Six Older Books That Deserve to Be Popular Today According to The Atlantic
The Atlantic recently highlighted six older books that are definitely worth revisiting today. From a post-apocalyptic novel about female friendship taking off on BookTok, to a hidden gem championed by Toni Morrison that’s getting a reissue this April, and Edith Wharton’s sharp Jazz Age satire, these books are as relevant as ever. Check out the full list below with descriptions from The Atlantic.

The Maimed
Hermann Ungar"'A sexual hell' is how the German writer Thomas Mann apparently referred to Ungar’s debut novel, The Maimed, first published in German in 1923. The tense, terse novel follows a hapless bank clerk, Franz Polzer, as he finds himself drawn into a sadomasochistic affair with his landlady. The Maimed brings Franz Kafka’s work to mind, but it is more sexually explicit on the page... With its swirl of erotic anxiety and its ambiguous ending, The Maimed heralded the beginning of a promising literary career that, like Kafka’s, was cut short when Ungar died in his prime, in 1929, at age 36."
Paperback, 2002
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Fish Tales
Nettie Jones"This frenetic novel, first acquired by Toni Morrison and published in 1983, has become something of a cult classic, and it’s easy to understand why: It approaches relationships with raw and unvarnished honesty. A new edition forthcoming from Farrar, Straus and Giroux in April promises to bring additional audiences to Jones’s sharp, fast-paced look at the highs and lows of the human heart."

Hardcover, 2025
$27.00$13.50 + Free shipping50% off your first book
I Who Have Never Known Men
Jacqueline Harpman"First published in 1995... I Who Have Never Known Men, written by a Belgian psychoanalyst, has received a surprising amount of attention on social media... Told from the perspective of its young and nameless female narrator, the book follows a group of 39 women of various ages who spend their days imprisoned in an underground bunker, which is patrolled by a mysterious series of male guards... What stands out most is the philosophical approach Harpman takes as she renders the familiar strange."


Paperback, 2022
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The Long-Winded Lady: Notes from the New Yorker
Maeve Brennan"The woman wandering the city alone has become a popular, even glamorous, figure… seen in contemporary works such as Olivia Laing’s 2016 memoir, The Lonely City, as well as reissued novels such as Elizabeth Hardwick’s Sleepless Nights, from 1979, and Ursula Parrott’s Ex-Wife... The characters in those books would find common cause with the Irish writer Maeve Brennan, who from 1954 to 1981 wrote missives for The New Yorker under the pen name “The Long-Winded Lady,” a woman who witnessed all kinds of behavior from New York’s denizens…"


Paperback, 2016
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Mr. Dudron
Giorgio de Chirico"The relationship between the artist and their audience has been analyzed and fetishized by critics ad nauseam, but Mr. Dudron provides a fresh perspective from the artist’s point of view. This previously unpublished novel by the Greek-born Italian painter de Chirico, written fitfully over decades, doesn’t have much of a plot, instead unfurling as a series of anecdotal conversations among artists and meandering, essayistic theories of painting. In lieu of a digestible arc, the reader gets a peek inside the head of de Chirico."
Paperback, 2024
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Twilight Sleep
Edith Wharton"In Roaring ’20s New York, Pauline Manford, the book’s heroine, inoculates herself from life’s unpleasantries—including her second husband’s affair with his stepson’s wife, Lita—with a busy social calendar, but when disaster strikes and the affair is discovered, not even Pauline’s unblinking devotion to rationality, truth, and progress can soothe her emotional reaction. Named after the drug cocktail given to women in the 20th century to ward off the pains of childbirth, which brings to mind the anesthetized attitude of some of its characters, Twilight Sleep was republished in late 2024."

Paperback, 1997
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