Most Anticipated Books of 2026

Later than intended, but here we are. I’ve narrowed it down to the 25 books I’m most looking forward to in January–September, though no doubt I’ll have heard of many more unmissable titles before that time is up. My list is dominated by fiction, which I tend to find out about earlier. Also on my radar are novels by Sharon Bala, Freya Bromley, Mary Costello, Louise Kennedy, Ben Lerner, Paula McLain, Liz Nugent and Tom Perrotta; short stories by Jess Gibson (Margaret Atwood’s daughter); and nonfiction from Margaret Drabble, Cal Flyn, Siri Hustvedt and Anne Lamott.

In release date order, with UK publication info given first if available. The blurbs are adapted from Goodreads. I’ve taken the liberty of using whichever cover I prefer.

 

Fiction

Departure(s) by Julian Barnes [20 Jan., Vintage (Penguin) / Knopf]: (Currently reading) I get more out of rereading Barnes’s classics than reading his latest stuff, but I’ll still attempt anything he publishes. He’s 80 and calls this his last book. So far, it’s heavily about memory. “Julian played matchmaker to Stephen and Jean, friends he met at university in the 1960s; as the third wheel, he was deeply invested in the success of their love”. Sounds way too similar to 1991’s Talking It Over, and the early pages have been tedious. (Review copy from publisher)

 

Half His Age by Jennette McCurdy [20 Jan., Fourth Estate / Ballantine]: McCurdy’s memoir, I’m Glad My Mom Died, was stranger than fiction. I was so impressed by her recreation of her childhood perspective on her dysfunctional Mormon/hoarding/child-actor/cancer survivor family that I have no doubt she’ll do justice to this reverse-Lolita scenario about a 17-year-old who’s in love with her schlubby creative writing teacher. (Library copy on order)

 

Our Better Natures by Sophie Ward [5 Feb., Corsair]: I loved Ward’s Booker-longlisted Love and Other Thought Experiments (though the follow-up, The Schoolhouse, was a letdown). “Amid the chaos and political upheaval of 1970s America, three very different women must accept the world as it is, or act to change it. Phyllis Patterson is a housewife in White Plains, Illinois. … Andrea Dworkin is an activist in Amsterdam. … Muriel Rukeyser is a poet in New York.” (Library copy on order)

 

Brawler: Stories by Lauren Groff [Riverhead, Feb. 24]: (Currently reading) Controversial opinion: Short stories are where Groff really shines. Three-quarters in, this collection is just as impressive as Delicate Edible Birds or Florida. “Ranging from the 1950s to the present day and moving across age, class, and region (New England to Florida to California) these nine stories reflect and expand upon a shared the ceaseless battle between humans’ dark and light angels.” (For Shelf Awareness review) (Edelweiss download)

 

Kin by Tayari Jones [24 Feb., Oneworld / Knopf]: I’m a big fan of Leaving Atlanta and An American Marriage. This sounds like Brit Bennett meets Toni Morrison. “Vernice and Annie, two motherless daughters raised in Honeysuckle, Louisiana, have been best friends and neighbors since earliest childhood, but are fated to live starkly different lives. … A novel about mothers and daughters, about friendship and sisterhood, and the complexities of being a woman in the American South”. (Edelweiss download)

 

Almost Life by Kiran Millwood Hargrave [12 March, Picador / March 24, S&S/Summit Books]: There have often been queer undertones in Hargrave’s work, but this David Nicholls-esque plot sounds like her most overt. “Erica and Laure meet on the steps of the Sacré-Cœur in Paris, 1978. … The moment the two women meet the spark is undeniable. But their encounter turns into far more than a summer of love. It is the beginning of a relationship that will define their lives and every decision they have yet to make.” (Edelweiss download)

 

Patient, Female: Stories by Julie Schumacher [May 5, Milkweed Editions]: I found out about this via a webinar with Milkweed and a couple of other U.S. indie publishers. I loved Schumacher’s Dear Committee Members. “[T]his irreverent collection … balances sorrow against laughter. … Each protagonist—ranging from girlhood to senescence—receives her own indelible voice as she navigates social blunders, generational misunderstandings, and the absurdity of the human experience.” The publicist likened the tone to Meg Wolitzer.

 

The Things We Never Say by Elizabeth Strout [7 May, Viking (Penguin) / May 5, Random House]: Hurrah for moving on from Lucy Barton at last! “Artie Dam is living a double life. He spends his days teaching history to eleventh graders … and, on weekends, takes his sailboat out on the beautiful Massachusetts Bay. … [O]ne day, Artie learns that life has been keeping a secret from him, one that threatens to upend his entire world. … [This] takes one man’s fears and loneliness and makes them universal.”

 

Hunger and Thirst by Claire Fuller [7 May, Penguin / June 2, Tin House]: I’ve read everything of Fuller’s and hope this will reverse the worsening trend of her novels, though true crime is overdone. “1987: After a childhood trauma and years in and out of the care system, sixteen-year-old Ursula … is invited to join a squat at The Underwood. … Thirty-six years later, Ursula is a renowned, reclusive sculptor living under a pseudonym in London when her identity is exposed by true-crime documentary-maker.” (Edelweiss download)

 

Little Vanities by Sarah Gilmartin [21 May, ONE (Pushkin)]: Gilmartin’s Service was great. “Dylan, Stevie and Ben have been inseparable since their days at Trinity, when everything seemed possible. … Two decades on, … Dylan, once a rugby star, is stranded on the sofa, cared for by his wife Rachel. Across town, Stevie and Ben’s relationship has settled into weary routine. Then, after countless auditions, Ben lands a role in Pinter’s Betrayal. As rehearsals unfold, the play’s shifting allegiances seep into reality, reviving old jealousies and awakening sudden longings.”

 

Said the Dead by Doireann Ní Ghríofa [21 May, Faber / Sept. 22, Farrar, Straus and Giroux]: A Ghost in the Throat was brilliant and this sounds right up my street. “In the city of Cork, a derelict Victorian mental hospital is being converted into modern apartments. One passerby has always flinched as she passes the place. Had her birth occurred in another decade, she too might have lived within those walls. Now, … she finds herself drawn into an irresistible river of forgotten voices”.

 

John of John by Douglas Stuart [21 May, Picador / May 5, Grove Press]: I DNFed Shuggie Bain and haven’t tried Stuart since, but the Outer Hebrides setting piqued my attention. “[W]ith little to show for his art school education, John-Calum Macleod takes the ferry back home to the island of Harris [and] begrudgingly resumes his old life, stuck between the two poles of his childhood: his father John, a sheep farmer, tweed weaver, and pillar of their local Presbyterian church, and his maternal grandmother Ella, a profanity-loving Glaswegian”. (For early Shelf Awareness review) (Edelweiss download)

 

Land by Maggie O’Farrell [2 June, Tinder Press / Knopf]: I haven’t fully loved O’Farrell’s shift into historical fiction, but I’m still willing to give this a go. “On a windswept peninsula stretching out into the Atlantic, Tomás and his reluctant son, Liam [age 10], are working for the great Ordnance Survey project to map the whole of Ireland. The year is 1865, and in a country not long since ravaged and emptied by the Great Hunger, the task is not an easy one.” (Edelweiss download)

 

Whistler by Ann Patchett [2 June, Bloomsbury / Harper]: Patchett is hella reliable. “When Daphne Fuller and her husband Jonathan visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art, they notice an older, white-haired gentleman following them. The man turns out to be Eddie Triplett, her former stepfather, who had been married to her mother for a little more than year when Daphne was nine. … Meeting again, time falls away; … [in a story of] adults looking back over the choices they made, and the choices that were made for them.” (Edelweiss download)

 

Returns and Exchanges by Kayla Rae Whitaker [2 June, Scribe / May 19, Random House]: Whitaker’s The Animators is one of my favourite novels that hardly anyone else has ever heard of. “A sweeping novel of one [discount department store-owning] Kentucky family’s rise and fall throughout the 1980s—a tragicomic tour de force about love and marriage, parents and [their four] children, and the perils of mixing family with business”. (Edelweiss download)

 

The Great Wherever by Shannon Sanders [9 July, Viking (Penguin) / July 7, Henry Holt]: Sanders’s linked story collection Company left me keen to follow her career. Aubrey Lamb, 32, is “grieving the recent loss of her father and the end of a relationship.” She leaves Washington, DC for her Black family’s ancestral Tennessee farm. “But the land proves to be a burdensome inheritance … [and] the ghosts of her ancestors interject with their own exasperated, gossipy commentary on the flaws and foibles of relatives living and dead”. (Edelweiss download)

 

Country People by Daniel Mason [14 July, John Murray / July 7, Random House]: It doesn’t seem long enough since North Woods for there to be another Mason novel, but never mind. “Miles Krzelewski is … twelve years late with his PhD on Russian folktales … [W]hen his wife Kate accepts a visiting professorship at a prestigious college in the far away forests of Vermont, he decides that this will be his year to finally move forward with his life. … [A] luminous exploration of marriage and parenthood, the nature of belief and the power of stories, and the ways in which we find connection in an increasingly fragmented world.”

 

It Will Come Back to You: Collected Stories by Sigrid Nunez [14 July, Virago / Riverhead]: Nunez is one of my favourite authors but I never knew she’d written short stories. The blurb reveals very little about them! “Carefully selected from three decades of work … Moving from the momentous to the mundane, Nunez maintains her irrepressible humor, bite, and insight, her expert balance between intimacy and universality, gravity and levity, all while entertainingly probing the philosophical questions we have come to expect, such as: How can we withstand the passage of time? Is memory the greatest fiction?” (Edelweiss download)

 

Exit Party by Emily St. John Mandel [17 Sept., Picador / Sept. 15, Knopf]: The synopsis sounds a bit meh, but in my eyes Mandel can do no wrong. “2031. America is at war with itself, but for the first time in weeks there is some good news: the Republic of California has been declared, the curfew in Los Angeles is lifted, and everyone in the city is going to a party. Ari, newly released from prison, arrives with her friend Gloria … Years later, living a different life in Paris, Ari remains haunted by that night.”

 

The Housekeeper by Rose Tremain [17 Sept., Vintage (Penguin); no cover image yet]: “Set in 1930s England and fictionalises the inspiration behind Daphne du Maurier’s famous novel, Rebecca.” Strangely, this started life as a short story (in The American Lover), then become a screenplay authored by Tremain (the film is in production and stars Uma Thurman and Anthony Hopkins), and is now being expanded into a novel. Tremain is 82 and a survivor of major cancer; I do wonder if this is the last book we can expect from her.

 

Nonfiction

Black Bear: A Story of Siblinghood and Survival by Trina Moyles [Jan. 6, Pegasus Books]: Out now! “When Trina Moyles was five years old, her father … brought home an orphaned black bear cub for a night before sending it to the Calgary Zoo. … After years of working for human rights organizations, Trina returned to northern Alberta for a job as a fire tower lookout, while [her brother] Brendan worked in the oil sands … Over four summers, Trina begins to move beyond fear and observe the extraordinary essence of the maligned black bear”. (For BookBrowse review) (Review e-copy)

 

Moveable Feasts: A Story of Paris in Twenty Meals by Chris Newens [Feb. 3, Pegasus Books; came out in the UK in July 2025 but somehow I missed it!]: I’m a sucker for foodie books and Paris books. A “long-time resident of the historic slaughterhouse quartier Villette takes us on a delightful gastronomic journey around Paris … From Congolese catfish in the 18th to Middle Eastern falafels in the 4th, to the charcuterie served at the libertine nightclubs of Pigalle in the 9th, Newens lifts the lid on the city’s ever-changing, defining, and irresistible food culture.” (Edelweiss download)

 

Frog: And Other Essays by Anne Fadiman [Feb. 10, Farrar, Straus and Giroux]: Fadiman publishes rarely, and it can be difficult to get hold of her books, but they are always worth it. “Ranging in subject matter from her deceased frog, to archaic printer technology, to the fraught relationship between Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his son Hartley, these essays unlock a whole world—one overflowing with mundanity and oddity—through sly observation and brilliant wit.”

 

The Beginning Comes after the End: Notes on a World of Change by Rebecca Solnit [March 3, Haymarket Books]: A sequel to Hope in the Dark. Hope is a critically endangered species these days, but Solnit has her eyes open. “While the white nationalist and authoritarian backlash drives individualism and isolation, this new world embraces antiracism, feminism, a more expansive understanding of gender, environmental thinking, scientific breakthroughs, and Indigenous and non-Western ideas, pointing toward a more interconnected, relational world.” (Edelweiss download)

 

Jan Morris: A Life by Sara Wheeler [7 April, Faber / April 14, Harper]: I didn’t get on with the mammoth biography Paul Clements published in 2022 – it was dry and conventional; entirely unfitting for Morris – but hope for better things from a fellow female travel writer. “Wheeler uncovers the complexity of this twentieth-century icon … Drawing on unprecedented access to Morris’s papers as well as interviews with family, friends and colleagues, Wheeler assembles a captivating … story of longing, traveling and never reaching home.” (Edelweiss download)

 

Others’ lists whence a few of my ideas came!

Cathy

Kate

Laura

Liz


What catches your eye here? What other 2026 titles do I need to know about?

33 responses

  1. Rachel's avatar

    I had heard Maggie O’Farrell has a new novel coming out but this is the first time I bothered to read the summary and I just gasped in delight as this sounds like it might be a good companion to Brian Friel’s Translations, which I love! I’m trying not to get too caught up in new release hype so I can devote more time to the library this year, but plenty of these sound brilliant.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Hooray for using your local library! Though, for me, that’s mainly how I access new books affordably. (Plus NetGalley and Edelweiss.) Are you still reviewing for BookBrowse?

      Like

  2. Elle's avatar

    I’ve read a grand total of two short stories by Lauren Groff and absolutely adored both of them, so am going to keep an eye out for this collection and the others. Whistler, by Ann Patchett, is also definitely calling me. Of the others, I’m glad Strout has moved away from Lucy Barton too (though may hold off on this one til some reviews come in); Returns and Exchanges and The Great Wherever also sound promising. Do you know about Francis Spufford’s and Brandon Taylor’s forthcoming books? Of the 2026 publication copies I’ve wangled thus far, those two seem the most (potentially) up your street.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I think you will have read one of these Groff stories as it was in the New Yorker (“Between the Shadow and the Soul”).

      The Taylor came out in October in the US so it was on my Most Anticipated list for the second half of last year. I did start it in electronic format but stalled about a quarter of the way through. It’s trenchant but also slow and meditative. I’ve requested a UK print proof so hopefully that will be my chance to get into it again.

      Alas, I’ve not gotten on with Spufford’s fiction beyond Golden Hill.

      Like

      1. Elle's avatar

        Yes, I read that one and one other New Yorker story, “Mother of Men”. Both absolutely brilliant.

        That makes sense – I wondered why the Taylor looked so familiar yet wasn’t out in the UK!

        Ah, shame. I thought Light Perpetual was beautifully executed but didn’t really understand its purpose; but Cahokia Jazz got me fully back on board.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Rebecca Foster's avatar

        C enjoyed Cahokia Jazz. Maybe I’ll try the new one!

        Like

  3. whatmeread's avatar

    I loved Shuggie Bain but thought Stuart’s second book was more of the same. Some things look really good, though. I love Fuller, O’Farrell, and Patchett and sometimes Barnes. I can’t seem to get on the St. John Mandel train, and I am not that big on Tremain. Strout being stuck on Lucy hasn’t bothered me, but she likes her recurring characters.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Yes, that was my impression of Stuart’s first two novels, but this one does sound different what with the Scottish island setting. Lewis and Harris are very religious, which makes for an interesting setup.

      I liked a couple of the Lucy Barton books very much but found a couple of the others dull.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. whatmeread's avatar

        Well, I always find islands interesting.

        Liked by 1 person

  4. WordsAndPeace's avatar

    a new book by Solnit!
    Enjoy!

    Liked by 2 people

  5. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

    It’s a banner year with Patchett, St. John Mandel, Groff, and a new Colson Whitehead! I am psyched.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Lots to look forward to in the book world … distract us from real life, please!

      Liked by 1 person

  6. A Life in Books's avatar

    Quite a few of these are already on my list but I’m pleased to see the Whitaker which I hadn’t come across. I enjoyed both the Hargrave and the Fuller.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      You’re always reading ahead 🙂 Too often, I’m playing catch-up. I know I’m liable to get to the end of this year having only read a fraction of these. I’ll have to try to get to two or more a month if I want to actually prioritize them.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. A Life in Books's avatar

        I’m sure you’ll manage it!

        Like

  7. Cathy746books's avatar

    I am so looking forward to the new Mandel and the new Patchett. New to me from your list which appeal are Returns and Exchanges and Patient Demale (I also loved Dear Committee Members).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      And you’ve already told us about lots of great Irish stuff to look out for!

      Liked by 1 person

  8. MarinaSofia's avatar

    A lot of authors I respect in that bunch… let’s see what their latest offerings are like!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      You never can tell. But I hope for the best!

      Like

  9. Laura's avatar

    Oh, I didn’t know Groff had a new collection coming out! Adding that to my TBR immediately. I do wish O’Farrell would step away from histfic, even though I did enjoy The Marriage Portrait – not feeling the vibes with this one at all.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I just finished the Groff today. Brilliant stuff!

      Yeah, I’d rather have a return to contemporary lit from O’Farrell, but I’m sure I’ll read Land at some point.

      Liked by 1 person

  10. Liz Dexter's avatar

    Well, I had Kin on my Wishlist already and I’ve added Returns and Exchanges and the Jan Morris bio to it! Thanks for the inspiration!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Hurrah, glad I could tempt you with something!

      Like

  11. lauratfrey's avatar

    I know I read about Black Bear somewhere, maybe even local news since it’s about Alberta, but thanks for the reminder on that one! I just put it on hold at the library and I’m #70 in line, whoops!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      That’s crazy! Marcie said Margaret Atwood’s books regularly have queues in the hundreds. I guess it’s a good sign that people support CanLit.

      Like

  12. Simon T's avatar

    Ooo thanks for the note about the Fadiman! And the Tremain sounds fascinating. I’m also intrigued to see how McCurdy can turn her non-fiction talent into fiction talent.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      McCurdy’s work with scenes and dialogue (which, really, must have been created from scratch as no one could possibly remember their childhood in that much detail) convinced me she’s ready for fiction!

      Like

  13. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    What a fabulous list: I would quite happily just work my way through it, book by book!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Well hurrah! I’ve read 1 and am currently reading another 6. Which would you start with?

      Like

      1. Marcie McCauley's avatar

        An impossible one, the Rose Tremain. Because I was just thinking about her books the other day and have the itch now! Of COURSE you’re reading 6. hee hee #wearethenormalones

        Like

    2. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Ah, but her book doesn’t even have a cover image yet, and the pub. date has changed at least once … so it’s the one you’d be least likely to get hold of! Isn’t that always the way? 😉

      Like

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