NEW YORK, NY.- Fall is full of harbingers of change: Air is brisk, daylight becomes fickle, leaves turn red. There is perhaps no better way to ground such a time of transformation and impermanence than with a great new read. Become seduced by the undercover spy-for-hire at the heart of Rachel Kushners thriller Creation Lake; ring in Sad Girl Autumn with Intermezzo, a characteristically cool Sally Rooney title about two brothers grieving their fathers death; or get swept up in the kaleidoscopic journeys of multiple narrators living in and under the ocean in Richard Powers Playground. Whatever your mood, these books among many other reads coming this fall will provide an escape, a shift in perspective and engrossing new worlds to cozy up to this season.
SEPTEMBER
Creation Lake
By Rachel Kushner
A disgraced FBI agent turned freelance operative infiltrates a rural French commune of environmental anarchists in Kushners latest thriller, which grapples with a question that has preoccupied philosophers and scientists for centuries: What, at our core, makes us human? (Scribner, Tuesday)
Small Rain
By Garth Greenwell
A writer discovers that he has a rare disease and lands in the ICU. Confined to bed and forced to confront his mortality, the narrator contemplates love, art, beauty, family everything that makes up the complicated terrain of life. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Tuesday)
Colored Television
By Danzy Senna
After her agent and publisher reject her sophomore novel, Jane directs her attention to something potentially more lucrative: Hollywood. But a series of white lies and bad decisions leads her down a path of self-destruction. (Riverhead, Tuesday)
Guide Me Home
By Attica Locke
In the final volume of Lockes Highway 59 trilogy, Detective Darren Matthews comes out of early retirement to investigate the disappearance of a young Black woman. To solve the case, he must reconcile with his estranged mother, sort out his alcohol dependence and mend his strained relationship with the woman he loves. (Mulholland, Tuesday)
Dear Dickhead
By Virginie Despentes; translated by Frank Wynne
This epistolary novel composed of email exchanges and social media posts shared among three characters is a dissection of sex, classism and feminism today. As the title might imply, creative profanity abounds. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Sept. 10)
The Wildes
By Louis Bayard
In classic Bayardian fashion, this historical fiction novel takes a cast of real people in this case, Oscar Wilde and his family and weaves them into an imaginative story, told from the perspective of the playwrights wife and his two sons after Wildes imprisonment for homosexuality. (Algonquin, Sept. 17)
Entitlement
By Rumaan Alam
A young Black woman goes to work for a billionaire eager to give his fortune away. The more she becomes enmeshed in his world, the more she adapts to his lifestyle and world views, abandoning her own values and sense of self in the process. (Riverhead, Sept. 17)
We Solve Murders
By Richard Osman
The beloved Thursday Murder Club author returns with a new series that revolves around a man (a retired cop) and his daughter-in-law (a private security guard) who unite to take down an Al Capone-like crime boss. (Pamela Dorman, Sept. 17)
Intermezzo
By Sally Rooney
In Rooneys latest novel, two brothers one a competitive chess player, the other a lawyer are forced to confront their strained relationship in the wake of their fathers death, while also juggling nascent love affairs. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Sept. 24)
Playground
By Richard Powers
Lives intersect on a French Polynesian island in this expansive, oceanic novel, which explores the effects of artificial intelligence and climate change on humanity. (Norton, Sept. 24)
The Empusium
By Olga Tokarczuk; translated by Antonia Lloyd-Jones
A feminist twist on Thomas Manns The Magic Mountain, Tokarczuks novel her first since winning the Nobel centers on an engineering student suffering from tuberculosis who finds himself at a mens sanitarium haunted by mysterious forces. (Riverhead, Sept. 24)
OCTOBER
The Mighty Red
By Louise Erdrich
A love triangle is at the heart of this novel, set against the backdrop of a beet farm in North Dakota during the economic meltdown of 2008-09. Its as much about the financial crash and environmental destruction as it is about the people most impacted by and vulnerable to these devastations. (Harper, Oct. 1)
The Third Realm
By Karl Ove Knausgaard
Like its predecessors, The Morning Star and The Wolves of Eternity, this latest entry in Knausgaards saga bounces between different narrators and revisits a familiar premise: A dark star appears, everyone sees it but knows nothing about it, and weird stuff ensues. (Penguin Press, Oct. 1)
Shred Sisters
By Betsy Lerner
The relationship between sisters can be as loving as it is devastating. Lerners debut novel explores the polarities of this dynamic as her characters navigate girlhood, mental illness and heartbreak over the course of two decades. (Grove, Oct. 1)
Season of the Swamp
By Yuri Herrera; translated by Lisa Dillman
This work of speculative fiction takes up a centuries-old mystery involving a young Benito Juárez, who was Mexicos first Indigenous president, and his relatively unknown 18-month exile in New Orleans. Herrera imagines a colorful life during a turbulent time in a culturally radiant city at the edge of a swamp. (Graywolf, Oct. 1)
Slaveroad
By John Edgar Wideman
Part autofiction, part history and part memoir, this book is an alchemy of genres. Wideman meditates on the word slaveroad as a metaphor both temporal and corporeal to examine its various meanings and its connection to the trans-Atlantic slave trade. (Scribner, Oct. 8)
Our Evenings
By Alan Hollinghurst
Spanning more than 50 years, this sprawling novel follows a gay, biracial teenager whose boarding-school scholarship is funded by a family that lingers in the backdrop of his life into adulthood. (Random House, Oct. 8)
Variation
By Rebecca Yarros
From the bestselling author of the Empyrean romantasy series comes a new book this time without dragons. After a career-ending injury, a famous dancer returns home, where she confronts dark family secrets while reconnecting with her first love. (Montlake, Oct. 8)
Dont Be a Stranger
By Susan Minot
After going through an intense divorce, Ivy, a 52-year-old writer and mother, becomes entangled in an all-consuming (and messy) relationship with a younger man. (Knopf, Oct. 15)
Womens Hotel
By Daniel M. Lavery
This novel features an ensemble cast of ordinary but distinct characters in 1960s New York who all reside at the Biedermeier a fictional and more decrepit version of the storied, all-female Barbizon Hotel. (HarperVia, Oct. 15)
Forest of Noise
By Mosab Abu Toha
This new collection from a renowned Palestinian poet offers a glimpse into life in a besieged Gaza and what its like to survive and find care, even hope, under the most dire of conditions. (Knopf, Oct. 15)
Blood Test
By Charles Baxter
A middle-aged insurance salesman undergoes a predictive blood test and receives disturbing results that threaten to upend his life, and those of the people around him. (Pantheon, Oct. 22)
Absolution
By Jeff VanderMeer
A decade after his Southern Reach trilogy, VanderMeer returns with this surprise fourth volume that acts as a prequel to the bestselling series and provides clues to the origin of the mysterious region known as Area X. (MCDxFSG, Oct. 22)
NOVEMBER
The City and Its Uncertain Walls
By Haruki Murakami; translated by Philip Gabriel
Murakamis new novel based on a short story of the same name published 44 years ago follows a lonely, unnamed male narrator who is still grieving over the childhood disappearance of his first love. (Knopf, Nov. 19)
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.