Literary Fiction · Family Saga · Mental Health Struggles

4 hand-picked literary fiction, family saga, and mental health struggles books curated by NextBookAfter.

Literary FictionFamily SagaMental Health Struggles
Cover of Ask Again, Yes

Ask Again, Yes

Fly Away gripped you with its unflinching look at flawed women masking pain with sarcasm, navigating addiction and loss in suburban America's hidden chaos. Now, Ask Again, Yes echoes that emotional rollercoaster through two families shattered by mental illness and one unforgivable act, exploring forgiveness and multi-generational bonds that refuse to break. It's the cathartic, tear-jerking follow-up for readers craving resilient heroines who turn suffering into growth.

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 The Most Fun We Ever Had

The Most Fun We Ever Had

You fell hard for Hello Beautiful's fierce sisterly loyalty amid heartbreak and mental fragility, where the Padavano women's resilience shines through chaos without sugarcoating the pain. It's that cathartic realism—exploring depression, forgiveness, and intergenerational ties—that makes it unforgettable, echoing your own messy family truths. Discover a follow-up like The Most Fun We Ever Had that delivers the same brutal beauty in sibling rivalries and quiet healing.

Cover of Transcendent Kingdom

Transcendent Kingdom

If Winter Santiaga's spiritual reckoning with consequence spoke to you, meet Gifty—a neuroscience PhD candidate dissecting family addiction, faith versus dopamine receptors, and Ghanaian-American identity with the same unflinching ferocity. Yaa Gyasi delivers the grit, the flawed Black female ambition, and the cultural specificity Sister Souljah trained you to demand, minus the afterlife detours.