The Best Books of 2024 (So Far)

the best books of 2024
The Best Books of 2024 (So Far)Sarah Kim
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Welcome back to another year in books, dear reader. Just a quarter of the way through 2024, we’re already enjoying an embarrassment of literary riches—and now, we’re here to spread the gospel about our favorites.

The best books of the year (so far) are taking us to dazzling new frontiers. In the fiction landscape, a spate of new novels offer visions of humanity from unlikely narrators, including robots, aliens, and the undead. Meanwhile, it’s shaping up to be an outstanding year for memoirs; new outings from luminaries like Leslie Jamison, Sloane Crosley, and Lucy Sante will grab you by the heartstrings and refuse to let go. In the nonfiction space, some of our finest intellectuals have released titles that help us make sense of our changing world, from the culture-flattening force of algorithms to the future of work.

Here are the Best Books of 2024 (so far), presented in publication order. Watch this space—we’ll continue adding to our list as the year progresses.

Filterworld, by Kyle Chayka

Just how much do algorithms control our lives—and what can we do about it? In this eye-opening investigation, Chayka enumerates the insidious ways that algorithms have flattened our culture and circumscribed our lives, from our online echo chambers to the design of our coffee shops. But all is not lost: Chayka argues for a more conscientious consumption of culture, encouraging that we seek out trusted curators, challenging material, and spirited conversations. After reading Filterworld, you’ll be ready to start your “algorithmic cleanse” and get back in touch with your humanity.

Read an interview with the author here at Esquire.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0385548281?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>Filterworld</em>, by Kyle Chayka</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$24.27</p>

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Filterworld, by Kyle Chayka

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$24.27

Beautyland, by Marie-Helene Bertino

In 1977, Adina Giorno is born to a single mother in Philadelphia. Then, at age four, she’s “activated” by her extraterrestrial superiors 300,000 light years away on the dying planet Cricket Rice, who task her with reporting back about how humans think and behave. Through a fax machine in her bedroom, Adina transmits astute and often hilarious observations about the confounding behavior of earthlings (for instance: “human beings don’t like when other humans seem happy”). Meanwhile, she experiences the bittersweetness of growing up; ostracized by the popular clique and mocked for her dark skin, she learns how sometimes, being human means feeling alien. Warm, witty, and touching, Beautyland is an out-of-this-world exploration of loneliness and belonging.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0374109281?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>Beautyland</em>, by Marie-Helene Bertino</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$24.91</p>

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Beautyland, by Marie-Helene Bertino

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$24.91

The Bullet Swallower, by Elizabeth Gonzalez James

Set in 1895 at the border between Texas and Mexico, The Bullet Swallower centers on Antonio Sonoro, the scion of a moneyed but deplorable family living in Dorado, Mexico. After a train robbery gone wrong outside of Houston, a shootout with the Texas Rangers leaves Antonio’s brother dead and Antonio horrifically disfigured, earning him the nickname “El Tragabalas” (the bullet swallower). Antonio’s quest for revenge against the Rangers takes him through the heart of the Texas badlands, where he weighs his violent impulses against the opportunity for repentance. Meanwhile, in a parallel narrative set in 1964, Antonio’s grandson Jaime, a Mexican movie star, transforms his grandfather’s story into a feature film, hoping to redeem the Sonoro name. Linking the two narratives is the mystical stranger Remedio, a reaper of souls guiding the Sonoros toward the light. Rich in lyrical language, gripping action, and enchanting magical realism, The Bullet Swallower augurs a bright future for the new frontier of westerns.

Read an interview with the author here at Esquire.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/1668009323?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>The Bullet Swallower</em>, by Elizabeth Gonzalez James</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$16.39</p>

The Book of Love, by Kelly Link

One of our finest practitioners of the short story form delivers her debut novel at last—and what a novel it is! The Book of Love is a phantasmagoric doorstopper rich in characteristically Link-ian pleasures, like the collision of the mundane and the magical. In a coastal New England town called Lovesend, four teenagers investigate how three of them died, only to be resurrected by their music teacher (to whom there’s more than meets the eye). Then, Lovesend is transformed by magical happenings as the veil between this life and the afterlife is ripped away, leaving our young heroes desperate to hang onto the real world. Enchanting and immersive, The Book of Love is a landmark achievement from a writer who never stops surprising us.

Read an interview with the author here at Esquire.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0812996585?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>The Book of Love</em>, by Kelly Link</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$26.28</p>

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The Book of Love, by Kelly Link

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I Heard Her Call My Name, by Lucy Sante

In this candid and soulful memoir of gender transition, Sante recounts her experience of transitioning later in life at age 66. She describes an electrifying experiment with FaceApp’s “gender-swapping feature,” where the sight of her face (digitally altered to look more feminine) produced “one shock of recognition after another.” In one dimension of the memoir, Sante traces her realization of her true self and her process of coming out; in another, she reconsiders her entire life through the prism of what she knows now. Sante’s account of meeting her true self is arresting, intimate, and a work in progress; as she writes, "Transitioning is not an event but a process, and it will occupy the rest of my life as I go on changing."

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0593493761?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>I Heard Her Call My Name</em>, by Lucy Sante</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$23.63</p>

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I Heard Her Call My Name, by Lucy Sante

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This American Ex-Wife, by Lyz Lenz

In This American Ex-Wife, a blistering memoir-meets-manifesto about the fraught gender politics of marriage and divorce, Lenz details how the end of her marriage became the beginning of her life. Raised in a religious household and married at a young age, Lenz walked away from an unsatisfying partnership to rebuild her life on her own terms, only to discover that happiness, autonomy, and freedom lay on the other side. Weaving together a detailed history of marriage, sociological research, cultural commentary, and a frank dissection of her own personal experiences, Lenz paints a damning portrait of marriage in America: “an institution built on the fundamental inequality of women,” as she describes it. Yet the book is also a rousing and exuberant cry for a reckoning—one where couples can love freely, leave freely, and build meaningful partnerships based on the full and equal humanity of men and women alike.

Read an interview with the author here at Esquire.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0593241126?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>This American Ex-Wife</em>, by Lyz Lenz</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$25.20</p>

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This American Ex-Wife, by Lyz Lenz

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$25.20

Working in the 21st Century, by Mark Larson

Fifty years after Studs Terkel’s Working, a historian delivers a comprehensive sequel for the age of late-stage capitalism. Assembled in a polyphonic oral history, Larson presents 101 conversations with American workers from all walks of life, including teachers, nurses, truck drivers, executives, dairy farmers, stay-at-home parents, wildland firefighters, funeral directors, and many more. In the wake of the pandemic and the Great Resignation, Larson’s subjects share their struggles to make ends meet, reckon with economic upheaval, and locate meaning and purpose in their work. Presented together in one thick volume, these often-fascinating anecdotes are a rich portrait of modern-day economic anxiety and social change.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/1572843330?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>Working in the 21st Century</em>, by Mark Larson</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$29.80</p>

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Working in the 21st Century, by Mark Larson

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Splinters, by Leslie Jamison

In her latest bravura memoir, Jamison chronicles a wrenching period of rupture and rebirth. When their daughter was thirteen months old, Jamison and her husband separated; what followed was a brutal struggle to balance parenthood, work, dating, sobriety, and creative fulfillment, all while the pandemic loomed. Told in overlapping, ever-widening circles of thought, Splinters details Jamison’s struggle to inhabit the roles we ask of women: mother, daughter, lover, friend. At the same time, the book is an intimate tribute to the author’s rapturous love for her daughter. Splinters thrives in this messy, imperfect complexity—in “the difference between the story of love and the texture of living it, the story of motherhood and the texture of living it.” Honest, gutsy, and unflinching, Jamison scours herself clean here, and finds exquisite, hard-won joy in the aftermath.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0316374881?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>Splinters</em>, by Leslie Jamison</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$21.46</p>

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Splinters, by Leslie Jamison

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Whiskey Tender, by Deborah Jackson Taffa

Born on the California Yuma reservation and raised in Navajo Territory in New Mexico, Taffa situates her outstanding debut memoir in similar collisions of culture, land, and tradition. Here, she recalls the people and places that raised her—especially her parents, who pushed her to idealize the American Dream and assimilate through education. Taffa layers in diligent research about her mixed-race, mixed-tribe heritage, highlighting little-known Native American history and the shattering injustices of colonial oppression. Together, the many strands of narrative coalesce to form a visceral story of family, survival, and belonging, flooding the field with cleansing light.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0063288516?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>Whiskey Tender</em>, by Deborah Jackson Taffa</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$23.98</p>

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Whiskey Tender, by Deborah Jackson Taffa

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Grief Is for People, by Sloane Crosley

In 2019, Crosley suffered two keelhauling losses: first, her apartment was burglarized and her jewelry stolen; then, one month later, her friend and mentor Russell Perrault took his own life. For Crosley, the two losses became braided together; “I am waiting for the things I love to come back to me, to tell me they were only joking,” she writes. In this raw and poignant memoir, divided into five sections that correspond to the five stages of grief, she links her frantic desire to recover the stolen jewelry with her inability to bring back Perrault. Leavened by Crosley’s characteristic gimlet wit, this excavation of grief, loss, and friendship leaves a lasting twinge.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0374609845?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>Grief Is for People</em>, by Sloane Crosley</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$20.43</p>

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Grief Is for People, by Sloane Crosley

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$20.43

Wandering Stars, by Tommy Orange

In this stirring sequel to his breakout novel, There, There, Orange tells two linked stories: one centers on a survivor of the 1864 Sand Creek Massacre, Jude Star, who’s taken to the Carlisle Indian Industrial School and forcibly stripped of his identity and culture. The other traces his modern-day descendents in Oakland, reeling after the powwow shooting that ended There, There. In this wrenching story about the legacy of colonial violence, we see generations of Native characters orphaned from their past. Through poignant resonances between then and now, Orange delivers an epic saga of generational trauma, devastating to behold and impossible to put down.

Read an interview with the author here at Esquire.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0593318250?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>Wandering Stars</em>, by Tommy Orange</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$19.19</p>

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Wandering Stars, by Tommy Orange

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Great Expectations, by Vinson Cunningham

Cunningham’s sensitive and sophisticated roman à clef centers on David, a 20-something Black man working in a minor fundraising role on an upstart senator’s presidential campaign. The author, who worked in the Obama White House, is clearly writing about an Obama analogue (this eloquent Black senator “project[s] an intimacy that was more astral than real”), but connecting the dots between fact and fiction is the least interesting reading of Great Expectations. As a young father and a college dropout, David struggles to relate to the privileged world of political palm-greasing. As the campaign burns toward the White House, Cunningham spins a wise coming-of-age tale about power, idealism, and disillusionment.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0593448235?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>Great Expectations</em>, by Vinson Cunningham</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$21.44</p>

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Great Expectations, by Vinson Cunningham

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$21.44

Annie Bot, by Sierra Greer

In this provocative debut novel, Greer delivers a Frankenstein for the digital age. Sexbot Annie is the perfect girlfriend for her wealthy human owner, Doug: programmed to please, she cooks, cleans, and adjusts her libido to Doug’s whims. But Annie is an “autodidactic” robot, meaning that she’s always learning and changing. As she experiences jealousy, secrecy, and loneliness, she becomes less perfect to the loathsome Doug, and ultimately flees to meet her maker—with dangerous results. Annie’s painful journey of becoming is a poignant parable for the age of AI; it’s a rich text about power, autonomy, and what happens when our creations outgrow us.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0063312697?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>Annie Bot</em>, by Sierra Greer</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$25.20</p>

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Annie Bot, by Sierra Greer

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James, by Percival Everett

James centers on a seminal character from American literature—and yet, seen afresh through Everett’s revelatory gaze, it’s as if we’re meeting him for the first time. Blasted clean of Mark Twain’s characterization from The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, the enslaved runaway Jim emerges here as a man of great dignity, altruism, and intelligence. The novel opens in Hannibal, Missouri, where Jim teaches enslaved children to run their speech through a “slave filter” of “correct incorrect grammar,” designed to pacify white people. Then the story settles into Twain’s familiar grooves—on the run together, Jim and Huck raft down the Mississippi River, facing danger, separation, and charlatans aplenty. Along the way, Jim imagines verbal sparring matches with dead philosophers, falls in love with reading, and begins to pen his own story; “with my pencil, I wrote myself into being,” he writes. And so he does: on the road to freeing himself and his family, Jim becomes more self-determined than ever. Clever, soulful, and full of righteous rage, his long-silenced voice resounds through this remarkable novel. Subversive and thrilling, James is destined to become a modern classic.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0385550367?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>James</em>, by Percival Everett</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$25.20</p>

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James, by Percival Everett

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Who's Afraid of Gender?, by Judith Butler

One of our foremost thinkers returns with an essential polemic on gender, an urgent frontline of the culture wars. Butler argues that by turning gender into a “phantasmic scene,” conservative politicians have diverted political will from the most pressing problems of our time, like climate change, war, and capitalist exploitation. Butler explores how various movements around the world have weaponized gender to achieve their goals, with a particular focus on trans-exclusionary radical feminists (TERFs). Who’s Afraid of Gender? calls for gender expression to be recognized as a basic human right, and for radical solidarity across our differences. With masterful analysis of where we’ve been and an inspiring vision for where we must go next, this book resounds like an impassioned depth charge.

<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0374608229?tag=syn-yahoo-20&ascsubtag=%5Bartid%7C10054.g.60202056%5Bsrc%7Cyahoo-us" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Shop Now;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Shop Now</a></p><p><em>Who's Afraid of Gender?</em>, by Judith Butler</p><p>amazon.com</p><p>$27.00</p>

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Who's Afraid of Gender?, by Judith Butler

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$27.00

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