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Literary Fiction · Social Critique

15 hand-picked literary fiction and social critique books curated by NextBookAfter.

Literary FictionSocial Critique
Cover of A Feast of Snakes

A Feast of Snakes

You devoured God's Little Acre for its unflinching dive into Depression-era Southern poverty, where flawed patriarchs chase greed and flesh amid grotesque family chaos. The savage humor exposing human folly, laced with erotic undertones and social critique, hooked you on that raw human depravity. Now, A Feast of Snakes coils tighter with the same feverish grit and betrayal in forgotten America.

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 Birnam Wood

Birnam Wood

If Heartwood gripped you with its unflinching marital discord amid ideological warfare and quiet betrayals, Birnam Wood will haunt with activist alliances crumbling under ego and resentment. Eleanor Catton's forensic character studies mirror that psychological depth, peeling back self-deception in flawed, petty individuals chasing unfulfilled ambitions. No tidy redemptions—just raw emotional realism in a world of moral ambiguity and social critique.

Cover of Boy Parts

Boy Parts

You loved Dorothy Daniels because she weaponized desire without apology, turning feminine hunger into power. If that brazen, hedonistic energy—the way she consumed men, society, and pleasure with equal ferocity—left you starving for more women who own their darkness, there's another anti-heroine waiting. She wields a camera instead of a knife, but her gaze is just as predatory, her rebellion just as intoxicating.

Cover of Detransition, Baby

Detransition, Baby

You fell for Beautiful World because it validated your ambivalence—the messy love, the philosophical spiraling, the sense that late capitalism has hollowed out what matters. You craved characters who dissect their own emotional paralysis with the same razor-sharp intelligence you bring to your own life. This next read delivers that exact eavesdropping-on-brilliant-minds thrill, but through conversations about identity, desire, and queer family-making that feel like the natural evolution of everything Rooney made you feel.

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 Erasure

Erasure

If Roth's savage takedown of academic pieties and hidden identities left you breathless, Percival Everett's Erasure is the literary gut-punch you've been craving. A furious, brilliant protagonist dismantles publishing's racial performance with the same unfiltered intelligence that made Coleman Silk unforgettable, delivering ambiguous endings and meta-fictional daring that rewards your skepticism.

Cover of Liars

Liars

If The Wedding People's hilarious detonation of upper-middle-class wedding absurdities and Phoebe's smirking rebellion against soul-crushing routines left you craving more, Liars by Sarah Manguso delivers with an acerbic narrator autopsying her marriage in a domestic pressure cooker of rage and wit. Fans who loved Espach's blend of dark humor, feminist satire, and redemptive chaos will devour this tale of undervalued women unleashing feral insights on heteronormative traps. It's the perfect follow-up for Chardonnay-sipping skeptics seeking unapologetic mockery and taboo midlife reinvention.

Cover of Notes on an Execution

Notes on an Execution

You devoured Bright Young Women because it refused to glorify the monster, spotlighting instead the brilliant, resilient women erased by true crime's male gaze. You craved that feminist fury, that surgical dismantling of how society glamorizes predators while silencing survivors. Now you need a book that delivers the same intellectual rage and empowerment.

Cover of Once There Were Wolves

Once There Were Wolves

If you were gripped by the slow-burn tension and atmospheric wilderness in Liz Moore's The God of the Woods, where family traumas and social hypocrisies unravel against a haunting backdrop, Charlotte McConaghy's Once There Were Wolves will hook you with its Scottish Highlands as a mirror for environmental conflicts and emotional resilience. Dive into multi-perspective storytelling that builds empathy for flawed characters, blending sharp critiques of privilege with evocative prose that turns landscapes into accomplices in the mystery. It's the character-driven thriller that rewards patience with profound insights into human vulnerability and nature's raw power.

Cover of Real Life

Real Life

You devoured Entitlement because Alam refused to let anyone off the hook—not the billionaire philanthropists, not Brooke, not you. That scalding honesty about wealth, race, and the quiet violence of meritocracy myths hit like a confession you didn't know you needed. If you're hungry for more fiction that skewers performative allyship and digs into the psychic toll of navigating white-dominated spaces without offering tidy redemption, this next read will wreck you in the best way.

Cover of The Days of Abandonment

The Days of Abandonment

If Marlen Haushofer's Killing Stella hooked you with its unflinching expose of domestic cruelty and internalized oppression, Elena Ferrante's The Days of Abandonment amps up that claustrophobic tension through a woman's raw unraveling. Dive into spare prose that mirrors emotional turmoil, critiquing gender dynamics with the same lingering unease that forces self-reflection. This rec delivers the cathartic reckoning for fans of psychological realism without the melodrama.

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!

Cover of The Sentence

The Sentence

If Enormous Wings gave you that aching recognition—magical realism as metaphor for the parts society won't hold—The Sentence will haunt you in the best way. Erdrich trades wings for a ghost, neurodivergence for heritage theft, but the emotional architecture is identical: otherness as both wound and superpower, family chaos as the only honest kind of love, and prose so empathetic it validates every messy corner without a single sermon.

Cover of The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida

The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida

If Roy's explosive dissection of India's rot left you breathless, you need fiction that delivers the same poetic brutality. For readers who devour unflinching social critique wrapped in lyrical ferocity—where activism isn't performed but embedded in every haunting sentence—this is the gut-punch that refuses sentimental escape hatches.