Literary Fiction · Taboo Themes

5 hand-picked literary fiction and taboo themes books curated by NextBookAfter.

Literary FictionTaboo Themes
Cover of Breasts and Eggs

Breasts and Eggs

If Earthlings made you feel seen in your rage against factory-setting existence, this is your next read. Mieko Kawakami strips away the same suffocating norms with surgical prose—women narrating their own unraveling under patriarchal gazes, bodies treated as public property, no comfort offered. Just the grotesque absurdity of being flesh in a world that won't let you own it.

Cover of Detransition, Baby

Detransition, Baby

If you couldn't put down 'Margo's Got Money Troubles' for its biting satire on economic precarity, sex work, and flawed family ties, 'Detransition, Baby' by Torrey Peters amps up that irreverent energy with sharp takes on trans lives, detransition, and queer parenting. It's the unflinching honesty and laugh-out-loud commentary on taboo reinvention that makes it a must-read companion. Dive into characters commodifying identities for survival, just like Margo, but with gender fluidity and emotional messiness cranked to eleven.

Cover of Life Ceremony

Life Ceremony

If Havel's quick, punchy oddities felt like validation for your repressed quirks, Murata's Life Ceremony cuts deeper—transforming mundane rituals into alien anthropology with zero apology. Each ultra-concise story is a literary sucker punch that skewers societal norms while mirroring the squirming strangeness you've been hiding. This is fiction that refuses sanitization, serving the macabre cold and direct for disillusioned readers done pretending their inner weirdness needs translation.

Cover of Perfume: The Story of a Murderer

Perfume: The Story of a Murderer

For those entranced by Lolita's intoxicating blend of obsession and exquisite prose, this novel offers a sensory feast of forbidden desires and psychological darkness, wrapped in historical satire and macabre wit.

Cover of The Great Believers

The Great Believers

Middlesex captivated with its multi-generational saga of identity crises, blending Greek-American heritage and gender exploration with witty narration that made taboo themes feel fiercely human. Readers fell hard for the resilient characters navigating personal reinvention amid cultural upheavals like Detroit riots, all wrapped in vivid sensory details that turned history into intimate drama. If that emotional resonance and page-turning depth hooked you, The Great Believers echoes it perfectly through the AIDS epidemic's lens, offering profound legacies of loss and queer community with the same compassionate humor.