophobic, sometimes hopeful horror novel for fans of the genre who love when familiar tropes and settings are twisted into something fresh and bold.

Buy a copy of Brother here!

Horror Movie by Paul Tremblay

Horror Movie by Paul Tremblay

Paul Tremblay’s most strange and nightmarish novel, Horror Movie, is a story told in two halves: as the story (though perhaps confessions is a better word) of a nameless protagonist who once starred in a grassroots horror movie that was never screened, and as the screenplay of that movie—something which, after thirty years, has become a cult sensation and the subject of endless online speculation after several scenes were posted to YouTube.

The leaking of those scenes has eventually led to the demand for a reboot, and our narrator—as the sole surviving member of the cast and crew—has been brought to LA in order to talk with producers and a director about that reboot. As the talks advance, we read more and more of the screenplay and learn about how it was written and shot back in 1993.

Our protagonist played The Thin Kid, who was both the film’s victim and villain, and his story will slowly reveal what happened to everyone else, why the movie never saw the light of day, and what happened in his life after Horror Movie was completed but never released. This novel is a psychologically stressful experience and a true feat of terror from Tremblay.

Bloom by Delilah S. Dawson

Bloom by Delilah S. Dawson

At two hundred pages exactly, Delilah S. Dawson’s Bloom is a masterful spiral from budding sapphic romance into complete dread and unhinged terror. The novel begins in a wholesome setting—a small-town farmer’s market—with a protagonist who has dumped her cheating ex, has taken a new job, and suddenly finds herself enchanted by a young woman selling cupcakes and soap at a market stall.

Ro is a literary scholar, an assistant professor, and an author. She has a promising career ahead of her, and we watch hopefully as she falls deep into her first sapphic relationship. But Ash is closed-off, changeable, and secretive. She lives in an isolated farmhouse where she makes soap, bakes, and cooks. She has rooms that are off-limits, and rules that Ro mustn’t break. The paranoia seeps in gradually and is drawn out masterfully.

The dread of this novel is a creeping, living thing. We know that there is something wrong with Ash—that she has a deep, dark secret. We guess at what it might be, and maybe we’re right, but even if we are, the way that this novel ends will still leave any reader feeling unsettled and queasy. A wonderful blend of romance and gothic terror that culminates in something so brilliantly horrid.

All the White Spaces by Ally Wilkes

All the White Spaces by Ally Wilkes

Reminiscent of Dan Simmons’ The Terror (above) and sections of Frankenstein (also above), All the White Spaces is a chilling and immersive tale of exploration and survival in the white wastes of Antarctica. This is also an historical novel, set so close to the end of the Great War, the poppies had barely begun to bloom.

Our protagonist is Jonathan, a young trans man who never saw the front lines, but did lose two brothers to the war. All three had grown up reading about the exploits of arctic explorers, and coming to terms with the fact that his brothers would never get to set sail, Jonathan sneaks aboard a British vessel headed for Antarctica. Things go dreadfully wrong, almost from the outset, and eventually the crew find themselves stranded.

On the journey to Antarctica, Jonathan begins to see ghostly visions of his dead brothers, and when they find themselves isolated in the barren spaces of Antarctica, those visions only get worse. Something evil is tempting him, luring him out, and its not only affecting Jonathan. All the White Spaces is a fantastic work of historical horror fiction set in the most lonely, desolate, and deadly part of the world.

Buy a copy of All the White Spaces here!

All Hallows by Christopher Golden

all hallows christopher golden

Christopher Golden is one of the great authors of American horror, as well as of comics and dark fantasy fiction, and All Hallows is him showing great deference to the Halloween season, while also tugging on our nostalgia strings. Set across a single Halloween night in suburban Massachusetts during the 1980s, All Hallows paints a picture of Americana upended and distorted.

We follow a cast of characters who all live on a single street, and are all busy this All Hallows Eve. The Barbosa family are constructing their traditional Haunted Woods attraction (their last ever) while the Sweeney family is being upended by lies and deceit on the part of an unfaithful husband and father. Amidst all of this, we have house parties and trick-or-treaters going door-to-door.

But some of those kids are strangers; anonymous children in creepy outfits whom nobody else recognises. Some of them are scared and confused, and they whisper about a Cunning Man coming to claim them. Death is on their heels — is ready to swoop into this suburban world and upend everything. People will die tonight, and it will be bloody.

Buy a copy of All Hallows here!

Black Sheep by Rachel Harrison

Black Sheep by Rachel Harrison

Black Sheep is a horror novel for all us creepy kids with daddy issues. The story is told by its protagonist, Vesper, a twenty-three-year-old woman living in New York City and working as a waitress. Hours before her eighteenth birthday, Vesper left her family home and the religious cult she was raised in. Now, six years later, after getting fired from her awful job, she receives a wedding invitation that lures her back home.

The happy couple are Vesper’s cousin and her own former teenage sweetheart. When she arrives, she is surprised by the shock on everyone’s faces. If nobody expected her, who invited her? It certainly wasn’t her mother, Constance—a famous scream queen who has been killing and dying in the best and worst horror movies for decades.

Something sinister is going on in the Hell’s Gate community; something even more sinister than the usual devil-worship and lamb slaughter. And Vesper knows that she is at the centre of it, whatever it is. But what will she learn as she is drawn back into this strange, dark, and terrifying world?

Buy a copy of Black Sheep here!

The Silent Companions by Laura Purcell

the silent companions laura purcell

The Silent Companions is easily one of the best horror novels of this century so far; a haunted house novel of unique and exciting proportions. Exceptionally gothic, very reminiscent of Susan Hill and Shirley Jackson, and yet wholly its own beast, The Silent Companions is gothic fiction, historical fiction, and horror all smooshed nicely together.

Our protagonist, Elsie, is pregnant, but her husband is already dead. And so she moves into his family’s country estate, where she feels isolated and lonely, with only her late husband’s cousin to call friend. The thing that haunts this novel is what makes it unique; something we’ve never seen before in the haunted house subgenre of horror fiction.

This is the novel that broke Laura Purcell into the world of horror with a deafening scream, and it remains one of the most adored and best horror novel of recent years.

Buy a copy of The Silent Companions here!

HEX by Thomas Olde Heuvelt

Translated from the Dutch by Nancy Forest-Flier

hex thomas olde heuvelt

HEX is a work of modern horror genius; a contemporary Dutch horror novel set in upstate New York’s Hudson Valley (where I lived for a while). The novel’s intriguing premise is this: the isolated town of Black Spring has a secret that it has managed to keep hidden from outsiders for centuries: the ghost of a witch roams their streets.

The witch was once Katherine van Wyler, killed in the town in the 17th century. Since then, with eyes and mouth sewn shut, her ghost has openly wandered the town and haunted its residents, even within their own homes. The residents are used to her, although tragedy has befallen them a few times in the past when she has gotten too close to someone, convincing them to take their own lives.

But now, in an. age of YouTube and social media, a teenager named Tyler has banded together a group of friends to perform a few experiments on the witch’s ghost and film them. These experiments, along with the dark behaviour of another long-term resident, are going to change things for the worse in Black Spring, unleashing something horrible and deadly.

Written and translated brilliantly, this is a fantastic modern horror novel about persecution and responsibility, taking horror in strange new directions. A must-read.

Buy a copy of HEX here!

Strega by Johanne Lykke Holm

Translated from the Swedish by Saskia Vogel

strega holm

Strega is a Swedish feminist novel that blends horror with the gothic. Beautifully translated, it begins with haunting language and ramps up to haunting events: real, imagined, or both. Our protagonist, Rafa, is at the intersection between girlhood and adulthood, and she is spending a season working at a remote hotel in the mountains, beside a lake and small town: the titular Strega.

For the novel’s first half, Rafa befriends the other eight girls, particularly one girl named Alba. The nine of them learn their roles, bond, learn the hotel and its staff, and wait for the guests to arrive. Weeks go by and there are still no guests. The town and hotel take on personalities of their own, and paranoia starts to grow. At the novel’s midpoint, however, a large number of guests arrive and the hotel becomes a party.

It is during this short and festive period that one of our girls goes missing, presumed dead, and her death brings with it the haunting and sobering realisation of what the world offers women: fear. While Strega‘s first half offers a surreal kind of paranoia — dizzying and off-kilter — this halfway gear-shift brings the terror to the surface.

Specific moments and passages in the novel’s second half will turn your blood cold and have you looking over your shoulder. It has an incredible power to instil the reader with an intense sense of nervousness. Strega is a powerful gothic horror novel that reminds us of the power of men, of capitalism, of isolation, of rules and regulations, to instil fear and paranoia into women.

Buy a copy of Strega here!

Our Wives Under the Sea by Julia Armfield

our wives under the sea

Julia Armfield’s Our Wives Under the Sea is a visceral gothic horror novel. This is a dual-narrative story which follows a lesbian couple, one of whom is sent on an expedition in a submarine to the bottom of the sea. While the expedition should last a few weeks, she and the crew are stranded there for six months.

Her narrative is a claustrophobic and tense one, with a Lovecraftian fear of the unknown knocking at the walls of the submarine with every page turn. When she finally returns, however, she is no longer herself, and her wife must make peace with the fact that the woman she loved is gone, replaced by something else.

Our Wives Under the Sea is a gothic horror novel about how we grieve, and the fact that we can grieve altogether wrong. It’s also an exercise in body horror, luxuriating in the twisted, unnatural, and impossible ways that our bodies can change and betray us.

This is a claustrophobic story, set in a cramped submarine and an equally cramped apartment, with the unknown and the terrifying always within arm’s reach. A real showcase of how horror can be made unusual again, and how the gothic can be brought to the present day. A masterpiece of a horror novel.

Buy a copy here!

The Watchers by A.M. Shine

The Watchers by A.M. Shine

Irish author A.M. Shine’s debut novel, The Watchers, is a gothic horror fed by claustrophobia and paranoia. Protagonist Mina has found her way to the edge of a forrest where cars break down and electronics don’t work. Once inside, she is chased to a bunker where a woman named Madeline tells her she’ll be safe as long as she never goes out at night. There are things in the forest that will hunt and kill her.

Madeline and Mina share the bunker with Ciara and Daniel; each of them has been trapped there for a different amount of time, but none seem to know why the bunker is there, why the forest behaves the way it does, and most importantly: what these monstrous watchers are, exactly.

What do they want? Where did they come from? And what do they even look like? These questions will be answered, but will Mina and the others live long enough to discover them for themselves?

Manhunt by Gretchen Felker-Martin

manhunt felker martin

Manhunt is a curious piece of horror fiction. It is gross, gory, uncomfortable, visceral, shocking, and punk as all hell. This is a viscerally disgusting novel, full of gratuitously over-the-top blood, body horror, abuse, and torture. Manhunt is also a plainly angry book. It is a post-apocalyptic narrative that follows a pair of trans women who have survived a plague that specifically targets testosterone.

This disease turns anyone with high levels of testosterone into horny, mindless zombie-like beasts, which means most cis women, and some trans women and men, were saved. Our protagonists must fight and hunt and scavenge to survive, while also facing down another threat: TERFs.

There is a cult of dangerous transphobes who hunt and lynch any trans women they come across, choosing to hate trans people more than they value their own lives. Manhunt is a horror novel about the mindless, sexual, and physical aggression of men towards women (cis or trans), and about the potential violent endgame of transphobia.

The visceral nature of Manhunt cannot be overstated. This is a book of such violent and bloody imagery that many readers may not be able to stomach it. Horror fans should have no problem with it, and what they’ll find is one of the most daring and thrilling horror novels ever written.

Buy a copy of Manhunt here!

The Luminous Dead by Caitlin Starling

the luminous dead

If you love your classic sci-fi horror — movies of isolation and claustrophobia like Alien and Event Horizon — you’ll eat this novel up. The Luminous Dead is set on a future world being mined for precious ore by large corporations. To survey the caves and tunnels beneath the surface, cavers are sent down in teams or in isolation. Gyre is a lone caver who is being paid well to explore a deep cave all alone for several weeks.

The entire novel is spent in this cave network, as Gyre’s only point of contact is the disembodies voice on the other end of the radio. Em is a controlling, cold, and secretive woman who can manipulate Gyre’s suit like a puppet. As the story moves forward and the terror rises, Gyre must break down Em’s walls and form a bond in order to stay safe and feel in control. Em knows a lot more than she’s letting on.

This is a true tale of claustrophobia and terror. Danger surrounds Gyre on all sides, and there is much to learn and grapple with. Those dangers may be real or imagined, and telling those apart will become increasingly difficult. This is not a horror novel for the claustrophobic.

Buy a copy of The Luminous Dead here!

The Salt Grows Heavy by Cassandra Khaw

The Salt Grows Heavy by Cassandra Khaw

Cassandra Khaw’s horror novella The Salt Grows Heavy is a dismal, dark, twisted, nightmarish piece of fiction. The story opens with our protagonist — a mermaid whose husband cut out her tongue and fed it to her — watching her newborn children eat the dead body of their father.

She is the beckoned away by a plague doctor, and the two journey away from their homeland and through a strange forest where new evils await them. There, they meet a band of boys who hunt and kill one another. They are then resurrected by their creators and masters: three saints whom our protagonists swear to destroy.

The Salt Grows Heavy offers an oppressive environment that is brought to live viscerally and with great discomfort by an author of intense, vivid imagination. This is a gruesome, squeamish, frightful horror story unlike anything you’ve ever read before.

Buy a copy of The Salt Grows Heavy here!

The Night House by Jo Nesbø

the night house jo nesbo

Jo Nesbø is a Norwegian author known for his critically acclaimed Harry Hole series of crime novels, as well as a modernised reimagining of Shakespeare‘s Macbeth, but The Night House is Nesbø taking on the horror genre. And it is a fascinating novel. Divided into three parts, with Part One taking up the first two thirds of the novel, The Night House presents itself as a very mid and uninspired YA horror novel, until everything changes.

The Night House begins with Richard, a fourteen-year-old boy whose parents tragically died, and so he moved out of the big city and now lives with his kindly aunt and uncle in a rural Twin Peaks-esque town. There, he finds himself to be a social outcast; a punk kid who is bullied at school, and that treatment embitters him to those around him. He treats his handful of friends horribly.

And in the book’s first chapter, Richard watches his friend Tom get eaten alive by a telephone in an old-fashioned phone booth. This gory incident is connected to the abandoned house at the heart of the nearby forest, and the infamous local figure who once lived there and supposedly ended up at the local asylum.

What transpires is a paint-by-numbers horror novel that is entirely upended at the two-thirds mark, when everything goes insane and the terror amps up impressively. So, when you read this, expect mundanity for a while until the world turns upside down and one of the best horror novels of recent years properly reveals itself.

Buy a copy of The Night House here!

Horseman by Christina Henry

horseman christina henry

Horseman is Henry’s take on Washington Irving’s The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, the classic American story of a small Dutch settlement in New England which is haunted and threatened by a ghostly headless horseman. As soon as you begin reading Horseman, it becomes obvious that this is more of a sequel than a reimagining, with key characters from Irving’s short story now decades older.

Our protagonist is the grandchild of Katrina Van Tassel and Brom Van Brunt. His name is Ben, and though he was born a girl and his grandmother repeatedly tells him to act more like one, Ben is a boy. The novels first chapter throws us into a bloody and bleak discovery: the body of a child in the woods, its head and hands missing. Has the headless horseman returned? Brom insists that’s impossible.

But more deaths are coming, and this situation seems far more complex than the return of the horseman. There’s more at play here. Horseman is a wonderful horror mystery that plays with folk conventions and traditions, and reignites a classic tale for a new audience.

The inclusion of a trans-masculine protagonist is also icing on the cake, making the fourteen-year-old Ben a more dynamic, exciting, fiery, and interesting character in his own right. Christina Henry has written some of the best horror novels of the 21st century, and Horseman is among them.

Buy a copy of Horseman here!

Heads Will Roll by Josh Winning

Heads Will Roll by Josh Winning

The transition of slashers from screen to page has picked up steam over the past few years, with most slasher novels being fuelled by nostalgia, references, and deconstructions of the subgenre, as seen in Grady Hendrix’s The Final Girl Support Group and Stephen Graham Jones’ My Heart is a Chainsaw. And Heads Will Roll is peppered with those same notes of adoration for the genre, but it’s also very much concerned with telling its own story.

Like Friday the 13th, Sleepaway Camp, and a hundred others before it, Heads Will Roll is a summer camp slasher—this time in novel form, though a novel written by a film critic. Cleverly, this is a very contemporary novel that explores the trappings of fame and the toxic avenues of “cancel culture”. Our protagonist was riding high in LA, playing the titular role in a hugely successful Netflix sitcom called We Love Willow, until she wasn’t.

After being cancelled for a tweet, the details of which we don’t learn about for a long time, she heads off to a summer camp for people wanting to get away from technology. There, she hears a campfire story about a girl who was beheaded, and now her ghost knocks on cabin doors looking for her head. Cue the slasher as campers start going missing one by one, and we even see their deaths play out from their own intimate perspectives.

Clown in a Cornfield by Adam Cesare

Clown in a Cornfield by Adam Cesare

For something that’s been given the “YA horror” label, Clown in a Cornfield is a wild, Stephen King-esque work of grittiness and gore. From its title to its death scenes, this is a gut punch of a novel. Clown in a Cornfield opens with a tragic death that sets the tone, before jumping a year into the future and beginning the story proper with a teenager and her father moving from Philadelphia to a nowhere rural town surrounded by corn.

The town’s unofficial mascot is a clown known as Frendo, and soon enough Frendo will begin to stalk our protagonist and her new friends. Before that, however, we are introduced to a group of misfits and ne’er-do-wells who are bored and used to causing chaos in this little town just to feel something. Quinn has falling into this group but is also savvy enough to be wary of them.

This is a novel about old versus new, about generational divides, about rural life, and about brutality, blood, and violence. It’s a book that feels like an early Stephen King novel brought into the twenty-first century.

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