The 10 best books of 2020

Of all the excellent books this year, these stood out.

Illustration by Aysha Tengiz

"Caste: The Origin of Our Discontents"

“Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents”

By Isabel Wilkerson, Random House

NONFICTION | The Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author of “The Warmth of Other Suns” (2010) delivers a well-timed reevaluation of American divisions. Wilkerson’s thesis is that the country’s current obsession with race is somewhat misplaced; there is a deeper and more intractable system that would more accurately be called American caste. Released amid the nation’s racial reckoning, the book immediately rocketed up bestseller lists with an assist from Oprah, who called it her most important book club pick ever.

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Review: Running deeper than race: America’s caste system
"The Cold Millions"

“The Cold Millions”

By Jess Walter, Harper

FICTION | Walter structures his book about two lovable, penniless brothers trying to make ends meet in Spokane, Wash., as a concoction of tales swirling around the violent repression of laborers in the early 20th century. The result could have been an earnest historical novel about the brutal struggle for fair wages, but Walter has instead created a rip-roaring work of harrowing adventures and irresistible characters, including the real-life Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, a pregnant 19-year-old who’s also an indomitable union firebrand.

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Review: ‘The Cold Millions,’ Jess Walter’s celebration of forgotten heroes, is one of the most captivating novels of the year
"Hamnet"

“Hamnet”

By Maggie O’Farrell, Knopf

FICTION | This richly drawn and intimate portrait of 16th-century English life is set against the arrival of one devastating event: the loss of William Shakespeare’s only son to the plague. O’Farrell is not intimidated by the presence of the Bard’s canon or the paucity of the historical record, and she makes no effort to lard her pages with intimations of his genius or cute allusions to his plays. Rather, she constructs a suspenseful and moving story about the way grief viciously recalibrates a marriage.

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Review: Maggie O’Farrell’s ‘Hamnet’ reimagines the life and death of Shakespeare’s only son
"Hidden Valley Road"

“Hidden Valley Road: Inside the Mind of an American Family”

By Robert Kolker, Doubleday

NONFICTION | The author of “Lost Girls” explores how 12 siblings — half of them diagnosed with schizophrenia — and their parents navigated illness, unspeakable violence and the crushed promise of the American Dream during the 1960s and ’70s. Interwoven with this harrowing familial story is the history of how the science on schizophrenia has fitfully evolved, from the eras of institutionalization and shock therapy, to the profound disagreements about the cause and origins of the illness, to the search for genetic markers.

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Review: The turbulent lives of six brothers with schizophrenia
"Homeland Elegies"

“Homeland Elegies”

By Ayad Akhtar, Little, Brown

FICTION | Akhtar, a Pulitzer-winning playwright, blurs the line between fact and fiction with this autobiographical novel that speaks to the agony of trying to articulate a nuanced critique of faith and politics in an age of shrieking partisanship. The story’s sinuous plot concerns the lives of a playwright and his Pakistani immigrant father, assessing their attitudes toward the United States as their fortunes rise and fall. Personal episodes mingle with engaging disquisitions on the dilution of antitrust law and other arcane economic issues. Somehow, Akhtar makes it all work, brilliantly.

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Review: Ayad Akhtar’s play ‘Disgraced’ won a Pulitzer Prize. Now ‘Homeland Elegies’ shows what that success cost him.
"Memorial Drive"

“Memorial Drive: A Daughter’s Memoir”

By Natasha Trethewey, Ecco

NONFICTION | The former U.S. poet laureate pays tribute to her mother, who was fatally shot at 40 by her second husband. Trethewey excavates her mother’s life, transforming her from tragic victim to luminous human being — a living, breathing dynamo, coming of age in the Jim Crow South, breaking out of the restrictions imposed on her as a Black woman. A political as well as personal book, it’s as much the story of a person cut down in her prime as an exploration of power in America.

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Review: In ‘Memorial Drive,’ Natasha Trethewey reclaims her mother’s life from the man who took it
"Transcendent Kingdom"

“Transcendent Kingdom”

By Yaa Gyasi, Knopf

FICTION | The “Homegoing” author’s new novel works in a completely different register, following a young Ghanaian-American neuroscientist pulled between the data-driven beliefs of her colleagues and the religious dogma of her family. A book of profound scientific and spiritual reflection, it recalls the works of Richard Powers and Marilynne Robinson, though it’s anything but derivative. Gyasi’s ability to interrogate medical and religious issues in the context of America’s fraught racial environment makes her one of the most enlightening novelists writing today.

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Review: Yaa Gyasi’s ‘Transcendent Kingdom’ is a book of blazing brilliance
"Unworthy Republic"

“Unworthy Republic: The Dispossession of Native Americans and the Road to Indian Territory”

By Claudio Saunt, W. W. Norton

NONFICTION | A National Book Award finalist, Saunt’s sweeping work candidly explores the horrors of Native American expulsion while illuminating the crucial role that Southern slaveholders — eyeing native lands to take over for themselves — played in shaping early 19th-century policy. This alone would make for an important study, but Saunt also manages to do something truly rare: destroy the illusion that history’s course is inevitable and recover the reality of the multiple possibilities that confronted contemporaries. Things could have been otherwise.

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Review: Illuminating slave owners’ crucial role in the expulsion of Native Americans
"Vesper Flights"

“Vesper Flights”

By Helen Macdonald, Grove

NONFICTION | “So many of our stories about nature are about testing ourselves against it, setting ourselves against it, defining our humanity against it,” Macdonald writes in “Vesper Flights.” In the 41 essays that make up this collection, the naturalist and author of “H Is for Hawk” seeks to tell another type of nature story, one that asks readers to see the natural world as something other than a reflection of themselves. Doing so, she believes, may just help us save it.

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Review: Helen Macdonald’s ‘Vesper Flights’ — like ‘H Is for Hawk’ — is a beautiful, poignant celebration of the natural world
"Writers & Lovers"

“Writers & Lovers”

By Lily King, Grove

FICTION | The author of “Euphoria” breaks all the rules with her new book: It’s a novel about trying to write a novel and it’s dangerously romantic, bold and fearless enough to imagine the possibility of unbounded happiness. According to the penal code of literary fiction, that’s a violation of Section 364, Prohibiting Unlawful Departure from Ambiguity and Despair. And yet, this story of a grieving, struggling writer torn between two suitors delivers such pure joy that there may be no surer antidote to 2020’s woes.

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Review: Lily King’s ‘Writers & Lovers’ delivers pure joy
About this story

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