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Literary Fiction · Psychological Drama · Dark Humor

6 hand-picked literary fiction, psychological drama, and dark humor books curated by NextBookAfter.

Literary FictionPsychological DramaDark Humor
Cover of Assembly

Assembly

If Lonely Crowds hit you with its unflinching take on urban isolation and the emotional burnout of chasing capitalist dreams in a diaspora haze, you're not alone—readers rave about its dark humor slicing through social media facades and family judgments. This follow-up echoes that raw authenticity, diving deeper into identity crises and mental health struggles with cynical wit that calls out societal bullshit. Get ready for a narrative that feels like a mirror to your own alienated ambitions, no easy answers included.

Cover of I'm a Fan

I'm a Fan

If you devoured Boy Parts for Irina's weaponized sexuality and pitch-black humor skewering the art world's pretensions, I'm a Fan delivers the same unrepentant thrill through a narrator's obsessive digital stalking and savage critique of influencer culture. Both novels revel in unlikable protagonists who embrace their inner monstrosity, blending psychological depth with biting satire on gender dynamics and moral ambiguity. Perfect for fans craving cathartic stories that mirror life's messy truths without redemption or easy answers.

Cover of Old God's Time

Old God's Time

If Flesh by David Szalay hooked you with its spare prose stripping illusions from aging flesh and male fragility, Old God's Time by Sebastian Barry delivers that same merciless mirror to human entropy. Revel in the dark humor of men battling obsolescence and suppressed fears, where physical decay meets emotional isolation without false hope. It's the cathartic truth-telling you need to confront life's unvarnished horrors head-on.

Cover of Penance

Penance

Victorian Psycho's blend of macabre obsessions, sly sociopathy, and subtle savagery hooked you with its unapologetic skewering of repressive norms through an unreliable, morally ambiguous governess. Dive into Penance for that same satirical bite, where obsession unravels in an eerie, isolated world with mockumentary elegance and zero redemption arcs. It's cathartic discomfort for fans of intellectual chills disguised as genre thrills, exposing modern hypocrisies with witty, unflinching prose.

Cover of Sunburn

Sunburn

You devoured The Adult because it refused to sanitize queer coming-of-age—because Natalie's unraveling felt like your own confusion mirrored back. That same unflinching honesty, that blend of dark humor and psychological turbulence, that sparse prose that cuts deeper than it comforts: it all lives in stories that treat identity formation like the raw, obsessive, alienating experience it truly is.

Cover of The Thirteenth Tale

The Thirteenth Tale

If Shirley Jackson's We Have Always Lived in the Castle hooked you with Merricat's childlike yet malevolent voice masking family poisons and societal scorn, you're in for a treat with echoes of gothic isolation and unreliable twists. Fans rave about the dark humor in eccentric rituals that critique mob mentality, blending innocence with menace in atmospheric worlds of female resilience. Dive into The Thirteenth Tale for layered secrets that unravel like Jackson's best, satisfying your thirst for psychological puzzles without the gore.