Not Ready to Leave Schitt’s Creek? Read These 8 Novels

Linda Codega
February 18 2020
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All good things must come to an end…but boy, does watching the final season of Schitt’s Creek sting just a little bit, huh? We all love Dan Levy’s brainchild—the perfect maelstrom of family absurdity, small town politics, heartfelt romance, fish-out-of-water narratives, and absolutely batschitt neighbors. It may be out of production now, but it’s never going to be out of our hearts. 

Here are some books to help you fill that strange, quirky little void once the series finale airs this spring.

This post was originally published on GetLiterary.com.

Rutting Season
by Mandeliene Smith

Filling the need for quirky, off-the-wall dialogue, Rutting Season takes you back to the first few seasons of Schitt’s Creek. People are angry, upset, familiar, distant, and in love, all in turn. This collection of short stories is Americana to the core, contradictory and fascinating. If you’re into thirty-minute stories full of comedy and drama, this is the collection for you.

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Rutting Season
Mandeliene Smith

An intimate, sparkling collection of stories by a debut writer about girls behaving badly and families on the brink of collapse.

In these lucid, sharply observant stories, Mandeliene Smith traces the lives of men and women in moments of crisis: a woman whose husband has just died, a social worker struggling to escape his own past, a girl caught in a standoff between her mother’s boyfriend and the police. A lively and insightful collection, Rutting Season is dark, humorous, and moving, filled with complex characters who immediately demand our interest and attention.

In “What it Takes,” a teenage girl navigates race and class as the school’s pot dealer. “The Someday Cat” follows a small girl terrified of being given away by her neglectful mother. “Three Views of a Pond” is a meditation on the healing time brings for a college student considering suicide. And in “Animals,” a child wrestles with the contradictions inherent in her family’s relationship with the farm animals they both care for and kill.

In barnyards, office buildings, and dilapidated houses, Smith’s characters fight for happiness and survival, and the choices they make reveal the power of instinct to save or destroy. Whether she’s writing about wives struggling with love, teenage girls resisting authority, or men and women reeling from loss, Smith illuminates her characters with pointed, gorgeous language and searing insight. Rutting Season is an unforgettable, unmissable collection from an exciting new voice in fiction.

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Going Dutch
by James Gregor

If you, like me, fell in love with the romantic subplots involving David Rose, his ownership of his identity, and his ultimate happy ending, Going Dutch is exactly where you need to be. This book is an especially perfect match with David’s push-pull, will-they, won’t-they companionship with Stevie in the show. Taking on friendship, love, intimacy, and what it means to be queer, lonely, alone, or in a relationship, this book really gets to the heart of what it’s like to have someone to lean on.

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Going Dutch
James Gregor

* MOST ANTICIPATED SUMMER READING SELECTION BY * ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY * BUZZFEED *

“In this intelligent, entertaining and elegantly written novel, James Gregor pulls off something many psychological novelists aspire to and few achieve: he convincingly captures the thinking of a character who earnestly sees himself as sympathetic, even as he behaves terribly.” —Adelle Waldman, author of The Love Affairs of Nathaniel P.

"Be it the horrors of online dating, the absurdity of academia, or the dicey interplay of gender and class, I'm convinced there's nothing that escapes James Gregor's attention." —Grant Ginder, author of Honestly, We Meant Well

"Going Dutch is my favorite kind of novel—smart, insightful, and brimming with sly humor." —Stephen McCauley, author of My Ex-Life

“[An] excellent debut…Marvelously witty...Announces Gregor as a fresh, electric new voice.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"A comedy of manners for the (very) modern age." —Entertainment Weekly

"Masterful. [An] exciting debut, and will leave you eager for more." —BuzzFeed

Exhausted by dead-end forays in the gay dating scene, surrounded constantly by friends but deeply lonely in New York City, and drifting into academic abyss, twenty-something graduate student Richard has plenty of sources of anxiety. But at the forefront is his crippling writer’s block, which threatens daily to derail his graduate funding and leave Richard poor, directionless, and desperately single.

Enter Anne: his brilliant classmate who offers to “help” Richard write his papers in exchange for his company, despite Richard’s fairly obvious sexual orientation. Still, he needs her help, and it doesn’t hurt that Anne has folded Richard into her abundant lifestyle. What begins as an initially transactional relationship blooms gradually into something more complex.

But then a one-swipe-stand with an attractive, successful lawyer named Blake becomes serious, and Richard suddenly finds himself unable to detach from Anne, entangled in her web of privilege, brilliance, and, oddly, her unabashed acceptance of Richard’s flaws. As the two relationships reach points of serious commitment, Richard soon finds himself on a romantic and existential collision course—one that brings about surprising revelations.

Going Dutch is an incisive portrait of relationships in an age of digital romantic abundance, but it’s also a heartfelt and humorous exploration of love and sexuality, and a poignant meditation on the things emotionally ravenous people seek from and do to each other. James Gregor announces himself with levity, and a fresh, exciting voice in his debut.

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The Family Fang
by Kevin Wilson

A darkly comic, strangely bizarre book, The Family Fang is about a couple of performance artists (Moira vibes all over this one) who decided that having kids would be the best art experience of all. It’s too bad that the kids didn’t really have much of a say in it. Diving into quirky, rich, elitist families who are too full of themselves to realize the harm they’ve caused, this book portrays the weird and wonderful ways that siblings bond over—and break up with— their past.

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The Family Fang
Kevin Wilson

A darkly comic, strangely bizarre book, The Family Fang is about a couple of performance artists (Moira vibes all over this one) who decided that having kids would be the best art experience of all. It’s too bad that the kids didn’t really have much of a say in it. Diving into quirky, rich, elitist families who are too full of themselves to realize the harm they’ve caused, this book portrays the weird and wonderful ways that siblings bond over—and break up with— their past.

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MENTIONED IN:

Not Ready to Leave Schitt’s Creek? Read These 8 Novels

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Lie With Me
by Philippe Besson

If you, like me, enjoy crying uncontrollably about LGBTQ love stories as a form of both catharsis and community, along with experiencing implicitly the joy, heartbreak, and sadness that queer people go through...this is the book you need to read next. I imagine that this is absolutely in David’s TBR, and that he will gift it to his fiancé, Patrick, afterward, with the caveat “I want you to read this. I just don’t want to see you read it, because then I’ll want to read it again.”

(BRB; there’s a fanfic here and I must write it.)

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Lie With Me
Philippe Besson

THE #1 FRENCH BESTSELLER

“Stunning and heart-gripping.” —André Aciman, author of Call Me By Your Name

The award-winning, bestselling French novel by Philippe Besson—“the French Brokeback Mountain” (Elle)—about an affair between two teenage boys in 1984 France, translated with subtle beauty and haunting lyricism by the iconic and internationally acclaimed actress/writer Molly Ringwald.

We drive at high speed along back roads, through woods, vineyards, and oat fields. The bike smells like gasoline and makes a lot of noise, and sometimes I’m frightened when the wheels slip on the gravel on the dirt road, but the only thing that matters is that I’m holding on to him, that I’m holding on to him outside.

Just outside a hotel in Bordeaux, Philippe chances upon a young man who bears a striking resemblance to his first love. What follows is a look back at the relationship he’s never forgotten, a hidden affair with a gorgeous boy named Thomas during their last year of high school. Without ever acknowledging they know each other in the halls, they steal time to meet in secret, carrying on a passionate, world-altering affair.

Dazzlingly rendered in English by Ringwald in her first-ever translation, Besson’s powerfully moving coming-of-age story captures the eroticism and tenderness of first love—and the heartbreaking passage of time.

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When We Were Vikings
by Andrew David MacDonald

Strapped-for-cash siblings join forces to survive in a world that wants nothing more than to minimize their existence. Zelda, who reminds me a bit of Alexis Rose, is the ultimate heroine, giving us ferocity and uncompromising rules for respecting her and her space. This is a perfect read for when you want that Alexis-owns-the-world vibe without having to get up at 5 a.m. for her morning run.

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When We Were Vikings
Andrew David MacDonald

Indie Next Pick for February 2020
Book of the Month January 2020
LibraryReads January 2020 Pick
Bookreporter New Release Spotlight
New York Post “Best Books of the Week”
Goodreads “January’s Most Anticipated New Books”
The Saturday Evening Post “10 Books for the New Year”
PopSugar “The 18 Best New Books Coming Out in January 2020”
Book Riot Best Winter New Releases

A heart-swelling debut for fans of The Silver Linings Playbook and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time.

Sometimes life isn’t as simple as heroes and villains.

For Zelda, a twenty-one-year-old Viking enthusiast who lives with her older brother, Gert, life is best lived with some basic rules:

1. A smile means “thank you for doing something small that I liked.”
2. Fist bumps and dabs = respect.
3. Strange people are not appreciated in her home.
4. Tomatoes must go in the middle of the sandwich and not get the bread wet.
5. Sometimes the most important things don’t fit on lists.

But when Zelda finds out that Gert has resorted to some questionable—and dangerous—methods to make enough money to keep them afloat, Zelda decides to launch her own quest. Her mission: to be legendary. It isn’t long before Zelda finds herself in a battle that tests the reach of her heroism, her love for her brother, and the depth of her Viking strength.

When We Were Vikings is an uplifting debut about an unlikely heroine whose journey will leave you wanting to embark on a quest of your own, because after all...

We are all legends of our own making.

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The Vacationers
by Emma Straub

Let’s say that Schitt’s Creek takes place over two weeks, on an isolated island, where you’re surrounded by your best frenemies and the closest members of your estranged family. Mix all that together, shake well, and you get The Vacationers. With punchy drama and steamy affairs, this book is a wonderfully lighthearted (but still memorable!) read that will absolutely scratch your itch for reading about the ridiculous nouveau riche.

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The Vacationers
Emma Straub

Let’s say that Schitt’s Creek takes place over two weeks, on an isolated island, where you’re surrounded by your best frenemies and the closest members of your estranged family. Mix all that together, shake well, and you get The Vacationers. With punchy drama and steamy affairs, this book is a wonderfully lighthearted (but still memorable!) read that will absolutely scratch your itch for reading about the ridiculous nouveau riche.

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The Majesties
by Tiffany Tsao

This novel is a sweeping family drama distilled into a single crystalized moment. While the heroine, Gwendolyn, is in a coma for most of the book, her subconscious goes over the events that led up to her sister’s decision to poison their entire family. The affluent and elite world of the uber-rich Southeast Asian family feels somehow both completely relatable and distant, like we’re watching a sitcom with only half the episodes available to stream.

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The Majesties
Tiffany Tsao

In this riveting tale about the secrets and betrayals that can accompany exorbitant wealth, two sisters from a Chinese-Indonesian family grapple with the past after one of them poisons their entire family.

Gwendolyn and Estella have always been as close as sisters can be. Growing up in a wealthy, eminent, and sometimes deceitful family, they’ve relied on each other for support and confidence. But now Gwendolyn is lying in a coma, the sole survivor of Estella’s poisoning of their whole clan.

As Gwendolyn struggles to regain consciousness, she desperately retraces her memories, trying to uncover the moment that led to this shocking and brutal act. Was it their aunt’s mysterious death at sea? Estella’s unhappy marriage to a dangerously brutish man? Or were the shifting loyalties and unspoken resentments at the heart of their opulent world too much to bear? Can Gwendolyn, at last, confront the carefully buried mysteries in their family’s past and the truth about who she and her sister really are?

Traveling from the luxurious world of the rich and powerful in Indonesia to the most spectacular shows at Paris Fashion Week, from the sunny coasts of California to the melting pot of Melbourne’s university scene, The Majesties is a haunting and deeply evocative novel about the dark secrets that can build a family empire—and also bring it crashing down.

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Maurice: A Novel
by E.M. Forster

One of the OG (Original Gay) novels, Maurice is a deeply passionate, sentimental look at a gay man’s experience of love and loss throughout his life. He’s privileged, rich, and terrible at judging potential boyfriends (sound like anyone you know?). Written almost 100 years ago and first published posthumously 50 years ago, Maurice is a revelation, and an absolutely sob-worthy drama of gay love and family ties.

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Maurice: A Novel
E.M. Forster

We follow Maurice through public school and Cambridge, and into his father's firm. In a highly structured society, Maurice is a conventional young man in almost every way—except that he is homosexual. Written during 1913 and 1914, immediately after "Howards End", and not published until 1971, "Maurice" was ahead of its time in its theme and in its affirmation that love between men can be happy.

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