Best books to read in November 2025, including John Irving’s latest
Great writing, even when an author sets a story in early 20th century Maine or during ancient uprisings, often sheds light on our own era. From a novel starring a sentient gale-force wind, on to a memoir from a leading African American writer, this monthβs titles provide illumination as we lose daylight.
FICTION
Helm: A Novel
By Sarah Hall
Mariner Books: 368 pages, $30
(Nov. 4)
U.K. inhabitants of Hallβs native Cumbria region have grappled for centuries with a wind known as βThe Helm.β Different eras have deemed it a measure of divine anger or human sin, and more recently, as one of earthβs vital signs. Helmβs narration alternates with chapters from perspectives including an astrologer, an astronomer, a Crusader, an herbalist and a climatologist, each adding to the strength of the immortal force.
Palaver: A Novel
By Bryan Washington
Farrar, Straus & Giroux: 336 pages, $28
(Nov. 4)
As in his first two novels βMemorialβ and βFamily Meal,β Houston-based Washington weaves scenes of Americans at home and in Japan with exquisite attention both to queer culture and to emotions. βThe motherβ and βthe sonβ are never named; her Jamaican origins affect his upbringing, as well as his identity. When she makes an unannounced visit to see him in Japan, the titleβs gentle irony becomes apparent.
Queen Esther: A Novel
By John Irving
Simon & Schuster: 432 pages, $30
(Nov. 4)
Readers will recall Dr. Wilbur Larch from βThe Cider House Rules.β Here he is the 1919 go-between for Esther Nacht, a 14-year-old Jewish refugee whom he places with the Winslow family as an au pair. Like so many women through the ages, that role results in a different kind of labor for her, one that turns this most Irving-esque (wrestling! sex!) book into writer Jimmy Winslowβs origin story.
The Silver Book: A Novel
By Olivia Laing
Farrar, Straus & Giroux: 256 pages, $27
(Nov. 11)
The 1975 murder of Italian subversive film director Pier Paolo Pasolini forms the tortured heart of Laingβs first historical novel. In 1974 protagonist Nicholas Wade leaves England and lands in Venice, where he meets Danilo Donati, costume designer for Pasolini as well as Fellini and others. Their relationship reflects those auteursβ themes, especially those of fascismβs rebirth in Pasoliniβs βSalΓ², or the 120 Days of Sodom.β
The White Hot: A Novel
By Quiara AlegrΓa Hudes
One World: 176 pages, $26
(Nov. 11)
Noted playwright Hudes pens a stunning debut novel that rends conventional notions of motherhood. Years after disappearing from her childβs life, April Soto writes her daughter Noelle a letter to read on her 18th birthday. Less apology than explanation, and less explanation than soul-searching screed, this novel has a huge voice, a womanβs attempt to create meaning from the depths of family trauma.
NONFICTION
Book of Lives: A Memoir of Sorts
By Margaret Atwood
Doubleday: 624 pages, $35
(Nov. 4)
Only Margaret Atwood could write a debut memoir at age 85 and make it significantly different from her previous work while at the same time infusing it with her droll wit and many passions, literary, environmental and familial. While she has always combined public and private in her acclaimed and groundbreaking novels, essays, and poetry, this volume beautifully fuses Atwood the person, and Atwood the writer.
Front Street: Resistance and Rebirth in the Tent Cities of Techlandia
By Brian Barth
Astra House: 304 pages, $29
(Nov. 11)
Barth, a freelance journalist, spent time in three different Bay Area encampments of unhoused people, including Oaklandβs Wood Street Commons, and, as Gov. Gavin Newsom moves forward on a new task force targeting these areas for removal, he argues that solutions to homelessness should come from the ground up, with the involvement of those most affected.
Without Consent: A Landmark Trial and the Decades-Long Struggle to Make Spousal Rape a Crime
By Sarah Weinman
Ecco: 320 pages, $32
(Nov. 11)
Until the 1970s in most states, a married woman could not legally refuse to have sex with her husband. The 1978 Oregon trial of John Rideout for marital rape of his wife Greta β despite his then-acquittal β raised awareness of this legislation and led to Rideoutβs conviction for rape and sodomy nearly four decades later in a case involving two other partners. Weinman (βThe Real Lolitaβ) writes with energy about a case with present-day ramifications.
Revolutions: A New History
By Donald Sassoon
Verso: 432 pages, $40
(Nov. 18)
You say you want a revolution β and historian Sassoon says: Consider your predecessors. Although we focus on hot-button moments, the long tale of these uprisings can lead to long-term instability and injustice (e.g., the young United States choosing to persist with enslavement). What is the real price of transformation? Is it worth considering when people unite against tyranny and oppression?
Languages of Home: Essays on Writing, Hoop, and American Lives 1975β2025
By John Edgar Wideman
Scribner: 400 pages, $29
(Nov. 18)
Widemanβs 1985 essay βThe Language of Homeβ was about the power of words to capture our foundations, so itβs fitting that his new collection covering 50 years of his powerful prose mimics that essayβs title. The new titleβs plural refers to the authorβs constant themes, which arenβt surprising. What does surprise is his prescience about still-relevant concerns, from a disappearing middle class to police brutality.