Support Us Login
  • Home
  • Going Out
    • Things to do
    • Food & Drink
    • Theatre
    • Visual Arts
    • Cinema
    • Kids
    • Festival
    • Gigs
    • Dance
    • Classical Music
    • Opera
    • Immersive
    • Talks
  • Staying In
    • TV
    • Books
    • Cook
    • Podcast
    • Design
    • Netflix
  • Life & Style
    • Beauty
    • Fashion
    • Gifting
    • Wellbeing
    • Lifestyle
    • Shopping
    • Jewellery
  • Explore
  • Shopping
  • CW SHOPS
  • Support Us
  • Get Started
  • Tickets
  • CW SHOPS
Get the Best of London Life, Culture and Style
By entering my email I agree to the CultureWhisper Privacy Policy (we won`t share data & you can unsubscribe anytime).
Books

Autumn reads: best new books to read this season

By Lucy Brooks on 15/9/2023

If summer is all about frothy beach reads, then autumn is the season of literary blockbusters. 2023 offers an enticing array of fictional worlds, from scandalous historical fiction and polyphonic sagas to twisted fairytales and dark dystopias.

The Fraud, Zadie Smith

The Fraud, Zadie Smith

Best-selling author of White Teeth, Zadie Smith, turns her talents to historical fiction. Taking readers on a romp through Victorian Britain and Jamaica, The Fraud revolves around a sensationalist real-life court case. The heir to the Tichborne baronetcy was lost at sea at 25, but when a mysterious man shows up claiming his rightful inheritance, the jury must decide between miraculous survival story or a case of underhand, money-grabbing imposture. Writing with vim and vividness, Smith brings potent themes of politics, class and social justice into a wholly human story.


Click here to buy

WHEN
Published 7 September
Wednesday's Child, Yiyun Li

Wednesday's Child, Yiyun Li

Yiyun Li, prize-winning author of The Book of Goose, plunges readers into the depth and breadth of grief in this collection of 11 short stories. From a grieving mother itemising everybody she has lost to a child, to the entwined lives of a woman and her carer, each story exposes a tender nub of humanity, captured with quietly devastating force in Li's artful prose. This is a collection to savour, contemplate and return to.


Click here to buy

WHEN
Published 14 September
Prophent Song, Paul Lynch

Prophent Song, Paul Lynch

An intense dystopian vision of Ireland, Prophet Song is fiction of the most momentous, which has earned a place on the 2023 Booker Prize long list. With secret police interrogations and mysterious disappearances, it is an exhilarating read -- with prescient parallels to the world around us. Lynch writes with an urgency that has prompted parallels to George Orwell and Cormac McCarthy, but his latest novel is also wholly original.


Click here to buy

WHEN
Published 24 August
The Seventh Son, Sebastian Faulks

The Seventh Son, Sebastian Faulks

Delving into the ethics of medical science, Sebastian Faulks turns unsettling sci-fi into lived reality with the story of a bravura tech billionaire who pushes the boundaries of fertility treatment to create an extraordinary child – and troubling repercussions. With all the flair for story-telling you'd expect from the best-selling author of Birdsong, The Seventh Son is an accomplished page-turner with a thought-provoking message.


Click here to buy

WHEN
Published 7 September
The Wren, The Wren, Anne Enright

The Wren, The Wren, Anne Enright

The Wren, The Wren is a story of female resilience and the love and pain passed on by women through generations. Booker-winner Anne Enright writes with characteristic mastery about intricate web of trauma and love that bond a mother and daughter. The result is a rich and compassionate family saga that immerses readers in the characters' lives


Click here to buy

WHEN
Published 31 August
North Woods, Daniel Mason

North Woods, Daniel Mason

This epic, playful, polyphonic novel unravels for centuries of human life, love and loss as they have played out New England house. Pulitzer-nominated writer Daniel Mason's formal innovation and narrative depth combine to transcendent effect, illustrating the wondrous ways in which we are rooted in our surroundings and history.


Click here to buy

WHEN
Published 19 September
Rogue, Mona Awad

Rouge, Mona Awad

Dubbed the new Margaret Atwood (by Atwood herself), Mona Awad negotiates horror, humour and gothic fairytale with aplomb. Rouge is at once a barbed satire on the beauty industry and a heart-wrenching study of grief – all wrapped up in a sinister quest. Left to deal with her dead mother's debts, Belle finds herself entranced by a strange spa, where family secrets and strange demons bubble beneath the glossy façade.


Click here to buy

WHEN
Published 14 September
The Wolves of Eternity, Karl Ove Knausgaard

The Wolves of Eternity, Karl Ove Knausgaard

Continuing the epic tale of his Morning Star novel, Karl Ove Knausgaard. Encompassing the political and cultural turmoil from the 1980s to the present day, The Wolves of Eternity follows a young Norweigan investigating his father's links to the Soviet Union and a disenchanted Russian biologist, who are connected by a family secret.


Click here to buy

WHEN
Published 5 October
The Future, Naomi Alderman

The Future, Naomi Alderman

Winner of the Women Prize for Fiction, Naomi Alderman (The Power) returns with the story of a group of misfits who plan a heist to regain control of a near-future world ruled by social media and tech billionaires. Within the punchy, action-packed plot are moral dilemmas reflecting on our own world.


Click here to buy

WHEN
Published 7 November
Let Us Descend, Jesmyn Ward

Let Us Descend, Jesmyn Ward

Sing, Unburied, Sing author Jesmyn Ward reimagines the slave trade in this majestic story that roots the black American experience into the foundations of the land. With enslaved Annis as a guide, readers descend into the hellish, but ultimately hopeful world of rice fields, plantations and resurrections.


Click here to buy

WHEN
Published 24 October
So Late in the Day, Claire Keegan

So Late in the Day, Claire Keegan

At just 64 pages, Claire Keegan's new story is small but perfectly formed. There is not a word wasted in this exquisite miniature about an Irish man taking the bus home from work and ruminating on a failed romance.


Click here to buy

WHEN
Published 31 August
Julia, Sandra Newman

Julia, Sandra Newman

George Orwell's 1984 is the latest literary classic to get a feminist re-telling. Sandra Newman (The Heavens) explores the Big Brother dystopia from the perspective of mechanic Julia Worthing. At once honouring and provoking Orwell's original, Julia shows us what it takes to survive the system.


Click here to buy

WHEN
Published 19 October
Share:
You may also like:


  • Things to do in London this weekend: 22–24 September

    Things to do in London this weekend: 22–24 September

  • Benedict Cumberbatch and Ralph Fiennes in The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar, Netflix

    What to watch on TV this week

  • Paul Dano in Dumb Money (Photo: Black Bear)

    In cinemas this weekend: Ken Loach returns for another bleak but unusually hopeful social drama



  • The Culture Whisper team
  • Support Us
  • Tickets
  • Contact us
  • Press
  • FAQ
  • Privacy
  • Terms and conditions
  • Cookies
  • Discover
  • Venues
  • Restaurants
  • Stations
  • Boroughs
✕ ✕
Turning tips into memories
Login
Signup

You have reached the limit of free articles.


To enjoy unlimited access to Culture Whisper sign up for FREE.
Find out more about Culture Whisper

Please fix the following input errors:

  • dummy

Each week, we send newsletters and communication featuring articles, our latest tickets invitations, and exclusive offers.

Occasional information about discounts, special offers and promotions.


OR
LOG IN

OR
  • LOG IN WITH FACEBOOK

Thanks for signing up to Culture Whisper.
Please check your inbox for a confirmation email and click the link to verify your account.



EXPLORE CULTURE WHISPER
✕ ✕
Turning tips into memories
Login
Signup

Please fix the following input errors:

  • dummy
Forgot your username or password?
Don't have an account? Sign Up

OR
  • LOG IN WITH FACEBOOK

If you click «Log in with Facebook» and are not a Culture Whisper user, you agree to our Terms & Conditions and to our Privacy Policy, which includes our Cookie Use

Sign up to CW’s newsletter
By entering my email I agree to the CultureWhisper Privacy Policy (we won`t share data & you can unsubscribe anytime).
×