The Paris Review Book Recommendations & Book Mentions
This list consists of recommendations or mentions of books spotted in media, social media accounts, podcasts or other public websites.
The Paris Review on X
Quarterly literary magazine founded in 1953.

The Twilight Zone
Nona FernĂĄndez
The Paris Review staffâs favorite books read in 2021 include Natalia Ginzburgâs âThe Dry Heart,â Jane Unrueâs âLife of a Star,â Nona FernĂĄndezâs âThe Twilight Zone,â Percival Everettâs âThe Trees,â and much, much more. https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2021/12/17/our-staffs-favorite-books-of-2021/
Paperback, 2021
$16.00$8.00 + Free shipping50% off your first book
Oil!
Upton Sinclair
âWorking to question the eraâs subjective speed thrills, Sinclair teaches us bit by bit to see oil capitalismâs sheer scale and corruption, with attention to the gaping inequalities at its core.â Read @MichaelTondre on Upton Sinclairâs novel, novel Oil!: https://t.co/bi3ehUtPlH
Paperback, 2023
$20.00$10.00 + Free shipping50% off your first book
The Prodigal: A Poem
Derek Walcott
âThe voice does go up in a poem. It is an address, even if it is to oneself.â âDerek Walcott https://t.co/DGrEvxHaMa
Paperback, 2006
$16.00$8.00 + Free shipping50% off your first book
Hero.
John C. Burt
The final episode of the podcast is here: listen to a reenactment of Joan Didionâs Art of Fiction interview, @Bud_Smithâs âViolets,â @jerichobrownâs âHero,â and Natalie Scenters-Zapicoâs âThe Trick Is to Pretendâ as read by @phoebe_bridgers. https://www.theparisreview.org/podcast/6060/episode-223-a-strange-way-to-live https://t.co/HttAgl8VND
Out of stock

Blood Meridian: Or the Evening Redness in the West
Cormac McCarthy
âMy first real lover was dumb, virile, hilariousâI didnât trust a word he said. Certainly nothing he recommended. This is why, for years, I stayed away from his favorite book, Cormac McCarthyâs Blood Meridian.â Sophie Dess for the Reviewâs Review: https://t.co/0ZRvRhpFkT
Paperback, 1992
$20.00$10.00 + Free shipping50% off your first book
Keeping the House
Tice Cin
âWhat really sets Tice Cinâs novel âKeeping the Houseâ apart is its snaking, shifting form, filled with constant interruptions by Turkish Cypriot words and their English definitions.â What the staff and contributors of âThe Paris Reviewâ recommend: https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2021/09/23/the-reviews-review-reproducing-bodies/
Paperback, 2021
$17.95$8.98 + Free shipping50% off your first book
Either/Or
Elif Batuman
"At the start of Elif Batumanâs Either/Or, the narrator asks a simple question: What is 'good' fiction?" @thereal_ckj on Elif Batuman's new novel "Either/Or" for The Review's Review. Both reviews this week discuss 1996-centric art work: https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2022/06/02/on-de-la-soul-and-elif-batuman/#more-159969
Paperback, 2023
$18.00$9.00 + Free shipping50% off your first book
Annie John
Jamaica Kincaid
âThe first novel I read by Jamaica Kincaid was Annie John, the first novel she wrote. She drafted itâas I recently learned from a long-awaited Art of Fiction interview conducted by Darryl Pinckneyâout loud in the bath, while pregnant with her daughter.â https://t.co/lKC9rX250h
Paperback, 2024
$17.00$8.50 + Free shipping50% off your first book
The Alchemist
Paulo Coelho
âIn my symbology, there are safe totems, good things, and there are bad ones, warnings ⊠A goat must always be loved, and helped. If a character is reading Paulo Coelhoâs The Alchemist, they are an agent of evil who may cause harm or disruption.â https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2022/04/04/how-do-we-stop-repeating-ourselves-a-conversation-with-caren-beilin/
Paperback, 2014
$17.99$8.99 + Free shipping50% off your first book
Ethan Frome
Edith Wharton
âThere is a short passage in Ethan Frome that I return to, sometimes, when I feel my curiosity becoming caustic, when my fascination turns invasive, when I begin to run my ghost meter over someoneâs life.â @ArnoldFriend6 on visiting The Mount. https://t.co/hob5abRxxK
Paperback, 2005
$10.00$5.00 + Free shipping50% off your first book