Winter has a way of encouraging life’s quieter rituals, and few are more rewarding than settling in with a great book. Whether you’re craving an absorbing novel, an intelligent memoir or a story that lingers long after the final page, this season’s reading list brings together the standout titles worth adding to your bedside table. Consider this your guide to the books we’ll be recommending all winter long.
Whistler
by Ann Patchett
An elegant family drama in which old loyalties fracture under mounting pressure, Whistler examines intimacy, resentment and the private tensions shaping modern relationships. Psychologically astute and quietly devastating throughout, the novel balances emotional intelligence with simmering dread, confirming its author as one of contemporary fiction’s sharpest observers of human behaviour.
Contrapposto
by Dave Eggers
A sprawling novel about art, ambition and creative obsession, Contrapposto explores friendship, compromise and the strange ways people reinvent themselves over time. Sharp, humane and quietly funny, it balances intellectual weight with emotional intimacy, delivering a thoughtful examination of modern creative life without collapsing beneath its own cleverness entirely.
The Keeper
by Tana French
Beginning with a missing woman and unravelling into something far murkier, this atmospheric literary thriller examines secrecy within an insular community. Psychologically rich and impossible to abandon halfway through, the novel builds dread with forensic patience, delivering sophisticated crime fiction operating at full strength from beginning to end.
Land
by Maggie O’Farrell
Set in post-famine Ireland during the winter of 1865, Land follows a father-and-son mapping expedition across a fractured and haunted landscape. Maggie O’Farrell’s latest novel balances historical detail with deeply human storytelling, confirming her extraordinary ability to make the distant past feel vividly immediate.
Seed
by Elisabeth Easther
Four women navigating motherhood, ambition, friendship and modern expectations collide throughout this sharp, emotionally intelligent novel from Elisabeth Easther. Warm, witty and deeply recognisable, Seed avoids the usual clichés of contemporary women’s fiction, instead delivering a smart, nuanced portrait of adulthood that feels both distinctly local and universally relevant.
Paper Husbands
by Nick Sceats
Wellington musicians attempting to revive the glory days of a long-forgotten band form the heart of this funny, bittersweet debut novel. Packed with faded ambition, fragile egos and the melancholy absurdity of ageing creatively, Paper Husbands captures the strange optimism of people still chasing relevance long after the audience disappeared.
Hooked
by Asako Yuzuki
This psychological novel explores obsession, female rage and private compulsions within contemporary urban life. Cool, controlled and edged with menace throughout, the story examines hidden desires lurking beneath polished exteriors, delivering darkly elegant fiction that lingers long after the final page has been turned.

Villa Coco
by Andrew Sean Greer
Set within a fading tropical escape, Villa Coco explores ageing, reinvention and desire with stylishly melancholic wit. Clever, emotionally precise and wonderfully light on its feet, the novel balances humour with loneliness beautifully, resulting in literary escapism carrying genuine emotional depth beneath its polished, leisurely exterior throughout brilliantly.
Ghost Stories
by Siri Hustvedt
Blending philosophy, neuroscience and personal recollection, Ghost Stories reflects on grief, memory and mourning with remarkable intellectual clarity and emotional restraint. Written following the death of Paul Auster, the memoir becomes a thoughtful, piercing examination of love and loss that avoids sentimentality while remaining deeply affecting throughout.

How to See Like a Machine
by Trevor Paglen
Examining machine vision and algorithmic interpretation, this urgent cultural study explores how artificial intelligence is reshaping surveillance, perception and reality itself. Dense in ideas yet highly readable, the book interrogates humanity’s increasingly dependent relationship with digital systems, becoming essential material for understanding the modern algorithmic age.
Waiting for Britney Spears
by Jeff Weiss
Music journalist and cultural critic Jeff Weiss revisits the chaotic tabloid years that transformed Britney Spears into the defining celebrity obsession of the early internet era. Funny, unsettling and unexpectedly thoughtful, the book examines fame, voyeurism and media culture before social media turned everyone simultaneously into both audience and performer.
Periodic Bitch
by Emma Hardy
Funny, furious and refreshingly unsanitised, Periodic Bitch examines hormones, PMDD and the exhausting realities of existing inside a female body. Blending memoir, cultural criticism and dark humour, Emma Hardy skewers medical misogyny, wellness clichés and modern expectations with the kind of wit that makes uncomfortable truths impossible to ignore.











































































































