Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage
Haruki Murakami sticks to three-decade-old themes — by now shopworn — in his latest novel.
The Dog
American Jack Livings, in his debut, digs deep under China's modern-day cuticles.
Scenes From Village Life
Amos Oz's interlocking stories are parables for a brilliant, haunted nation.
Unhappiness
Yasmina Reza applies a shrewd and knowing scalpel to the foibles of the French elite.
Never Love a Gambler
Irish writer Keith Ridgway is beautifully uncompromising in his pitch-perfect thug chronicles.
Open City
What's most impressive about Teju Cole's debut is its modulated darkness.
Can’t and Won’t
Lydia Davis has a problem: she can't not display her ingenious bravura.
The Unknown Quantity
Hermann Broch's novel of the life and times of a 1920s mathematician is sadly overlooked.
In miniature
Jessie Burton's debut puts Holland's Golden Age into occasionally sinister focus.
Shantytown
César Aira uses a vast slum as magnet for every kind of human and social chaos.
Gargoyles
It's hard to imagine a bolder debut than Austrian Thomas Bernhard's 1967 salvo.