Literary Fiction · Flawed Protagonists

8 hand-picked literary fiction and flawed protagonists books curated by NextBookAfter.

Literary FictionFlawed Protagonists
Cover of Crossroads

Crossroads

If Playworld hooked you with its brutal honesty about modern masculinity and the absurdity of urban pretensions, you're craving more stories that skewer societal hypocrisies through flawed protagonists spiraling into existential crises. The dark humor and psychological depth that made Ross's novel a cathartic escape from sanitized narratives echo in Crossroads by Jonathan Franzen, delivering the same unapologetic probe into family power struggles and moral ambiguity. This is for readers tired of polite fiction—dive into the mess of human frailty and cultural critiques that refuse easy resolutions.

Cover of Empire Falls

Empire Falls

If Peyton Place hooked you with its explosive mix of small-town secrets, infidelity, and class warfare, Empire Falls by Richard Russo delivers the same savage takedown of American illusions. Dive into flawed characters battling economic despair and moral rot in a decaying mill town, where gossip and betrayal fuel a gripping family saga. It's the perfect follow-up for readers hungry for raw social critique wrapped in scandalous drama.

Cover of Knockemstiff

Knockemstiff

If Olive Kitteridge proved you can handle difficult people carrying profound truths, Knockemstiff takes that covenant further. Pollock's southern Ohio misfits navigate addiction, infidelity, and aging through interconnected stories so spare they cut—same abrasive vulnerability, same refusal to romanticize, but with Appalachian grit replacing New England stoicism.

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 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 Dutch House

The Dutch House

If The Goldfinch rewired your expectations for what literary fiction could accomplish—Dickensian sprawl meeting psychological precision, moral ambiguity rendered in museum-quality prose—then The Dutch House is your next obsession. Patchett commands the same epic, multi-decade scope, tracing sibling bonds warped by inheritance and loss, while her lush, sensory language builds a world so textured you'll taste the privilege and feel the betrayal in your bones.

Cover of The Paper Palace

The Paper Palace

If Dawn's plane crash revelation gutted you, wait until you meet a woman whose entire summer unravels the careful architecture of her marriage. The same what-if hunger, the same refusal to condemn female desire, the same intellectual detail wrapped around emotional carnage. This is for readers who defended Dawn's choices at book club and need another story that transforms selfishness into survival.

Cover of The Secret History

The Secret History

If Crime and Punishment's feverish dive into guilt, moral ambiguity, and psychological torment left you craving more, The Secret History echoes that raw intensity with elite students rationalizing extreme acts that shatter their worlds. Dostoevsky's flawed protagonist unraveling under conscience's weight finds a perfect match in Tartt's introspective intellectuals facing regret without redemption. Share if you're hooked on stories that expose human fragility through philosophical thrillers!