From gripping sequels to debuts by fresh new voices, discover the best new fiction books of 2024 and 2025. We also look back at the best fiction books of 2023 and share our edit of some of the best novels of all time.
Albert Camus once said that ‘fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth’, and with these eight words he perfectly encapsulated the immense power of the novel. The best fiction teaches us history that the curriculum never did, sees us break in a new pair of shoes in a new city, breaks our heart and mends it – sometimes in the same chapter. It lets us breathe in a past era, step into fantasy worlds and even offers glimpses into dystopian futures. As 2024 marks another exciting year of new books, we've also collected the best fiction of 2023, and of all time.
A look ahead to 2025
The author of The Attic Child is back, with a powerful dual narrative historical novel . To the world Mrs Copplefield is the epitome of Victorian propriety: an exemplary society lady who writes a weekly column advising young ladies on how to be better wives. Only Adeline has never been a good wife or mother; she has no claim to the Copplefield name, nor is she an English lady. Now a black woman, born in Africa, who dared to pretend to be something she was not, is on trial in the English courts with all of London society baying for her blood. And she is ready to tell her story.
When Katie’s nine-year relationship ends – suddenly and unexpectedly – she arrives at her friends' flat share with no idea what to do next. Friends Dee, Liv and Rosa come up with an idea to help: a handbook for heartbreak. Armed with some martinis and old sketchbook, they compile notes on crying, hangovers, music, buying new sheets and being really, really angry. But Katie is not the only one nursing a broken heart. Could they all benefit from their shared advice?
Eva is sixteen and living in Brooklyn when she meets super-rich Upper East-Sider Jamie in the hospital her grandmother is dying in. So begins this coming-of-age debut novel from short story writer Clare Sestanovich. As Eva goes to university, and falls in and out of love, Jamie spirals away from her into a world of radical politics and religion. But they're both looking for the same thing: a way to define themselves and their beliefs in a divided and unjust world.
Garrett Carr's debut takes us to Ireland's west coat in the 1970s, where a baby is found alone on the beach. Adopted by fisherman Ambrose Bonnar, the boy captivates Bonnar's family and the close-knit town immediately, through love, worry and envy. Set over twenty years, this is a tale of ordinary lives made extraordinary, and a quiet community attempting to adapt in a fast-changing world.
Living in south London, doing her best to support her family after being abandoned by her father as a child, twenty-three-year-old Sirad Ali is pretty sure this is not the life she really wants. Then, on her commute to work, she's suddenly transported to an alternate life in present-day Mogadishu, and encounters Ubah, the woman she could have been had her parents not fled to London during the Somali Civil War. On her equally sudden return to Greenwich, Sirad must find a way to continue with her normal life. But then Ubah mysteriously appears in London.
The best fiction books of 2024
Shortlisted for the Booker Prize 2024
Faced with the prospect of being sold to a new owner in New Orleans, and being separated from his wife and child, enslaved Jim hides on Jackson’s Island to plot his escape. Meeting Huck who is hiding from his volatile father, the pair team up and embark on a dangerous journey along the Mississippi River in search of freedom. From Percival Everett comes James , a poignant and funny novel which finally gives a voice to one of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn's most marginalised characters.
Booker Prize-winning author Alan Hollinghurst returns with Our Evenings , the darkly funny story of Dave Win, who, after winning a privately funded scholarship to his local boarding school, is thrust into an upper-class world he has never experienced. Through the story of Win's life, with all its triumphs and pains, Hollinghurst holds up a mirror to modern England, exploring themes of race, class, sexuality, love, and the power the upper classes wield over theatre and art.
The Kamogawa Diner in Kyoto is no ordinary restaurant. Run by retired police detective Nagare Kamogawa and his daughter, Koishi, the pair sleuth behind the scenes to uncover their guests’ culinary histories and serve dishes that transport them back to their most cherished memories. In The Restaurant of Lost Recipes , the second novel in Hisashi Kashiwai’s cosy Japanese fantasy mystery series, Nagare and Koishi help a variety of guests reconnect with their pasts, from a former pop star looking for a fresh start to a budding Olympic swimmer searching for inspiration.
Kate Mosse returns with The Map of Bones , the final novel in her The Joubert Family Chronicle historical fiction series, an epic multi-generational story of women blazing their own trails and fighting to survive. From Suzanne Joubert, a refugee who arrives at the Cape of Good Hope in search of her cousin – a feared pirate who vanished without a trace in the 1620s – to her descendant Isabelle Lepard, who journeys into the heart of the frontier to find her family, Mosse weaves an enthralling tale of the Joubert women’s trials and tribulations.
As a man and a child make their way across an arid, scorched landscape, their only goal is to find shelter. Finding an abandoned mine site they have no choice but to seek safety, even though they have no idea who or what might be waiting for them down below. A dystopian novel set in a world baked dry, in Juice , Booker-shortlisted author Tim Winton asks: how far will humankind go to survive?
by