Literary Fiction · Family Saga · Intergenerational Trauma

8 hand-picked literary fiction, family saga, and intergenerational trauma books curated by NextBookAfter.

Literary FictionFamily SagaIntergenerational Trauma
Cover of Ask Again, Yes

Ask Again, Yes

If Franzen's surgical precision on Midwestern family implosion hooked you, Keane's Irish-American neighbors deliver the same catastrophic intimacy—mental illness, generational scars, and passive-aggressive kitchen warfare that makes you squirm with recognition. Multi-generational sprawl meets humor-soaked pathos, dissecting suburban cop families with zero moral comfort. Dysfunction this articulate is irresistible.

Cover of Disoriental

Disoriental

For fans of Martyr!'s lyrical exploration of Iranian-American identity and personal reckoning, Disoriental offers a vibrant, multigenerational tale of exile, family secrets, and self-discovery that echoes the same emotional resonance and cultural depth.

Cover of Red at the Bone

Red at the Bone

You fell for Baldwin's Harlem heartbeat, where young love pulses against systemic cruelty and family ties bind wounds of injustice. Now imagine Brooklyn's intimate hum, echoing that same tender rage and defiant strength in black women's stories of devotion and identity. Dive into a lyrical mirror of urban resilience and redemptive love that exposes racial divides without flinching.

Cover of Red at the Bone

Red at the Bone

Little Fires Everywhere ruined you for sanitized family dramas—you need the same razor-sharp dissection of class and race, just aimed at a different kind of respectability. Red at the Bone gives you Black Brooklyn instead of white suburbia, but the emotional devastation is identical: mothers who refuse their assigned roles, daughters drowning in inherited expectations, and the brutal cost of keeping up appearances.

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 Sing, Unburied, Sing

Sing, Unburied, Sing

If The Immortalists wrecked you with its sibling warfare and death's shadow, Ward's Sing, Unburied, Sing delivers the same raw emotional architecture—ghosts that refuse silence, fractured family loyalties, and magical realism that probes how mortality shapes every choice. Intergenerational trauma meets Southern Gothic truth, no sentimentality allowed.

Cover of The Latecomer

The Latecomer

Claire Lombardo's 'Same As It Ever Was' resonated because it held up a mirror to middle-class family life without flinching—every quiet resentment, every compromise, every inherited wound examined with humor and brutal honesty. If you're craving another novel that spans decades to dissect how early choices calcify into lifelong regrets, exploring flawed characters with empathy but zero excuses, we've found your next read. No tidy endings, no melodrama—just the messy, patient brutality of real life.

Cover of The Postcard

The Postcard

If 'Follow Your Heart' gripped you with its intimate letters exposing suppressed desires and family resentments, you'll crave this next read that mirrors those emotional depths in a nostalgic French setting. Dive into a flawed woman's journey through hidden traumas and late-life awakenings, echoing the cathartic redemption you cherished. It's the perfect follow-up for anyone seeking validation in brutal self-reflection and unspoken loves.