10 Books Like Normal People: Wry, Angsty, and Tender
Get more angst, loyalty, forgiveness and dry humor with these books like Normal People. Get some Irish settings, flat mates, complicated friendships (incl. some that unravel).
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Get more angst, loyalty, forgiveness and dry humor with these books like Normal People. Get some Irish settings, flat mates, complicated friendships (incl. some that unravel).
Discuss Millie’s creepy attic bedroom, danger and this thriller’s wild ride with these The Housemaid book club questions. Get discussion prompts, a synopsis and related reads.
Get more murder, mayhem, elderly detectives, found family, retirement home shenanigans and razer sharp wit with these books like The Thursday Murder Club.
Have your book group explore Hernan Diaz’s themes of high stakes finance, the power of storytelling, and the quest for truth with these Trust book club questions.
These books like All the Light We Cannot See will deliver WWII stories, precocious heroines, daydreamy heroes and a touch of fate and mysticism.
Use these The Diamond Eye book club questions to discuss the Mila’s unlikely transition from bookish student to deadly sniper. Get discussion prompts, selected reviews and suggested readalikes.
Use these The Christie Affair book club questions to lay bare this pack of lies, mysteries, disappearances, infidelity and lapses and you’ll have a great book club discussion.
Explore your literary love with these books about Libraries. Read across genre for library stories featuring murder, mystery, unlikely friendships, political strife and creepy stacks.
Dig into the Italian Renaissance with these The Marriage Portrait book club questions. Explore themes of duality, exchange, death and court intrigue with these discussion prompts and guide.
Check out these books like The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo to get more great reads with closeted Hollywood, blind ambition, marriages of convenience and strong women.
Use these The House in the Pines book club questions to explore the book’s themes of an unreliable narrator, family trauma, the fragility of memory and self-discovery.
Use these Mad Honey book club questions to explore the book’s themes of abusive cycles, generational trauma, family tragedy and trans identity.