Literary Fiction · Family Dysfunction

5 hand-picked literary fiction and family dysfunction books curated by NextBookAfter.

Literary FictionFamily Dysfunction
Cover of Afterparties

Afterparties

If 'We the Animals' by Justin Torres gripped you with its wild boys clashing in a storm of machismo and emotional volatility, get ready for the same raw punch in immigrant chaos. 'Afterparties' by Anthony Veasna So echoes that feral energy, with resilient kids navigating poverty, identity crises, and taboo desires amid dysfunctional loyalty. Dive into poetic vignettes exploding with dark humor and unflinching cultural trauma—perfect for fans hungry for more gritty, queer survival stories.

Cover of Martyr!

Martyr!

Worry validated your anxiety with sharp, ironic honesty—no redemption arcs, just raw recognition of sibling dysfunction and existential drift. If you loved watching Jules scroll through her paralysis while skewering wellness culture, you need another overeducated, self-sabotaging narrator who turns grief and addiction into wry, relatable chaos.

Cover of Red at the Bone

Red at the Bone

If Sing, Unburied, Sing pulled you through Mississippi dirt with its lyrical ferocity and unflinching look at intergenerational trauma, you need its spiritual twin. The same blues-infused rhythm, the same refusal to sanitize Black pain or joy, the same emotional archaeology that rewards patient readers who crave authenticity over easy answers—all wrapped in a Brooklyn brownstone haunted by the Tulsa Massacre and family secrets that span decades.

Cover of Sorrow and Bliss

Sorrow and Bliss

The Rachel Incident gave you millennial malaise wrapped in self-aware humor, where heavy topics like abortion and queer awakening met biting wit instead of melodrama. You loved the codependent friendships that mattered more than romance, the economic precarity grinding beneath every laugh, and protagonists too smart and flawed for tidy endings. That raw, dialogue-driven brilliance? It's waiting for you again.

Cover of The Arsonists' City

The Arsonists' City

If 'The Sisters' by Jonas Hassen Khemiri hooked you with its biting satire on family dysfunction and diaspora absurdities, blending sharp wit with poignant sorrow, then 'The Arsonists' City' by Hala Alyan will ignite that same fire. Dive into sibling rivalries, parental secrets, and cultural hybridity that refuse neat resolutions, echoing the messy authenticity you craved. It's family as gorgeous wreckage—raw, resonant, and ready to redefine your bookshelf.