Whether you’ve promised yourself that 2016 is likely to be the year you’ll read more books, the year you’ll read books more thoughtfully or the year you’ll read fewer curmudgeonly remarks sections, we have a few new releases worth considering.
We’re looking forward to bold familial debuts, whimsical fable-like tales and sprawling sagas by the usual suspects( we’re looking at you, Don DeLillo ). Our list has you covered through May — here’s hoping you’re resolute with your reading resolves until then!
JANUARY
The Past by Tessa Hadley
Jan. 5
Hadley’s popular reputation, especially in the U.S ., hasn’t caught up with her critical one. But this novel, which uses her much-praised perceptiveness and her fine-brushed prose to tell a story of familial secrets and tensions, may help her break through. -CF
Your Heart Is a Muscle the Size of a Fist by Sunil Yapa
Jan. 12
Yapa’s debut is a searing, stylishly written fiction voiced through seven characters navigating the treacherous province of the 1999 Seattle WTO protests as they devolve into violence. -CF
This Census-Taker by China Mieville
Jan. 12
Mieville is the type of sci-fi writer who’s skilled at making new worlds without bogging down his plots with heavy-handed exposition, so his short, inventive book about isolation and identity is sure to entertain. -MC
The Portable Veblen by Elizabeth McKenzie
Jan. 19
When Paul, a charming neurologist, proposes to Veblen, her answer is a hesitant “yes.” Things don’t exactly improve from there, as the betrothed couple’s lives are complicated by wars, class-oriented and otherwise. -MC
FEBRUARY
The Book of Memory by Petina Gappah
Feb. 2
Full of Nabokovian allusions and unreliable narration, Gappah’s novel is told through the voice of Memory, an albino Nigerian girl who has been imprisoned for the murder of her adoptive father — a charge of which she claims she’s innocent. -CF
The High Mountains of Portugal by Yann Martel
Feb. 2
The Booker Prize-winning author of Life of Pi is back with a fiction that spans 100 years of Portuguese history, beginning with a human hunting for a mysterious artifact. -MC
And After Many Days by Jowhor Ile
Feb. 2
An ambitious debut, And After Many Days tells the story of a young man who disappears in the midst of political upheaval in Nigeria, and the complex interplay of the past and present, the personal and the political. It’s a book about how we tell tales and how we uncover the truth — oh, and it’s a suspenseful mystery. -CF
The Queen of the Night by Alexander Chee
Feb. 2
If you pay attention to literary Twitter, you’re very well known Chee, the quintessential author/ good book-world citizen. Now he has a new fiction coming out for the first time in over a decade, an intriguing tale of operatic blackmail and suspense. -CF
Sudden Death by Alvaro Enrigue
Feb. 9
This is a book about the outlaw-painter Caravaggio, and also about tennis, although Enrigue confesses in its introduction that he has never watched a tennis match. The apparently disparate topics collide in this very funny irony. -MC
The Lives of Elves by Muriel Barbery
Feb. 9
Nearly ten years ago, Muriel Barbery enchanted readers the world over with her novel The Elegance of the Hedgehog — and she’s back with a still-more twee tale of two children brought together by their virtually supernatural connections to music and the natural world. -CF
The Lost Time Accidents by John Wray
Feb. 9
Waldy Tolliver, a kind of modern-day Billy Pilgrim, get unstuck in time, tasked with a daunting expedition to uncover the mysteries of his ancestors. His father is a sci-fi writer, his great-grandfather a physicist — and their tales are threaded together by the wild flow of day. -MC
Shylock Is My Name by Howard Jacobson
Feb. 9
The second in a new Hogarth series of Shakespearian retellings from master novelists( the first was Jeanette Winterson’s The Gap of Time ), Jacobson’s modern spin on The Merchant of Venice throws Nazi footballers into the mixture for a poignant meditation on the enduring power of anti-Semitism. -CF
Free Men by Katy Simpson Smith
Feb. 16
In her debut fiction, historian and writer Smith brought the sins and struggles of a post-revolutionary Carolina family vividly to life. Free Men promises to do the same for a harrowing tale of three humen on the run from the law, and, in at least one case, the shackles of enslavement, in the late 18 th-century South. -CF
The Girl in the Red Coa t by Kate Hamer
Feb. 16
Narrated by a missing girl and her distraught mother, Hamer’s book is a moving, voice-driven narrative. As much an examination of loss and anxiety as it is a gripping page-turner, it’ll appeal to anyone captivated by child narrators or analyses of the aches and elations of motherhood. -MC
MARCH
Blackass by A. Igoni Barrett
March 1
In a sharp twisting on Kafka’s Metamorphosis , Barrett’s novel opens with the protagonist waking up one morning in Lagos to realise he’s been transformed — into a white man. A sear, provocative irony ensues. -CF
Innocents and Others by Dana Spiotta
March 8
Female friendship is finally considered worthy of literary analysis, a movement for which we have Elena Ferrante and Alexandra Kleeman, among so many other bold female novelists, to thank. Spiotta’s latest is the story of two female filmmakers who, in spite of being close friends, just don’t assure eye-to-eye when it comes to their artistic medium of choice. -MC
Half a Lifelong Romance by Eileen Chang
March 8
The celebrated author of Love in a Fallen City wrote this novel about Shanghai in the ‘3 0s , now being translated into English for the first time, nearly 50 years ago. Star-crossed fans are rent apart by fate, holding out hope that they haven’t separated for good. -MC
What Is Not Yours Is Not Yours by Helen Oyeyemi
March 8
The author best known for gracing her contemporary tales with a fairy tale-like air has a brand-new short story collecting, promising to fill readers’ hearts with wistful whimsy. Each story centres on the idea of keys, real and imagined. -MC
Hold Still by Lynn Steger Strong
March 21
This literary suspense fiction, which is being touted as the Everything I Never Told You ( Celeste Ng) of 2016, melds psychological insight, precise plot and limpid prose. -CF
The Nest by Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney
March 22
One of the most-anticipated debuts of 2016 — possibly thanks to a glistening endorsement from one Amy Poehler — The Nest follows a squad of siblings dealing with the potential loss of their inheritance. Each imagined exactly how the money would change “peoples lives”, and confronting the adjustment comes with more than a few dredged up old arguments. -MC
The Association of Small Bombs by Karan Mahajan
March 22
Protagonist Mansoor narrowly dodges demise after surviving a tragic bombing in Delhi. His friends, two brothers, aren’t so lucky, and leave their parents’ lives in shambles. Mahajan’s second novel tells their story, peppered with scenes from the life of a bomb maker, to craft a meditation on the scope of even “small” acts of terrorism. -MC
APRIL
Everything I Received on the Beach by Cynan Jones
April 5
Everything I Received on the Beach is coming to our shores in April, although it was written before Welsh novelist Jones’ 2015 U.S. publication, The Dig . A slim, chilling fiction, it follows three desperate humen hoping to better their lot, at an estimated cost that may be far greater than they reckoned with. -CF
The Bed Moved by Rebecca Schiff
April 12
Schiff’s tales are plumb with youthful misfortunes, both timeless and pegged to the Internet era. If you’ve ever been on an online date or to a geeky summer camp, there’s something here for you to love. -MC
Lazaretto by Diane McKinney-Whetstone
April 12
McKinney-Whetstone has won awardings for her evocative historical fiction in the past. In Lazaretto , at the quarantine hospital for immigrants to Philadelphia, the black live-in faculty help find comfort and family with one another soon after AbrahamLincoln’s assassination, but their fates remain vulnerable in the turbulent times. -CF
Hystopia by David Means
April 19
Means is one of those “writers’ writers” you always hear about, and in this novel he defines his tightly crafted sentences to run imagining what America might be like if President John F. Kennedy survived his assassination and the Vietnam War never really objective — a wrenchingly brilliant alternative history. -CF
MAY
The Veins of the Ocean by Patricia Engel
May 3
Engel continues to capture the immigrant experience with the story of Reina Castillo, whose parents’ marriage was rocked by infidelity and whose friend is a death-row convict. Her life converges with a Cuban exile, in a story of companionship Roxane Gay calls “exquisite.” -MC
Zero K by Don DeLillo
May 10
Few literary announcements are as joyous as news of a new DeLillo novel, full as his writings are of wry wisdom. Zero K will be about eternal life, a DeLilloian topic if ever we heard one. A billionaire tries to remedy his ailing wife by preserving her body until researchers figure out the whole living forever thing. -MC
LaRose by Louise Erdrich
May 10
Erdrich won the National Book Award for her tumultuous novel The Round House , about a crime committed on a reservation. Another crime, which ripples out to influence each character, sits at the center of her latest book: A hunter targeting deer erroneously shoots his 5-year-old neighbor, spurring deep sorrow for everyone involved. -MC
The Noise of Time by Julian Barnes
May 10
The latest from Booker-winning author Barnes is a historical fiction about a composer whose run has been denounced by Joseph Stalin. Rather than facing exile, he’s was transformed into a Soviet marionette in what is sure to be an emotionally wrought read. -MC
Sweetbitter by Stephanie Danler
May 24
Danler’s own experience waitressing at hot Manhattan joints advises her much-anticipated debut. The heroine of Sweetbitter , a 22 -year-old New York City transplant who’s over her head and searching for belonging, discovers run as a waitress, and is speedily swept into the language and rhythm of restaurant life. -CF
Some Possible Solutions by Helen Phillips
May 31
After publishing an odd, inventive little fiction in 2015( The Beautiful Bureaucrat ), Phillips is coming out with a collecting of similarly odd, inventive short tales featuring premises like people’s scalp abruptly becoming transparent. -CF
Modern Lovers by Emma Straub
May 31
It’s summer reads season, and that means brand-new Straub — this time, she defines her observational wit on three middle-aged friends( former college bandmates) who find themselves in a crisis of identity as their now-grown children head off to college themselves. -CF
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