Literary Fiction · Capitalism Critique

6 hand-picked literary fiction and capitalism critique books curated by NextBookAfter.

Literary FictionCapitalism Critique
Cover of All This Could Be Different

All This Could Be Different

If Grace Porter's post-PhD spiral felt like watching your own quarter-life crisis in slow motion, this is your next devastation. All the raw vulnerability, impulsive romance, and found family ache you loved in Honey Girl—but angrier at the systems grinding us down. Sarah Thankam Mathews writes queer immigrant exhaustion with the same poetic precision that made Rogers' debut feel like expensive therapy.

Cover of Birnam Wood

Birnam Wood

For readers captivated by the layered deceptions and capitalist critiques in Trust, Birnam Wood offers a sharp, contemporary eco-thriller that probes power imbalances and moral ambiguities through clashing ideologies and unreliable motives.

Cover of Chain-Gang All-Stars

Chain-Gang All-Stars

The Measure hooked you with that speculative premise that forced impossible moral questions—strings that reveal how long you'll live, society fractured by fate. You loved the way it mirrored real prejudice through short-stringers, sparked debates that lasted weeks, and balanced philosophical weight with characters whose relationships felt achingly real. Now you need another story that dares to ask what humanity becomes when systems demand cruelty.

Cover of Friday Black

Friday Black

If Pastoralia taught you to laugh at soul-crushing corporate absurdity, Friday Black amplifies that dystopian vision until modern life warps into speculative nightmares. Adjei-Brenyah delivers the same empathy for flawed underdogs, the same dark comedy mining discomfort for truth, but refracted through scenarios where capitalism's cruelties become literal survival games. This is satire for readers who crave social commentary as inventive prose, not sermon.

Cover of Severance

Severance

If My Year of Rest and Relaxation hooked you with its raw dive into depression, urban isolation, and a flawed anti-heroine's unapologetic flaws, Severance delivers the same deadpan wit and existential dread amid apocalyptic burnout. Fans love how both books skewer consumer culture and capitalism without moralizing, letting alienation persist in morbidly entertaining prose. Dive into this perfect follow-up for more cathartic cynicism and zero-redemption vibes.

Cover of Trust

Trust

If Careless People's unflinching dissection of how ambition corrodes idealism left you hungry for more—its dark humor puncturing elite hypocrisy, its refusal to offer tidy moral verdicts—you need narratives that turn financial empires into psychological crime scenes. Books that dare you to sort truth from spin while watching characters rationalize their way from principles to power, all rendered with the wit and intellectual thrill that made you fall for Wynn-Williams' no-holds-barred critique.