How much can really happen over the course of just one day? These ten novels and their authors consider that question a challenge, as they all chart the course of their character’s lives within a kaleidoscopic twenty-four hours. While these books are set over the course of just one day, each author makes the story into a saga. By elevating unnoticed details, poignant flashbacks, and unexpected twists, these ten miniature odysseys will take you on journeys you never saw coming. An added bonus? Most of the books on this list are quick reads, making them perfect choices to help you achieve your reading goals by the end of the year!
10 Epic Novels Unfolding Over a Single Day
In this delightful debut about a late-in-life love triangle, Henry is in a tizzy after he realizes he’s forgotten to get his wife a present—and it’s two days before Christmas. On his quest to get her the perfect gift—a bottle of Chanel Nº5 perfume—he runs into Daisy, the previous love of his life, who has recently left her husband. Meanwhile, Henry’s wife is struggling over her own unhappiness in her marriage, as well as a secret she’s been keeping from her husband.
In this complex and moving novel, sixty years of secrets bring three unlikely people together. A retired widow in Connecticut opens her door to unexpectedly find her childhood best friend on her doorstep; a man is about to introduce his estranged father to his newborn daughter when he collapses on the floor of a Pennsylvania hotel lobby; and a middle-aged taxi driver in Hawaii receives a fateful phone call that brings back all the trauma of the past. All of their lives will change over the course a single day.
Following his acclaimed New York Times bestseller Did You Ever Have a Family, Bill Clegg returns with a “delicate, deeply observed, and deftly crafted” (Nickolas Butler, author of Shotgun Lovesongs) second novel about the complicated bonds and breaking points of friendship, the corrosive forces of secrets, the heartbeat of longing, and the redemption found in forgiveness.
A retired widow in rural Connecticut wakes to an unexpected visit from her childhood best friend whom she hasn’t seen in forty-nine years.
A man arrives at a Pennsylvania hotel to introduce his estranged father to his newborn daughter and finds him collapsed on the floor of the lobby.
A sixty-seven-year-old taxi driver in Kauai receives a phone call from the mainland that jars her back to a traumatic past.
These seemingly disconnected lives come together as half-century-old secrets begin to surface. It is in this moment that Bill Clegg reminds us how choices—to connect, to betray, to protect—become our legacy.
“Written in lyrical, beautiful prose that makes even waking up seem like a poetic event” (Good Morning America), this novel is a feat of storytelling, capturing sixty years within the framework of one fateful day.
From renowned stand-up comedian Steven Wright comes a sometimes hilarious, always eye-opening look into the head of a (seemingly) normal seven-year-old. Harold is your average third grader: bored by school, in love with movies, and obsessed with the Boston Red Sox. Wright’s surreal, stream-of-consciousness novel follows Harold’s complex brain patterns through one day in class as he imagines himself getting coffee on the moon with Carl Sagan one minute and seeing his own funeral procession the next. A time-bending look at the sixties, human thought, and daily existence, HAROLD isn’t to be missed.
A uniquely humorous and deeply profound novel from a legendary stand-up comedian that follows the thoughts of a 1960s third grader during a single day at school.
Steven Wright is one of the most significant and influential stand-up comedians in history. Rolling Stone ranked him fifteenth on their “50 Best Stand-ups of All Time” list, while the New York Times has written of his enduring legacy: “If you made a family tree of modern stand-up, he would top one of the few major and expanding branches. The children of Mr. Wright pack the comedy scene today.” Now comes his first novel, which is sure to be unlike anything you’ve ever read.
From the outside, Harold is an average seven-year-old third grader growing up in the 1960s. Bored by school. Crushing on a girl. Likes movies and baseball—especially the hometown Boston Red Sox. Enjoys spending time with his grandfather. But inside Harold’s mind, things are a lot more complex and unusual. His thoughts come to him as birds flying through a small rectangle in the middle of his brain. He visits an outdoor cafe on the moon and is invited aboard a spaceship by famed astronomer Carl Sagan. He envisions his own funeral procession and wonders if the driver of the hearse has even been born yet.
Harold documents the meandering, surreal, often hilarious, and always thought-provoking stream-of-consciousness ruminations of the title character during a single day in class. Saturated with the witticisms and profundities for which Wright’s groundbreaking stand-up has long been venerated, this novel will change the way you perceive your daily existence. To quote one of its many memorable lines: “Everything doesn’t have to make sense. Just look at the world and your life.”
When the party started, all Nadine thought she would have to worry about was getting the flowers herself. Her husband is no help, her two grown children are distracted, and her mother’s presence is a reminder that today isn’t just Nadine’s annual summer garden party but the anniversary of something much darker. Now, with the party in full swing upstairs, Nadine stands over a dead body in her basement. What brought her to this moment? And what secrets are sure to surface when the guests upstairs start talking?
In this tense, spellbinding thriller set over the course of a single day, a woman prepares for a party that goes dreadfully wrong—for fans of Ashley Audrain and Lisa Jewell.
Nadine Walsh’s summer garden party is in full swing. The neighbors all have cocktails, the catered food is exquisite—everything’s going according to plan.
But Nadine—devoted wife, loving mother, and doting daughter—finds herself standing over a dead body in her basement while her guests clink glasses upstairs. What happened? How did it come to this?
Rewind to that morning, when Nadine is in her kitchen, making last-minute preparations before she welcomes more than a hundred guests to her home to celebrate her mother’s birthday. But her husband is of little help to her, her two grown children are consumed with their own concerns, and her mother—only her mother knows that today isn’t just a birthday party. It marks another anniversary as well.
Still, Nadine will focus just on tonight. Everyone deserves a celebration after the year they’ve had. A chance for fun. A chance to forget. But it’s hard to forget when Nadine’s head is swirling with secrets, haunting memories, and concerns about what might happen when her guests unite.
A masterful and poignant debut, ORDINARY HAZARDS is perfect for fans of Celeste Ng. Successful businesswoman Emma left her hometown years ago but has returned to the local bar on Wednesday at five p.m. She isn’t alone: an eccentric group of small-town locals draws her into a booze-fueled night of catching up. But over the course of the night, Emma’s secrets start to spill. Chief among them? Why Emma has returned to her hometown in the first place, and the lengths she’s willing to go to in order to retrieve what she’s lost.
For fans of Celeste Ng and Mary Beth Keane comes an impeccably paced and transfixing debut novel that “vividly renders the messiness of a single human life in all its joy and heartbreak” (Claire Lombardo, New York Times bestselling author).
It’s 5 p.m. on a Wednesday when Emma settles into her hometown bar with a motley crew of locals, all unaware that a series of decisions over the course of a single night is about to change their lives forever. As the evening unfolds, key details about Emma’s history emerge, and the past comes bearing down on her like a freight train.
Why has Emma, a powerhouse in the business world, ended up here? What is she running away from? And what is she willing to give up to recapture the love she once cherished?
A “crisp, haunting, and intelligent” (Stephen Markley, author of Ohio) exploration of modern love, guilt, and the place we call home, Ordinary Hazards follows one woman’s epic journey back to a life worth living.
Virginia and her ex-boyfriend were together for a decade. Nine months after their breakup, when she accidentally runs into him, she makes the impulsive decision to jump into the back of his Jeep, unseen, to observe what his life is like without her. At first, she’s determined to finally confront him and put an end to a relationship she still hasn’t been able to shake. But as the day unfolds, it brings more than she ever imagined. An all-in-one-day story, BLACK OLIVES is a quick, funny, heartrending read.
Ah, Virginia. A woman falls into her ex’s back seat and what comes next is part stalker, part woman scorned, and part comedic accident.…192 pages
Nineteen-year-old Mari can’t sleep. While passing the night at a Denny’s, she encounters a young man who, insisting he knows her sister, persuades Mari to follow him. What follows is an all-in-one-night odyssey in which Mari traverses the surreal, sleeping world of Tokyo, encountering mobsters, musicians, sex workers, and models alike. In the suspended moments between sunset and sunrise, reality and fantasy, bestselling and critically acclaimed author Haruki Murakami immerses us in one of his trademark atmospheres, by turns funny, eerie, thrilling, and magical.
Lillian moved to New York City in the 1930s and became the highest-paid advertising woman in the country, a job that changed her life both for the better and for the worse. Now, at eight-five years old, Lillian is on her way to a party in 1984, but she keeps getting distracted on her walk—by bodega clerks, bartenders, criminals, children, rumors of a subway vigilante, and a fearless poetess. Her walk is a tour of a changing America and the exciting and heartbreaking ways that she—and New York—will never be the same.
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Natasha believes in facts, not fate. Fact: Her family is about to be deported to Jamaica. Fact: She is currently stuck on a crowded subway train where there’s nothing she can do about it. Still, she’s drawn to the cute boy looking at her from across the car. Meanwhile, Daniel has always been obsessed with living up to his parents’ expectations, but the moment he sees Natasha, he’s certain that the universe has bigger plans for them that day. A National Book Award Finalist, THE SUN IS ALSO A STAR will take your breath away.
Bertie and Kate have been best friends since high school, which is why it feels like the world is ending when Kate announces she’s moving to LA. Of course, the world also is actually ending during their last-hurrah trip to Paris together, as a series of global conflicts explodes. While on a surreal private tour of the labyrinthine Louvre, the two are separated and the day starts over, making them relive the nightmare again and again. Can Bertie find Kate? And how much control over anything does she really have? END OF THE WORLD HOUSE is both an all-in-one day book and a time loop story. (And if you can’t get enough of time loop stories like this one, check out Christina Lauren’s IN A HOLIDAZE for a seasonal treat!)
Groundhog Day meets Ling Ma’s Severance in this “brilliant” (PopSugar) and “exhilarating” (The Millions) comedic novel about two young women trying to save their friendship as the world collapses around them.
Bertie and Kate have been best friends since high school. Bertie is a semi-failed cartoonist, working for a prominent Silicon Valley tech firm. Her job depresses her, but not as much as the fact that Kate has recently decided to move from San Francisco to Los Angeles.
When Bertie’s attempts to make Kate stay fail, she suggests the next best thing: a trip to Paris that will hopefully distract the duo from their upcoming separation. The vacation is also a sort of last hurrah, coming during the ceasefire in a series of escalating world conflicts.
One night in Paris, they meet a strange man in a bar who offers them a private tour of the Louvre. The women find themselves alone in the museum, where nothing is quite as it seems. Caught up in a day that keeps repeating itself, Bertie and Kate are eventually separated, and Bertie is faced with a mystery that threatens to derail everything. In order to make her way back to Kate, Bertie has to figure out how much control she has over her future—and her past—and how to survive in an apocalypse when the world keeps refusing to end.
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