Literary Fiction · Family Saga · Identity Exploration

3 hand-picked literary fiction, family saga, and identity exploration books curated by NextBookAfter.

Literary FictionFamily SagaIdentity Exploration
Cover of The Latecomer

The Latecomer

If The Paper Palace validated your obsession with families where wealth can't prevent emotional wreckage, The Latecomer is your next reckoning. Jean Hanff Korelitz dissects the Oppenheimer siblings' decades of buried wounds and moral gray zones with the same unflinching honesty—no tidy endings, just the raw truth of lives lived in permanent discomfort. This is for readers who demand fiction that doesn't apologize for complexity.

Cover of The Most Fun We Ever Had

The Most Fun We Ever Had

You fell for Mrs. Everything because it didn't flinch—two sisters navigating feminism, sexuality, and family wounds across decades, blending nostalgic historical detail with gritty emotional honesty. It gave you permission to see the messiness of women's lives as worthy of epic storytelling, mixing heartbreak with humor sharp enough to cut. If that multigenerational ache and unvarnished truth-telling hooked you, we've found the follow-up that delivers the same cathartic gut-punch.

Cover of The Vanishing Half

The Vanishing Half

You stayed for Ferrante's refusal to sanitize female bonds—the envy, the betrayal, the toxic vitality that makes sisterhood a battlefield. You craved prose that didn't flinch when depicting class mobility as an illusion and motherhood as a burden without redemption. If those raw truths hit like a confession you'd been waiting to hear, you need stories that honor that same ferocity.