CULTURE
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This year is shaping up to be a good one for book lovers. There’s a posthumous printing of Nobel Prize-winning author Gabriel García Marquez’s languorous last novel, Until August, in which a happily married woman makes her annual trip to a waterfront town, where she takes a lover for the night; the first-ever biography of Andy Warhol star and queer icon Candy Darling (there’s also a biopic starring Hari Nef out later this year); All Fours, the first novel from actor and author Miranda July since 2015’s The First Bad Man; James, a radical reimagining of Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn from the perspective of the enslaved Jim, by American Fiction writer Percival Everett; and the highly-anticipated memoir of Anna Marie Tendler, who recounts all the times throughout her life that men have called her—or, nearly driven her—“crazy.”
There’s also The House of Hidden Meanings, a juicy memoir from RuPaul that traces his life story from being an alienated young Black boy in 1960s San Diego to becoming the media mogul and gay icon he is today, an investigation into modern eating disorder culture from writer Emma Specter, philosopher Judith Butler’s latest contribution to the field of gender studies with the clear-eyed Who’s Afraid of Gender?, and several exciting debuts from writers and poets including Kaveh Akbar, Honor Levy, Ashleah Gonzales, and Liz Riggs. Whether you’re downloading a book to your device or heading to a brick-and-mortar bookshop, here are the best titles of the year to check out (so far):
Martyr! by Kaveh Akbar
In his celebrated poems, Iranian-American writer Kaveh Akbar examines deeply personal topics—addiction, the feeling of displacement, and identity. With his touching debut novel, Martyr!, Akbar explores these themes further through his protagonist Cyrus—a newly sober, orphaned Iranian immigrant. Obsessed with the concept of martyrdom, Cyrus searches for a family secret that leads him to unexpected places physically, spiritually, and regarding his complicated lineage.
Come and Get It by Kiley Reid
In Kiley Reid’s 2019 bestselling debut, Such a Fun Age, the author explored the uncomfortable relationship between a young Black babysitter and her privileged white employer. With Come and Get It, Reid turns her focus to a modern college campus in Arkansas, where discussions of money, race, class, and gender happen organically given the melting pot nature of academia. Told through the three perspectives of a visiting professor recovering from a breakup, a young resident advisor laser-focused on saving for a down payment on a home, and a clueless transfer student running from an embarrassing incident at her last school, Come and Get It is filled with incisive observations on the different versions of the American dream that drive us, and how we each choose to get there.
This Is the Honey: An Anthology of Contemporary Black Poets edited by Kwame Alexander
This vibrant anthology edited by New York Times bestselling author Kwame Alexander brings together the works of some of the most groundbreaking contemporary Black poets writing today—like Jericho Brown, Warsan Shire, Rita Dove, and Ross Gay—to celebrate diverse perspectives and poetic expression.
Greta & Valdin by Rebecca K. Reilly
This heartfelt debut from New Zealand author Rebecca K Reilly captures the messy, complicated realities and anxieties of 21st-century young adulthood. Narrated alternately by Auckland-based queer sister and brother (Greta and Valdin), the two protagonists face their share of modern foibles—from dipping into the dating pool after a breakup to unexpected run-ins with exes and the relentless self-consciousness of being on dating apps. They also come from a sprawling, Maori-Russian-Catalonian family—many of whom also happen to be queer. Like its characters, Greta & Valdin defies categorization, inviting readers to relish in endearingly chaotic family connections and the lifelong search for purpose and love.
Ten Bridges I’ve Burnt by Brontez Purnell
After the success of 2017’s Since I Laid My Burden Down and 2022’s prize-winning 100 Boyfriends, musician, dancer, and writer Brontez Purnell is back with Ten Bridges I’ve Burnt, a collection of 38 pieces exploring themes like sexuality, generational trauma, and the ethics of art. A queer artist from Oakland by way of Alabama, Purnell infuses his avant-garde, punk rock ethos into the medium of memoir, playing on the genre with a mixture of poetic humor, brilliant cultural criticism, and empathetic clarity.
Grief Is for People by Sloane Crosley
In her eighth book (and first memoir), Sloane Crosley brings her talent for keen observation to the thorny topic of grief. In 2019, a month after her apartment was burglarized, resulting in the loss of a precious family heirloom, Crosley’s dear friend and publishing mentor died by suicide. This chain of events inspired Grief Is For People, a meditation on loss organized by the five famous stages of grief: denial, bargaining, anger, depression, and afterward (in place of acceptance). As Crosley investigates what happened to her stolen things, she also retreads her relationship with her friend, combing through text messages and replaying exchanges in her head, searching for clues she might’ve missed. With biting wit, Crosley ties in the societal effects of the pandemic, making the project of understanding grief both universal and deeply personal.
No Judgment: Essays by Lauren Oyler
When you go viral for a scathing 5,000-word review of a writer in your milieu (in this case, Lauren Oyler crashing the London Review of Books website with her 2020 takedown of fellow millennial essayist Jia Tolentino’s Trick Mirror), your work is bound to draw its own level of scrutiny. With her new collection of essays, No Judgment, Oyler is self-aware in her observations, covering at length, for instance, the dominance of autofiction over the last decade, a genre that Oyler explored with her 2021 debut novel, Fake Accounts. It’s rare that young writers get the chance to go this granular on topics of their choosing; with, No Judgment Oyler takes this advantage and runs with it, diving into subjects like the utility of gossip, anxiety, life in her now-home city of Berlin, and the rise of the star rating system for books—or, the act of reviewing itself.
Wandering Stars by Tommy Orange
Tommy Orange, a Cheyenne and Arapaho tribe member from Oakland, burst onto the literary scene with his 2018 debut novel There, There, which became a finalist for the 2019 Pulitzer Prize. Its follow-up, Wandering Stars, is part prequel, part sequel to the story, revisiting several of its characters. The tale takes place over a century, chronicling the events of the 1864 Sand Creek Massacre and the devastating impact of the forced assimilation of Native children wrought by institutions like the Carlisle Indian Industrial School. It continues into the 21st century, where a new generation of young Native Americans grapples with the legacy of generational trauma and addiction. With Wandering Stars, Orange again delivers a powerful narrative steeped in historical context and cultural commentary.
Parasol Against the Axe by Helen Oyeyemi
The award-winning, bestselling author of books like Mr. Fox and Peaces, returns with her eighth novel, Parasol Against the Axe. Born in Nigeria and raised in South London, Oyeyemi has called Prague home since 2013, and Parasol marks the first time she’s set one of her stories in the Czech capital. While many of Oyeyemi’s past works have played on the concept of fairy tales—with 2014’s Boy, Snow, Bird reworking “Snow White” and 2019’s Gingerbread a modern take on “Hansel and Gretel”—Parasol questions the boundaries between fact and fiction, and how the truth itself can change depending on who is telling or it, or where it’s being told.
The House of Hidden Meanings by RuPaul
Drag icon and TV mogul RuPaul takes readers behind the makeup, wigs, and six-inch heels with his first memoir, recounting his life story from growing up as a queer Black kid in San Diego to finding his identity as an artist in the punk and drag scenes of Atlanta and New York. Filled with witty Ruisms and reflections on life—including his hard-earned journey to sobriety and self-love (If you don’t love yourself, how the hell are you gonna love somebody else? as his famous tagline goes)—The House of Hidden Meanings is a moving memoir and a peek inside the entertainment industry over several decades of profound change.
Anita de Monte Laughs Last by Xochitl Gonzalez
A story told from three different points of view, Anita de Monte Laughs Last is a masterfully complex exploration of the intersection of art, commerce, gender, and race. Third-year art history student Raquel is navigating the delicate social hierarchies of an Ivy League School (where Raquel is first-generation), when she discovers the work of Cuban-American conceptual artist Anita de Monte for her thesis project. A New York City art star of her time, Anita died mysteriously in 1985, her legacy quickly forgotten. Like Raquel, she was in a relationship with a powerful older white man in the art world, for which she faced backlash, criticism, and suspicion from his privileged friends. The novel is told from Raquel, Anita, and her (potentially murderous, definitely narcissistic) husband Jack’s perspectives, seamlessly jumping between timelines, social commentary, and thriller-level intrigue. As Raquel learns more about Anita, she finds undeniable parallels between herself and the deceased artist, and despite the decades between them, sees that some things never change.
Until August by Gabriel García Marquez
The Nobel Prize-winning Gabriel García Marquez changed the world forever with novels like One Hundred Years of Solitude and Love in the Time of Cholera. Now, ten years after the celebrated Colombian author’s death, a posthumous printing of his last novel offers one final story of love and regret. In Until August, Ana Magdalena Bach makes a yearly pilgrimage to the island where her mother is buried. Though happily married, her annual tradition includes taking a new lover for the night. Until August is a sensual contemplation on time, freedom, and self-transformation from one of the world’s greatest writers.
James by Percival Everett
After the wild success of 2023’s Oscar-winning American Fiction (based on Percival Everett’s 2015 novel Erasure), you won't want to miss the cult favorite author’s electric new work. A reimagining of Mark Twain’s 1884 masterpiece The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Everett’s James flips the classic narrative. Told from the perspective of Jim, the novel’s enslaved runaway, rather than the young Huck, James completely reimagines one-half of Finn’s famous duo, elevating him from unwitting sidekick to reluctant hero. Everett is a master in working with historical figures, including 2009’s I Am Not Sydney Poitier and 2004’s A History of the African-American People (Proposed) by Strom Thurmond, as Told to Percival Everett and James Kincaid. Everett brings that laser-sharp wit to James, creating a radical new American adventure.
You Get What You Pay For: Essays by Morgan Parker
Morgan Parker’s poetic sensibility is at the forefront in You Get What You Pay For, her debut collection of essays. The award-winning author of poetry collections like 2017’s There Are More Beautiful Things Than Beyoncé and 2019’s Magical Negro, Parker draws on both her personal experiences—with writing, therapy, beauty culture, and relationships, for instance—as well as bigger cultural phenomena, like the complex legacy of Serena Williams and Bill Cosby’s fall from grace, to reflect on Black women’s experiences throughout American history.
Who’s Afraid of Gender? by Judith Butler
Judith Butler is no stranger to publishing groundbreaking works. The American philosopher’s iconic 1990 book, Gender Trouble, became a mainstay on university syllabuses, radically shifting how many think about traditional gender roles and sexuality, after all. Now, Butler’s latest work explores how fear and discomfort around these very topics is fueling a global rise in reactionary politics—and offers solutions to combat the growing intolerance of individual differences.
Candy Darling: Dreamer, Icon, Superstar by Cynthia Carr
From acclaimed biographer Cynthia Carr comes the first full look at queer icon and Andy Warhol collaborator, Candy Darling. The biography celebrates Darling’s life, legacy, and contributions to art and counterculture before her untimely death at 29 from leukemia in 1974. Known for her boundary-pushing, fearless spirit, Darling had a wild list of achievements, like inspiring songs by Lou Reed and the Rolling Stones and performing alongside Tennessee Williams in his play, Small Craft Warnings. (It’s a big year for Candy fans, as a biopic starring Hari Nef is also in the works).
You Are Here: Poetry in the Natural World edited by Ada Límon
In a moment where many are reevaluating their relationship with the natural world, this collection of poems by 50 celebrated contemporary writers reflects on just that topic. Published in association with the Library of Congress, and edited by Ada Límon, the 24th Poet Laureate of the United States, You Are Here challenges readers to rethink what they know about “nature poetry,” as both the poetic landscape and the literal landscape of the world are currently changing before our very eyes.
Rangikura: Poems by Tayi Tibble
The second collection from acclaimed Indigenous New Zealand writer Tayi Tibbl, Rangikura encourages readers to question their relationship to desire and exploitation. Written with Māori moteatea, purakau, and karakia (chants, legends, and prayers) in mind, Rangikura explores how the past haunts us, even when we try to escape it.
Fashion’s Big Night Out: A Met Gala Look Book by Kristen Bateman
Fashion writer, editor, and consultant Kristen Bateman and designer Jeremy Scott teamed up for Fashion’s Big Night Out, a detailed look at the history of the Met Gala from its relatively tame inception in 1984 to becoming the splashiest most-talked about sartorial event each year. Behind-the-scenes images give a peek into what goes into making the glittering extravaganza come together while highlighting the gala’s most iconic fashion moments.
My First Book by Honor Levy
Inventive Gen Z writer Honor Levy has been making waves in the literary world since 2020 when both The New Yorker and cult indie press Tyrant Books published her kaleidoscopic flash fiction (she was just 21 at the time). Now, Levy is releasing her aptly-titled debut, My First Book, a collection of surreal short stories about characters grappling with the existential questions and formative romantic experiences of youth, against the chaotic background of the digital age.
All Fours by Miranda July
After nearly a decade, bestselling author, director, screenwriter, and actor Miranda July returns with the novel All Fours. The sharply funny book tells the story of a 45-year-old woman who in a bit of midlife mania embarks on a solo road trip from LA to NYC, leaving her husband and young daughter behind. Just thirty minutes into her journey, she pulls into a motel and finds herself drawn to the young man working at a nearby rental car counter and his girlfriend, too. In typical July form, All Fours focuses on the boundary lines of human connection and sexuality, in this case, while exploring the desires and creative instincts of a woman in the transitional time of middle age. July enters this territory with humor and heart, leaving readers with plenty to chew on.
Very Bad Company by Emma Rosenblum
Following the success of her bestselling debut Bad Summer People—a wild tale about a group of close-knit but possibly murderous friends vacationing on Fire Island—Emma Rosenblum is back with Very Bad Company. This time, Rosenblum (who is the chief content officer of BDG) presents a cast of tech executives misbehaving on an exclusive company retreat in Miami. When a top employee dies on the first night, the week of brainstorming and team building leads to a journey into the company’s (and its employees’) dark secrets. With its comedic send-up of corporate dynamics and culture, Very Bad Company is another irresistible summer read.
Rebel Girl: My Life as a Feminist Punk by Kathleen Hanna
Bikini Kill and Le Tigre frontwoman Kathleen Hanna delivers a searing memoir in which the pioneering punk icon recalls her journey through music and activism as a founding member of the riot grrrl movement. Hanna recounts her rocky childhood through her early years in the music scene, making clear that playing in a punk girl band came with its fair share of challenges, like being at the receiving end of brutal criticism and actual violence. Still, she makes the case for hope and resilience in the face of hardship—illustrated by her meaningful relationships with her bandmates and friends, like Kurt Cobain and Kim Gordon, and the lasting positive impact of her work.
Perfume and Pain by Anna Dorn
In this satirical novel, Anna Dorn (author of 2022’s Exalted) tells the story of Astrid Dahl, a Los Angeles-based writer attempting to both resuscitate her flailing career and find true love—two tasks made harder by the fact that she’s been sort of canceled among her community and is highly self-destructive. Still, Astrid throws herself into distraction, befriending and dating several women simultaneously, and trying her best not to sabotage a major moment of professional redemption. Dorn’s writing is a nod to 1950s lesbian pulp fiction, heavy in melodrama, humor, and self-deprecation.
Fake Piñata by Ashleah Gonzales
Celebrity manager Ashleah Gonzales first became known for her great taste in books; as Kendall Jenner’s agent, Gonzales’s reading recommendations went viral after the top model was photographed around the world, toting alt-lit finds stamped with Gonzales’s trademark turquoise sticky notes. Now, Gonzales has her first collection of poems on the way, via Chelsea Hodson’s small but trendy press, Rose Books.
More Please by Emma Specter
Just as soon as the body positivity and body neutrality movements of the late 2010s seemed here to stay, trends like the surge in celebrity use of weight-loss drugs like Ozempic, the Y2K fashion revival, and “pro-ana” (pro-eating disorder) Tumblr culture migrating to TikTok indicate the pop culture pendulum may be swinging back towards the skinny glorification of recent past decades. With More Please, writer Emma Specter takes a clear-eyed look at this fraught relationship with body image and food, blending memoir with cultural commentary and reported interviews to dive into topics like wellness culture, dangerous dieting practices, and the ongoing American obsession with thinness.
Tehrangeles by Porochista Khakpour
From the acclaimed author of Brown Album and Sick comes Tehrangeles, a Kardashian-coded story about a successful Iranian-American family living in the Hollywood Hills on the verge of landing a reality show. Parents Ali and Homa Milani run a microwavable snack empire, and their four daughters fit into familiar archetypes of the times: model, influencer, health fanatic, and chronically online overachiever. As the prospect of reality TV fame looms over their McMansion like a promising storm cloud, the family must face their deepest secrets and reevaluate what it means to be a family.
I'm Mostly Here to Enjoy Myself by Glynnis MacNicol
Halfway through the pandemic, Glynnis MacNicol, aged 46, found herself exhausted from the isolation of living alone during lockdown. When travel opened up and she was able to return to a Parisian apartment she’d sublet in the past, MacNicol, unmarried and childfree fled to France and embarked upon a journey of radical pleasure filled with good friends, good food, good wine, and good sex. I’m Mostly Here to Enjoy Myself is an intimate account of that time as MacNicol finds purposeful, decadent joy beyond the confines of society’s expectations.
Long Island Compromise by Taffy Brodesser-Akner
Following the major success of her first novel, 2019’s Fleishman Is in Trouble (which she later adapted into a Claire Danes-starring miniseries for Hulu), Taffy Brodesser-Ackner returns with her second full-length work of fiction, Long Island Compromise. Where her first work focused on the divorce between one specific striver Manhattan couple, her second takes us out to the suburbs, where a once-wealthy family is reckoning with the decades-long impact of a single traumatic event. Brodesser-Ackner, who got her start writing award-winning profiles of public figures, brings that sharp journalistic lens to her layered portraits of her characters, with the “feminist Philip Roth” sensibility she’s become known for (and acknowledged).
Lo Fi by Liz Riggs
Liz Riggs’s debut novel, Lo Fi, is a tribute to those early, unvarnished days in a young creative’s life before the big break comes and the dream of success is still a distant mirage. Set in Riggs’s home of Nashville, Lo Fi’s protagonist Alison Hunter is a young, aspiring artist working nights in a sweaty nightclub where everyone is somehow involved in the music industry. Like a sultry country song itself, Lo Fi sees Hunter navigate her way through dating, heartbreak, and difficult but transformational decisions.
The Coin by Yasmin Zaher
In Yasmin Zaher’s debut novel, a young living far from her home in Palestine tries to put down roots in New York City, albeit in unconventional ways—teaching at a school for underprivileged boys, participating in a Birkin bag resale scheme with a grifter she befriended, and becoming obsessed with cleanliness—a quality she feels the American city lacks. In this visceral story about loss and control, heady themes like class, war, exile, family, sexuality, and existential dread are explored with dark humor and a wholly original voice that make Zaher a writer to watch.
JFK Jr.: An Intimate Oral Biography by RoseMarie Terenzio
Despite America’s long-running fascination with Kennedy family lore, there has yet to be an oral biography of John F. Kennedy Jr.—until now. Published on the 25th anniversary of his untimely death in a plane crash at the age of 33, and written by JFK Jr.’s former executive assistant, RoseMarie Terenzio (she worked with him at George magazine and oversaw his PR and philanthropic causes until he died in 1999), the book is full of insider knowledge of the late son of the former president, drawing on interviews with his friends, classmates, teachers, colleagues, and confidants to reveal new stories and insights about his life. Continued interest in JFK Jr.’s late wife, Carolyn Bessette Kennedy, proves the couple’s lasting legacy, and the unique hold they continue to have on the American cultural and political psyche.
Peggy by Rebecca Godfrey
Rebecca Godfrey’s last novel, completed by her friend Leslie Jamison following Godfrey’s death in 2022, is an imagined look at the real life of Peggy Guggenheim—heiress, socialite, and famed art collector. In Peggy, Godfrey envisions how Guggenheim’s life was forever changed as a teenager when her father died on the Titanic. This places us in 1912, and the novel follows Guggenheim’s whirlwind life through the art worlds of America and Europe, and the interesting, high-brow, and often sexist circles she traveled in. Godfrey, whose 2005 true crime book Under the Bridge was adapted into a Hulu series starring Riley Keough and Lily Gladstone this year, had a knack for mining real-life details for fictional gold.
Men Have Called Her Crazy by Anna Marie Tendler
Artist and writer Anna Marie Tendler unwittingly found her life splashed across the headlines in 2022 following her highly publicized divorce from comedian John Mulaney. Now, Tendler is releasing a powerful memoir recounting her experiences in her own words, from unrequited high school love to being hospitalized for depression, anxiety, and self-harm, to dating and family planning in her 30s. By reclaiming her story, Tendler questions the unreasonable expectations placed on all women in the modern era.
New York After Dark by Dustin Pittman
Photographer Dustin Pittman spent his life capturing the vibrant scenes around him, from the women’s liberation movements to Andy Warhol’s factory. New York After Dark features 270 pages of photos from Pittman’s archive, with a focus on the wild world of ’60s-’90s New York City nightlife. Candid anecdotes from Pittman himself add even more color to the up-close look at a bygone but never-forgotten time.
Intermezzo by Sally Rooney
‘Sally Rooney’ has become shorthand for a certain type of millennial story, one that favors naturalistic dialogue, complex interpersonal dynamics and quietly devastating yet relatable dating scenarios over major plot twists or loud settings. The 33-year-old Irish writer has authored three novels, two of which were adapted into television miniseries (one of which became a massive, career-launching hit for its male star, Paul Mescal). Her highly-anticipated fourth novel, Intermezzo, focuses on the relationship between two Dublin brothers who though on the surface couldn’t be more different, are each left to grapple with the death of their father and their own complicated romantic relationships.
The Last Dream by Pedro Almodovar
Pedro Almodovar may have been making films since the late 1970s, but the Oscar-winning Spanish director is only just releasing his first book. The Last Dream is a collection of personal essays and (very) short stories, blending fiction with reality in a colorful style that harkens to his 20 feature films. With his latest, the Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore-starring The Room Next Door, out this December, it’s as good a time as any to delve into the tenderly wild world of the legendary auteur.
Be Ready When The Luck Happens by Ina Garten
For decades, Ina Garten has shared glimpses of her glamorously cozy life with the world through her thirteen cookbooks and fan-favorite Food Networks series. Now, the Barefoot Contessa’s first memoir goes deeper into the details of her journey from being an office drone in Washington, D.C. to building a global culinary empire. With plenty of (fleeting) appearances by her husband Jeffrey, of course.
Selling Sexy: Victoria's Secret and the Unraveling of an American Icon by Lauren Sherman and Chantal Fernandez
Fashion journalists Lauren Sherman and Chantal Fernandez (currently of Puck News and The Cut, respectively) chart the rise of Victoria’s Secret, from its inception as a small chain of boutiques in the 1970s to its early aughts status as the biggest name in mall lingerie, to its more recent stumbles in the late 2010s. With its storied runway show returning this year—which has some the biggest names of the once multi-billion dollar company’s heyday dusting off their angel wings for the event—the brand, now under new ownership, will have to prove whether it can enter a new era of fashion. Selling Sexy provides the context for whether VS can bounce back, and what its rise, fall and attempted comeback say about American culture.
Didion & Babitz by Lili Anolik
Over the summer, Charli XCX and Lorde made headlines with over their decade-long frenemyship, examining the way relationships between artistic peers can, despite mutual admiration, quickly turn sour. But before “Girl, so confusing,” there was Joan Didion and Eve Babitz—two iconic writers of a legendary era who also related to one another with equal parts love and hate. Though they never worked it out on the remix, a collection of journals, photos, scrapbooks and other ephemera were recently found in Babitz’s apartment after her death—including letters to and from Didion, and observations on the pair’s friendship-turned-rivalry.
Cher: The Memoir, Part One by Cher
With a life too big and bold for just one memoir, Cher’s new autobiography will be split into two parts. Part one covers the first half of the 78-year-old’s life, from a chaotic upbringing moving around the country while her mother divorced and remarried several times (with young Cher all the while dreaming of being famous), to her own move to Los Angeles at 16 to pursue her dreams. It was there she met Sonny Bono, and Part One also follows the course of that relationship, which made them both stars before its end.
The City and Its Uncertain Walls (English translation) by Haruki Murakami
Beloved author Haruki Murakami returns with his first novel since 2017 with The City and Its Uncertain Walls (released in Japan in 2023, this marks the book’s English translation). Set in a place and time where a ‘Dream Reader’ reviews dreams, The City is written with Murakami’s typical surrealist flare, and is a reaction, according to the author, of the highly divisive nature of post-pandemic times.
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