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50 notable works of fiction in 2018

An American Marriage

By Tayari Jones (Algonquin)

Roy and Celestial are college-educated and upwardly mobile — but they are also black, a fact that has outsize relevance in the toxic landscape of the American justice system.

Baby, You’re Gonna Be Mine

By Kevin Wilson (Ecco)

A narcissistic rock musician whose band has dissolved moves back home in the title story of this imaginative and witty collection.

Cherry

By Nico Walker (Knopf)

Devastatingly candid, this autobiographical novel is written by a former Army medic now in prison for bank robbery.

Children of Blood and Bone

By Tomi Adeyemi (Henry Holt)

Two young women — one royal, one oppressed — join forces to try to restore magic to the kingdom of Orisha.

Circe

By Madeline Miller (Little, Brown)

A passionate young woman develops occult skills and is banished to a solitary island in this feminist retelling of an ancient story.

Conscience

By Alice Mattison (Pegasus)

Three narrators weave a story around political activism, privacy, sexual betrayal, racial tension and homelessness.

Crudo

By Olivia Laing (Norton)

In the summer of 2017, a 40-year-old writer tries to adjust not only to her new marriage but also to a world that seems to be falling apart.

The Female Persuasion

By Meg Wolitzer (Riverhead)

A studious freshman whose worldview is altered by a feminist icon makes her way through college, love and the daunting uncertainties of real life.

Flights

By Olga Tokarczuk; translated by Jennifer Croft (Riverhead)

Some of the tales woven loosely together in this novel, which won the Man Booker award for translated fiction, border on the grotesque, but they are enlivened by the author’s humor and optimistic voice.

Florida

By Lauren Groff (Riverhead)

Heat, alligators, hurricanes and other dangers lurk in these 11 short stories set in the bizarre lushness of the Sunshine State.

French Exit

By Patrick deWitt (Ecco)

Having squandered her inheritance, an eccentric widow sells what property is left and sails with her son to Paris.

Girls Burn Brighter

By Shobha Rao (Flatiron)

Two girls survive poverty and cruel fates in India and follow separate paths to new lives — and sometimes more brutality — in America.

The Great Alone

By Kristin Hannah (St. Martin’s)

In 1974, an alcoholic Vietnam veteran inherits a cabin in Alaska and moves there with his wife and teenage daughter.

The Great Believers

by Rebecca Makkai (Viking)

A woman cares for her dying brother during the 1980s AIDS epidemic; searching for her daughter three decades later, she reconnects with one of his friends.

How to Be Safe

By Tom McAllister (Liveright)

In the wake of a school shooting, a recently suspended teacher becomes a person of interest — and a bitter critic of American society.

If You Leave Me

By Crystal Hana Kim (William Morrow)

In the aftermath of the Korean War, a young South Korean must choose a husband as her country struggles to develop an identity.

The Immortalists

By Chloe Benjamin (Putnam)

Four New York siblings ask a clairvoyant to tell them when they will die, and the answers change how they choose to live.

The Incendiaries

By R.O. Kwon (Riverhead)

Religious fervor pervades the story of three students — a lapsed evangelical, a party girl and an emerging cult leader — who meet and fall in love.

Killing Commendatore

By Haruki Murakami (Knopf)

A 36-year-old portraitist retrains his sights on his earlier, broader artistic goals, with sometimes magical results.

The Kiss Quotient

By Helen Hoang (Berkley)

Successful in work but wary of physical contact, a woman on the autism spectrum hires a male escort to teach her about sex and relationships.

A Ladder to the Sky

By John Boyne (Hogarth)

A satire of writerly ambition wrapped in a psychological thriller: A young novelist claws his way to fame by seducing other writers and stealing their plots.

Lake Success

By Gary Shteyngart (Random House)

When a hedge-fund manager finds his privileged life crumbling, he takes a bus to Texas to find an old girlfriend.

The Largesse of the Sea Maiden

By Denis Johnson (Random House)

Ex-wives and ex-friends, prisoners and poets, flunkies and “wayward angels” populate this posthumous collection of five masterful short stories.

Love and Ruin

By Paula McLain (Ballantine)

The author of “The Paris Wife,” based on Ernest Hemingway’s first marriage, writes a biographical novel about his third wife, journalist Martha Gellhorn.

The Mere Wife

By Maria Dahvana Headley (MCD)

“Beowulf” is wittily reimagined as a feminist parody of suburban sanctimony, with a lesser role for the epic’s hero, incarnated here as ex-Marine Ben Woolf.

A Million Drops

By Victor del Árbol; translated by Lisa Dillman (Other)

The murder of a child is the starting point for a dizzying multigenerational drama centered on the Soviet role in Spain’s 1930s civil war.

The Music Shop

By Rachel Joyce (Random House)

It’s 1988, and CDs are pushing vinyl into oblivion, but at a run-down English music shop, the big albums provide the soundtrack for an unabashedly romantic treat.

My Sister, the Serial Killer

By Oyinkan Braithwaite (Doubleday)

A beautiful Ni­ger­ian murderer gets some body-disposal help from her sister, a nurse. Then the killer gets interested in a handsome doctor.

My Year of Rest and Relaxation

By Ottessa Moshfegh (Penguin Press)

A bereaved recent college grad takes to her bed, aided by a buffet of drugs and one of the worst shrinks in fiction.

November Road

By Lou Berney (William Morrow)

One of the most distinctive, unexpected crime novels of recent years begins with the premise that JFK’s assassination was ordered by a New Orleans mobster.

Only Child

By Rhiannon Navin (Knopf)

A 6-year-old describes a school shooting — “We kept hearing the POP sounds outside. And screaming.” — and its family-rending aftermath.

The Pisces

By Melissa Broder (Hogarth)

Dogsitting in Los Angeles’s Venice Beach, a troubled graduate student meets and falls for a beachgoer who turns out to be part fish.

The Poet X

By Elizabeth Acevedo (Harper Teen)

Written in short poems, a 15-year-old’s diary illuminates her life in Harlem. A National Book Award finalist.

Red Clocks

By Leni Zumas (Little, Brown)

The lives of four women intersect in a near-future United States where abortion has been criminalized.

A River of Stars

By Vanessa Hua (Ballantine)

When a Chinese factory worker conceives her boss’s child, he sends her to give birth in America — but a sonogram changes her plans.

The Shakespeare Requirement

By Julie Schumacher (Doubleday)

In a delightfully acerbic sequel to “Dear Committee Members,” a cranky English professor becomes the reluctant chair of his department.

The Shape of the Ruins

By Juan Gabriel Vásquez (Riverhead)

Conspiracy theories about the 1948 assassination of Colombian icon Jorge Eliécer Gaitán provide the framework of a sweeping and magisterial novel.

The Silence of the Girls

By Pat Barker (Doubleday)

The Trojan War as seen from the perspective of the princess Briseis, captured by the Greek hero Achilles and then lost to Agamemnon.

Still Life With Monkey

By Katharine Weber (Paul Dry Books)

Paralyzed after a car crash, Duncan survives with the help of his wife, his twin brother and a capuchin service monkey named Ottoline.

Strike Your Heart

By Amélie Nothomb; translated by Alison Anderson (Europa)

Pain radiates through the story of a successful woman who never had her mother’s affection; “Home is where it hurts,” she concludes.

That Kind of Mother

By Rumaan Alam (Ecco)

Questions of privilege and identity are brilliantly depicted in the story of a white mother who adopts a second son — this one black.

Theory of Bastards

By Audrey Schulman (Europa)

In a near and very dire future, a MacArthur “genius” intently studies the sex lives of bonobos — and a sudden disaster changes everything.

Transcription

By Kate Atkinson (Little, Brown)

In 1940, Juliet is deployed to eavesdrop on suspected Nazi sympathizers in Britain, and her spy business continues into the Cold War.

Upstate

By James Wood (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)

A British businessman, fearing that his grown daughter teaching at Skidmore College is depressed, arrives determined to help her.

Warlight

By Michael Ondaatje (Knopf)

“In 1945 our parents went away and left us,” the British narrator begins, and decades later, he exhumes their secrets from the mire of espionage and war.

What We Were Promised

By Lucy Tan (Little, Brown)

A Chinese emigre family moves back to live in luxury in Shanghai, where the reappearance of a long-absent brother opens painful issues.

When Katie Met Cassidy

By Camille Perri (Putnam)

Katie has been dumped by her fiance. Androgynously sexy Cassidy takes her to a lesbian bar where romantic comedy ensues.

The Winter Soldier

By Daniel Mason (Little, Brown)

Medical training did little to prepare young Lucius for the battlefields of World War I — and a new “disease” that we now call PTSD.

You Think It, I’ll Say It

By Curtis Sittenfeld (Random House)

Stories by the author of “Prep” illuminate the social, sexual, professional and political realities of this particular moment in America.

Your Duck Is My Duck

By Deborah Eisenberg (Ecco)

A short story collection that captures the national mood, in a voice that is accurate, disarming and often quotable.

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