In real life, it can feel like I have little to look forward to. A catch-up holiday gathering and a shortened visit from my sister were over all too soon, and we have yet to book any trips for the summer months. Thankfully, there are always pre-release books to get excited about.
This list of my 20 most anticipated titles covers a bit more than the first half of the year, with the latest publication dates falling in August. I’ve already read 14 releases from 2023 (written up here), and I’m also looking forward to new work from Margaret Atwood, Rowan Hisayo Buchanan, Angie Cruz, Patrick deWitt, Naoise Dolan, Tessa Hadley, Louisa Hall, Leah Hazard, Christian Kiefer, Max Porter, Tom Rachman, Gretchen Rubin, Will Schwalbe, Jenn Shapland, Abraham Verghese, Bryan Washington, Anne Youngson and more, as well as to trying out various debut authors.
The following are in (UK) release date order, within sections by genre. U.S. details given too/instead if USA-only. Quotes are excerpts from the publisher blurbs, e.g., from Goodreads.
Fiction
The End of Drum-Time by Hanna Pylväinen [Jan. 24, Henry Holt and Co.] I loved Pylväinen’s 2012 debut, We Sinners. This sounds like a winning combination of The Bell in the Lake and The Mercies. “A richly atmospheric saga that charts the repercussions of a scandalous nineteenth century love affair between a young Sámi reindeer herder in the Arctic Circle and the daughter of the renegade Lutheran minister whose teachings are upending the Sámi way of life.” (Edelweiss download)
Heartstopper, Volume 5 by Alice Oseman [Feb. 2, Hodder Children’s] A repeat from my 2022 Most Anticipated post. Will this finally be the year?? I devoured the first four volumes of this teen comic in 2021. Nick will be getting ready to go off to university, so I guess we’ll see how he leaves things with Charlie and whether their relationship will survive a separation. (No cover art yet.)
I Have Some Questions for You by Rebecca Makkai [Feb. 21, Viking / Feb. 23, Fleet] Makkai has written a couple of stellar novels; this sounds quite different from her usual lit fic but promises Secret History vibes. “A fortysomething podcaster and mother of two, Bodie Kane is content to forget her past [, including] the murder of one of her high school classmates, Thalia Keith. … [But] when she’s invited back to Granby, the elite New England boarding school where she spent four largely miserable years, to teach a course, Bodie finds herself inexorably drawn to the case and its increasingly apparent flaws.” (Proof copy)
Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton [March 7, Granta / Farrar, Straus and Giroux] I was lukewarm on The Luminaries (my most popular Goodreads review ever) but fancy trying Catton again – though this sounds like Atwood’s Year of the Flood, redux. “Five years ago, Mira Bunting founded a guerrilla gardening group … Natural disaster has created an opportunity, a sizable farm seemingly abandoned. … Robert Lemoine, the enigmatic American billionaire, has snatched it up to build his end-times bunker. … A gripping psychological thriller … Shakespearean in its wit, drama, and immersion in character.” (NetGalley download)
Romantic Comedy by Curtis Sittenfeld [April 4, Random House / April 6, Doubleday] Sittenfeld is one of my favourite contemporary novelists. “Sally Milz is a sketch writer for The Night Owls, the late-night live comedy show that airs each Saturday. … Enter Noah Brewster, a pop music sensation with a reputation for dating models, who signed on as both host and musical guest for this week’s show. … Sittenfeld explores the neurosis-inducing and heart-fluttering wonder of love, while slyly dissecting the social rituals of romance and gender relations in the modern age.”
The Last Animal by Ramona Ausubel [April 18, Riverhead] “Jane is … on the cutting-edge team of a bold project looking to ‘de-extinct’ the woolly mammoth. … As Jane and her daughters ping-pong from the slopes of Siberia to a university in California, from the shores of Iceland to an exotic animal farm in Italy, The Last Animal takes readers on an expansive, bighearted journey that explores the possibility and peril of the human imagination on a changing planet, what it’s like to be a woman and a mother in a field dominated by men, and how a wondrous discovery can best be enjoyed with family. Even teenagers.”
Saturday Night at the Lakeside Supper Club by J. Ryan Stradal [April 18, Pamela Dorman Books] Kitchens of the Great Midwest is one of my all-time favourite debuts. A repeat from my 2021 Most Anticipated post, hopefully here at last! “A story of a couple from two very different restaurant families in rustic Minnesota, and the legacy of love and tragedy, of hardship and hope, that unites and divides them … full of his signature honest, lovable yet fallible Midwestern characters as they grapple with love, loss, and marriage.” (Edelweiss download)
The Memory of Animals by Claire Fuller [April 20, Fig Tree (Penguin) / June 6, Tin House] Fuller is another of my favourite contemporary novelists and never disappoints. “Neffy is a young woman running away from grief and guilt … When she answers the call to volunteer in a controlled vaccine trial, it offers her a way to pay off her many debts … [and] she is introduced to a pioneering and controversial technology which allows her to revisit memories from her life before.” And apparently there’s also an octopus? (NetGalley download)
The Late Americans by Brandon Taylor [May 23, Riverhead / June 22, Jonathan Cape (Penguin)] “In the shared and private spaces of Iowa City, a loose circle of lovers and friends encounter, confront, and provoke one another in a volatile year of self-discovery. … These three [main characters] are buffeted by a cast of poets, artists, landlords, meat-packing workers, and mathematicians who populate the cafes, classrooms, and food-service kitchens … [T]he group heads to a cabin to bid goodbye to their former lives—a moment of reckoning that leaves each of them irrevocably altered.” (Proof copy)
Speak to Me by Paula Cocozza [June 8, Tinder Press] I loved her debut novel, How to Be Human, and this sounds timely. (I have never owned a smartphone.) “When Kurt’s phone rings during sex—and he reaches to pick it up—Susan knows that their marriage has passed the point of no return. … This sense of loss becomes increasingly focused on a cache of handwritten letters, from her first love, Antony, mementoes of a time when devotion seemed to spill out easily onto paper. Increasingly desperate and out of synch with the contemporary world, Susan embarks on a journey of discovery that will reconnect her to her younger self, while simultaneously revealing her future.” (No cover art yet.)
I Am Homeless If This Is Not My Home by Lorrie Moore [June 20, Faber / Knopf] What a title! I’m keen to read more from Moore after her Birds of America got a 5-star rating from me late last year. “Finn is in the grip of middle-age and on an enforced break from work: it might be that he’s too emotional to teach history now. He is living in an America hurtling headlong into hysteria, after all. High up in a New York City hospice, he sits with his beloved brother Max, who is slipping from one world into the next. But when a phone call summons Finn back to a troubled old flame, a strange journey begins, opening a trapdoor in reality.”
A Manual for How to Love Us by Erin Slaughter [July 5, Harper Collins] “A debut, interlinked collection of stories exploring the primal nature of women’s grief. … Slaughter shatters the stereotype of the soft-spoken, sorrowful woman in distress, queering the domestic and honoring the feral in all of us. … Seamlessly shifting between the speculative and the blindingly real. … Set across oft-overlooked towns in the American South.” Linked short stories are irresistible for me, and I like the idea of a focus on grief.
Learned by Heart by Emma Donoghue [Aug. 24, Pan Macmillan / Aug. 29, Little, Brown] Donoghue’s contemporary settings have been a little more successful for me, but she’s still a reliable author whose career I am happy to follow. “Drawing on years of investigation and Anne Lister’s five-million-word secret journal, … the long-buried love story of Eliza Raine, an orphan heiress banished from India to England at age six, and Anne Lister, a brilliant, troublesome tomboy, who meet at the Manor School for young ladies in York in 1805 … Emotionally intense, psychologically compelling, and deeply researched”.
Nonfiction
The Year of the Cat: A Love Story by Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett [Jan. 19, Tinder Press] “When Rhiannon fell in love with, and eventually married her flatmate, she imagined they might one day move on. … The desire for a baby is never far from the surface, but … after a childhood spent caring for her autistic brother, does she really want to devote herself to motherhood? Moving through the seasons over the course of lockdown, [this] nimbly charts the way a kitten called Mackerel walked into Rhiannon’s home and heart, and taught her to face down her fears and appreciate quite how much love she had to offer.”
Fieldwork: A Forager’s Memoir by Iliana Regan [Jan. 24, Blackstone] “As Regan explores the ancient landscape of Michigan’s boreal forest, her stories of the land, its creatures, and its dazzling profusion of plant and vegetable life are interspersed with her and Anna’s efforts to make a home and a business of an inn that’s suddenly, as of their first full season there in 2020, empty of guests due to the COVID-19 pandemic. … Along the way she struggles … with her personal and familial legacies of addiction, violence, fear, and obsession—all while she tries to conceive a child that she and her immune-compromised wife hope to raise in their new home.” (Edelweiss download)
Enchantment: Reawakening Wonder in an Exhausted Age by Katherine May [Feb. 28, Riverhead / March 9, Faber] I was a fan of her previous book, Wintering. “After years of pandemic life—parenting while working, battling anxiety about things beyond her control, feeling overwhelmed by the news-cycle and increasingly isolated—Katherine May feels bone-tired, on edge and depleted. Could there be another way to live? One that would allow her to feel less fraught and more connected, more rested and at ease, even as seismic changes unfold on the planet? Craving a different path, May begins to explore the restorative properties of the natural world”. (Proof copy)
Monsters: A Fan’s Dilemma by Claire Dederer [April 25, Knopf / May 25, Sceptre] “What do we do with the art of monstrous men? Can we love the work of Roman Polanski and Michael Jackson, Hemingway and Picasso? Should we love it? Does genius deserve special dispensation? Is history an excuse? What makes women artists monstrous? And what should we do with beauty, and with our unruly feelings about it? Dederer explores these questions and our relationships with the artists whose behaviour disrupts our ability to apprehend the work on its own terms. She interrogates her own responses and her own behaviour, and she pushes the fan, and the reader, to do the same.”
Undercurrent: A Cornish Memoir of Poverty, Nature and Resilience by Natasha Carthew [May 25, Hodder Studio] Carthew hangs around the fringes of UK nature writing, mostly considering the plight of the working class. “Carthew grew up in rural poverty in Cornwall, battling limited opportunities, precarious resources, escalating property prices, isolation and a community marked by the ravages of inequality. Her world existed alongside the postcard picture Cornwall … part-memoir, part-investigation, part love-letter to Cornwall. … This is a journey through place, and a story of hope, beauty, and fierce resilience.”
Grief Is for People by Sloane Crosley [June 25, MCD Books] According to Crosley, this is “a five-part book about many kinds of loss.” The press release adds to that: “Telling the interwoven story of a burglary, the suicide of Crosley’s closest friend, and the onset of Covid in New York City, [this] is the first full-length work of nonfiction by a writer best known for her acclaimed, bestselling books of essays.” (No cover art yet.)
Poetry
Bright Fear by Mary Jean Chan [Aug. 23, Faber] Their debut collection, Flèche, was my top poetry release in 2019. “These piercing poems fearlessly explore intertwined themes of queer identity, multilingualism and postcolonial legacy: interrogating acts of Covid racism, instances of queerphobia and the hegemony of the English language. Questions of acceptance and assimilation are further explored through a family’s evolving dynamics over time, or through the specious jargon of ‘Equality, Diversity and Inclusion’.” (No cover art yet.)
Other lists for more ideas:
What catches your eye here? What other 2023 titles do I need to know about?
I’ve added a fair few of these to my wishlist – thank you! Most anticipating the Claire Fuller and Emma Donoghue novels from your list. A 2023 release I’m looking forward to is Liar, Dreamer, Thief by Maria Dong which is a novel that includes an exploration of mental health.
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I’m glad I could pique your interest! Thanks for introducing me to Liar, Dreamer, Thief — that sounds great. I love reading about mental health.
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Oh, I hope you have more IRL to look forward to soon! I’m also keen to read the Catton, Oseman and Stradel, and the Ausubel sounds really intriguing.
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Thank you. Our lists overlapped on a few here (Donoghue, Makkai, Sittenfeld) — I hope they’ll live up to expectations! I only just learned about new novels from Lauren Groff and Bryan Washington due out later in the year, or I might have included them. I’ll have to do a second-half list in addition. https://www.bookpage.com/features/2023-preview-most-anticipated-fiction/
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This is a great list;. thanks for linking! The Groff sounds good and keen on the new Adjei-Brenyah as well.
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Though I’m somewhat alarmed to see that the Groff is part of a loose trilogy! I can’t tell yet if it sounds dystopian or ahistorical.
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Catton (hoping for Macbeth references) and Fuller (always, too) for me from your list, and maybe the Donoghue. I’m anticipating Caleb Azumah Nelson’s new one Small World in May hugely.
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I wasn’t as big a fan of Open Water, but I’ll look out for reviews of his new one.
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So excited for the new J. Ryan Stradal. He’s a favorite.
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I wasn’t so keen on his second book, but I’m hoping for a return to form.
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I really liked The Luminaries, so I’m looking forward to that book by Catton. I have also enjoyed everything I’ve read by Claire Fuller. I never know with Emma Donoghue, though, whether I’m going to like it or not.
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Yes, I’ve had mixed luck with Donoghue’s historical fiction. We shall see!
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Ahhh, I’m so excited about The End of Drum-Time. I too LOVED her We Sinners and I also loved The Mercies, so if it’s anything like that, I’m in! Also, my current WIP is half set in Finland, so that’s fun. Another 2023 release I’m stoked about is Christian Kiefer’s The Heart of it All (set in my home state of Ohio–woot!). I loved his novel, The Animals, and wasn’t quite as enamored with his latest, Phantoms, but I have high hopes for this new one from him.
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I hadn’t heard about a new Christian Kiefer. Thanks for letting me know!
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I can always be relied upon to follow up Sittenfeld and Fuller, but there’s not one here that I wouldn’t be keen to try. Roll on the library New Books shelves!
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A few of these are US-only (at least for now), but I do hope most of the rest will be accessible through libraries.
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Just as well if they can’t all scramble up the TBR pile!
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Good to see you’re looking forward to planning 2023 breaks. As for books, I’ve read and enjoyed both the Makkai and the Taylor, and have hopes for the Sittenfeld and Fuller. Dithering about the Catton having given up The Luminaries (but loved the BBC adaptation) and you’ve piqued my interest for the Cocozza although I wasn’t as keen on her debut as you. Lots to entertain and enlighten us in 2023 for sure.
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We plan on making return trips to Wigtown/Edinburgh and Hay-on-Wye, at the very least. Possibly also Northumberland, and we’re tempted by the new sleeper service to Berlin — it would be my first time there.
This Catton novel is much shorter, thankfully!
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We have Berlin in our sights again! You could combine Edinburgh and Northumberland for a longer holiday.
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If we decide to go to Berlin, I’ll ask for ideas of what to do!
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A very interesting selection of books, I’m curious about the Verghese, and especially tempted by Ausubel and Atwood. Anything by Lorrie Moore piques my interest too. This year does look like it’s shaping up to be a really good one for new releases.
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I’ve heard mixed things about the Verghese — it’s very long, as his books tend to be. Every day I hear about more 2023 releases!
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A great list. I’ve got my eye on the Lorrie More and also the Catton. Although, I might see how the forecasting reviews position the Catton here in the U.S. before I commit. The Fuller also intrigues. The octopus mention reminds me of “The Half Life of Valery K,” a novel I reviewed this past summer. It has an octopus that hilariously watches TV using a remote.
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I’ve not read any Pulley but somehow I knew about the octopus connection in her work.
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A few here to add to my list, particularly the new Fuller and Crosley which I had somehow missed. I’ll also look out for the Stradel – loved her debut.
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Stradal is a he 🙂 Though by how his books are marketed, I can see how you wouldn’t have realized. Kitchens of the Great Midwest is a favourite of mine.
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Enchantment and Undercurrent pique my interest – I wonder if you predicted who of your regulars would fancy what! I have some good stuff coming up on NetGalley but no overlap! Happy reading!
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I didn’t think to make such predictions, but it doesn’t surprise me that those are the two to pique your interest!
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Ooh, I also really enjoyed Wintering and I didn’t know the author had a new book coming out! I’m also excited to hear that Gretchen Rubin has a project coming up. Sounds like it’s shaping up to be a good year for books 🙂
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Rubin’s new book is Life in Five Senses. She’s been posting for years on social media about the kind of things she’s researching and it’s sure to be fascinating.
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[…] her other two books lined up to read, so I was excited to hear about this new work and put it on my Most Anticipated list for the year. My interest was redoubled by Laura’s review, which likens it to a cross between […]
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[…] I have trouble remembering why I was so excited about Catton’s third novel that I put it on my Most Anticipated list for 2023, especially given my decidedly mixed feelings about The Luminaries. I’d read a lot about […]
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[…] perfectly treads the line between literary fiction and women’s fiction. This was one of my most anticipated releases of the year and it met my […]
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