Literary Fiction · Intergenerational Conflict

3 hand-picked literary fiction and intergenerational conflict books curated by NextBookAfter.

Literary FictionIntergenerational Conflict
Cover of Real Americans

Real Americans

If The Tokyo Suite hooked you with its unflinching dissection of class warfare and morally messy protagonists navigating exploitation in chaotic urban sprawls, Rachel Khong's Real Americans amps up that intensity by tracing economic divides across generations and borders. Fans loved Madalosso's dark humor slicing through privilege's absurdities without easy outs—Khong delivers the same satirical edge on racial identity and the American Dream's illusions. Dive into this for characters as flawed and cities as oppressively alive, challenging your complacency with zero moral hand-holding.

Cover of The Book of Unknown Americans

The Book of Unknown Americans

If The Joy Luck Club gripped you with its unflinching dive into intergenerational tensions and cultural assimilation struggles, get ready for The Book of Unknown Americans to deliver that same emotional rawness through Latinx immigrant voices. Amy Tan's vignette-style storytelling that mirrored life's chaotic puzzles reemerges here, blending heritage pride with assimilation pains in a way that's addictively poignant. It's the cathartic follow-up for fans seeking nuanced tales of identity crises and resilient family bonds without the sugarcoating.

Cover of The Most Fun We Ever Had

The Most Fun We Ever Had

For fans of Pineapple Street's sharp family entanglements and witty takes on privilege, this multi-generational saga delivers a heartfelt yet humorous deep dive into the messy bonds of an affluent Chicago clan.