Literary Fiction

Literary fiction reviews: character-driven, thematically complex works of contemporary and classic literature.

  • The Catcher in the Rye

    J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye appeared in 1951 and immediately divided critics and readers in ways it has never entirely stopped doing. Holden Caulfield, its sixteen-year-old narrator, has become one of the most recognized voices in American fiction-and one of the most contested. His disdain for “phoniness,” his sensitivity, his grief, and his…

  • One Hundred Years of Solitude

    Gabriel García Márquez begins One Hundred Years of Solitude at the moment of its ending and ends at the moment of its beginning, and in that circular structure contains the entire cosmology of a fictional world so fully realized it has permanently enlarged the possibilities of the novel as a form. Published in Spanish in…

  • To the Lighthouse

    Published in 1927, To the Lighthouse is Virginia Woolf’s most formally audacious novel and arguably her most personal. The book is organized around a single postponed journey-the Ramsay family’s plan to visit the lighthouse on the Isle of Skye-and uses that deferrment to excavate the nature of time, loss, and the impossibility of perfect understanding…

  • Mrs. Dalloway

    Virginia Woolf’s fourth novel, published in 1925, takes place in a single London day-June 1923, sometime after the Armistice-and in that day contains what feels like a lifetime, or several lifetimes, or the texture of consciousness itself trying to hold a lifetime together. Mrs. Dalloway is the book in which Woolf fully developed what she…

  • Song of Solomon

    When Toni Morrison published Song of Solomon in 1977, it announced-before Beloved, before her Nobel Prize-the full scale of her literary ambition. The novel is sprawling, mythic, and wildly alive: a bildungsroman that reaches back through African American history and forward into something like redemption. It is Morrison at her most exuberant, and that exuberance…

  • Beloved

    Toni Morrison published Beloved in 1987, her fifth novel, and the one that would change her career and American literature along with it. The book won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1988 and played a significant role in Morrison’s Nobel Prize in Literature in 1993. Set in Cincinnati in 1873, eight years after the…

  • The Great Gatsby

    F. Scott Fitzgerald published The Great Gatsby in 1925 to modest commercial reception and mixed reviews. He would not live to see it become what it is today: perhaps the single most taught, most argued-over, most cinematically adapted American novel ever written. That posthumous ascension is itself a kind of Gatsbyian story-the dream achieved too…

  • To Kill a Mockingbird

    Harper Lee’s debut novel arrived in 1960 like a thunderclap over the American literary landscape, and more than six decades later it has not lost a single volt of its moral electricity. Set in the fictional Alabama town of Maycomb during the Great Depression, the novel unfolds through the eyes of young Scout Finch, whose…

  • The Remains of the Day

    The Remains of the Day By Kazuo Ishiguro · Faber & Faber · 1989 · 258 pages ISBN: 978-0-571-15435-3 · Genre: Literary Fiction WritersReview Rating: 9/10 Review There are novels that become permanent fixtures of the literary conscience, books you carry inside you long after the final page, whose characters resurface unbidden in your own…