Literary Fiction · Identity Politics

3 hand-picked literary fiction and identity politics books curated by NextBookAfter.

Literary FictionIdentity Politics
Cover of Disorientation

Disorientation

Yellowface hooked you with its brutal satire on white authors stealing Asian stories for clout, delivering that delicious schadenfreude as June Hayward's empire crumbles in a storm of backlash. Disorientation amps up the chaos in academia, skewering orientalist profs and tokenism with the same wicked wit that made Yellowface unputdownable. If you live for morally messy protagonists unraveling spectacularly, this is your next obsession.

Cover of Interior Chinatown

Interior Chinatown

If Erasure's publishing world takedown left you furious and exhilarated, Interior Chinatown delivers the same surgical precision aimed at Hollywood's pigeonholing machine. Yu traps his protagonist in 'Generic Asian Man' hell with the same meta brilliance Everett used to skewer Black narrative commodification—and neither book will let you look away from your own complicity.

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.