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11 contemporary literary novels that explore grief, identity, ambition, and the quiet ways people come undone

Some contemporary literary novels announce themselves loudly, built around shocking twists or sweeping drama. Others work more quietly, slipping under your skin through emotional precision, unsettling atmosphere, and an understanding of how ordinary lives can become emotionally unbearable. The novels on this list belong firmly in the second category.

These books explore grief, isolation, class, motherhood, ambition, memory, friendship, and the impossible expectations people inherit from families and society. Some blur the line between realism and psychological horror. Others stay grounded in everyday life while exposing the emotional fractures hidden beneath routines, relationships, and carefully maintained appearances. What connects them is their interest in interior lives—the private fears, compulsions, disappointments, and longings people carry even when outwardly functioning just fine.

If you’re looking for contemporary literary fiction that feels emotionally intelligent, psychologically rich, and deeply human, these novels deserve your attention.

The cover of the novel Mercy Hill by Hannah Thurman features a tree.

Mercy Hill by Hannah Thurman

A tense and emotionally layered novel about family loyalty, inherited expectations, and the quiet damage caused by control disguised as care. Hannah Thurman explores how obligation and manipulation can shape entire lives, especially for women expected to endure without complaint. Mercy Hill is intimate, unsettling, and deeply perceptive about the ways families can trap people long after they believe they’ve escaped.

Read my full review.
Buy this book.

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Author Interview

Author interview: Emma Tourtelot on motherhood, grief, and becoming a novelist

Emma Tourtelot brings a rare mix of cultural fluency, emotional candor, and lived experience to her work. In this interview, Tourtelot reflects on motherhood as a creative throughline, her early-morning writing life, and the surprising rewards of seeing readers truly live inside her words, as she discusses her debut novel, No One You Know.

Emma Tourtelot’s debut novel, No One You Know, released January 20, 2026.

Q: What’s a memory of a story or book that made you realize you wanted to be a writer?
A: I grew up one town over from Roald Dahl–in Buckinghamshire, England–so I got to meet him at our local library when I was a kid. He was just as weird and wonderful as his stories. And so tall! (I just looked it up: He was 6’6”.) I read his books over and over, and I loved hearing about his little writing shed in his back garden. That was the first time I really thought about who was behind the stories I loved. My favorite was always James and the Giant Peach.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

No One You Know by Emma Tourtelot: Grief, motherhood, and the quiet violence of being blamed

No One You Know by Emma Tourtelot is one of those novels that quietly proves how wrong first impressions can be. I’ll admit it: I almost passed this one by because the cover looks oddly amateurish, the kind of design that suggests something lightweight or underbaked. I’m genuinely glad I didn’t. What’s inside is a sharp, unsettling literary debut that digs far deeper than its packaging suggests.

Get your copy of No One You Know from my independent online bookstore today!

Set in the Hudson Valley, the novel opens on what looks like a carefully curated life. Kate is a successful realtor and momfluencer with a devoted husband, Ethan, and a close relationship with her teenage daughter, Indie. That surface-level perfection shatters when Indie’s best friend, Maddy, is killed by a drunk driver right in front of her. From that moment on, Tourtelot is less interested in the tragedy itself than in the slow, corrosive aftermath—the way grief destabilizes families, marriages, and entire communities.

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