Best Magical Realism Books

Over the past few years, we’ve found ourselves surprised by how much we’ve loved novels within the broad magical realism genre, despite fantasy themes not being our first stop at the bookstore. Many of our readers also noted magical realism as a favorite genre during our reader survey, so we knew it was time to pull a list of highly-rated titles for you!

What is Magical Realism?

In a magical realism book, some aspect of the character’s story or world varies from the norm and requires you to just go with the flow of the story without questioning if it’s realistic. However, as a whole, the books are also grounded in reality. The characters very much live in the real world with real problems and experiences.

Elements of magical realism could take the form of a Ground Hog Day-style time loop, a Freaky Friday-style character swap, animals or natural elements as a character, or even a ghost character (like Patrick Swayze in Ghost). These unusual happenings are generally shared in very matter-of-fact ways and can be metaphors throughout the novel.

Magical realism has its roots in Latin literary fiction from the 1940s & 1950s. You can find some great examples of early magical realism in the section of the list titled “Classic & Literary Magical Realism.”

What’s the difference between Fantasy and Magical Realism?

Fantasy usually takes place in an unreal world with unreal characters. Magical realism stories, on the other hand, take place primarily in the real world employing magical elements to make a point about reality or to allow us to examine our world from another point of view.

While everything on this book list fits into the magical realism genre, you’ll find a wide range of novels to add to your TBR (to be read) list. Some only require a brief suspension of belief, but others have a more classic literary magical realism feel.

Contemporary Magical Realism Novels

Book Summary

Twenty-seven year old Ava is struggling one month after the death of her ex-boyfriend. Although she lives in Ohio, she receives a mysterious letter with an ad to become a caretaker for a cantankerous older man and his cat in the small town of Driftwood on the Alabama coast. Despite her normally fearful approach to life and her suspicion that her ex is now haunting her, Ava takes a risk and heads to the quaint beachside town.

In Driftwood, thirty-eight year old Maggie runs Magpie’s, a coffee and curiosity shop where magic is found when the old and new are paired. While she’s cheerful on the outside, she’s still mourning the loss of her mom and worried about her aging father. Newcomer Ava might be just what Maggie needs to learn to let go of the past.

Magical realism is sprinkled throughout the novel with unexplained predictions and events, and through the use of butterflies.

The Book Girls Say…

This book is told in first-person from both Ava’s and Maggie’s points of view. They’re both likable, as are the town’s other quirky characters. While the book covers hard topics, including mental health and grief, it avoids being a dark book and instead is a heart-warming tale of found family.

Another of the author’s books, Midnight at the Blackbird Cafe, has been highly rated by our readers and also contains a mix of magical realism and small-town charm.

Book Summary

Lucy is a 26-year-old teacher’s aide hoping to adopt her student, seven-year-old Christopher. He tragically lost his parents, but she needs to be in a better financial situation for both the actual adoption process to be approved and to take care of Christopher long-term.

She’s always found comfort in books, especially the Clock Island series by Jack Masterson. The author stopped writing and became reclusive years ago, but she still regularly re-reads his work. Just when Lucy is about to give up on adopting Christopher, Jack Masterson re-emerges and announces a new book. However, it’s not a standard release. Four contestants will get to come to the real Clock Island and compete for a chance to win the single copy in existence, which is worth at least six figures.

The Book Girls Say…

This adventurous story is full of heart with a side of magic!

Book Summary

If you could find out exactly how many years you have left to live, would you want to know?

On the same day, all around the world, every person over the age of 22 receives an identical box. Inside each is a string. At first, no one knows what the strings mean, but it soon becomes apparent that a long string means long life and a short string foretells a life cut short.

As society responds to the revelation of the boxes, each person must make a choice – do you want to know how long you will live? If so, what will you do with that knowledge? And what if your choice is different from those you care about most?

These are the dilemmas facing the eight protagonists in The Measure, whose fates become interwoven as their individual stories unfold.

The Book Girls Say…

This is a book that really makes you think and will stick with you long after you’ve read the last page. We think it’s a perfect book to listen to on a road trip because it offers up abundant topics for a discussion with no right or wrong answers.

While there are multiple main characters, each is well-developed, and it’s not hard to keep track of each storyline.

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Book Girls’ Readers Rate This Book

90% Would Recommend to a Friend

Book Summary

Nora has decided she is done. Done with the way her life is going. In a moment of darkness, she attempts suicide, but she finds herself in the Midnight Library between life and death. The shelves go on and on, and inside each book is a life that she could have lived, had she made just one different choice somewhere along the way – from following dreams to pursuing different careers to undoing old breakups.

Each time she opens a book, she finds herself living that alternate life, and she is faced with the decision of whether she wants to permanently exchange her life for a new one. As she visits these alternate realities, she’ll have to decide not only which life she wants, but also what makes life worth living in the first place.

The Book Girls Say…

While we aren’t usually drawn to magical realism, we found the premise of this book fascinating. Some find it to be too predictable – and it’s true that the synopsis of the book tells you exactly what to expect. However, this is a book that will really make you think – not just about Nora’s choices and regrets, but also about your own.

As mentioned, this book does deal with suicide contemplation. However, we believe you’ll be left positively contemplating life.

Book Girls’ Readers Rate This Book

98% Would Recommend to a Friend

Book Summary

On Mallow Island, off the coast of South Carolina, sits an old cobblestone building in the shape of a horseshoe. It’s called the Dellawisp, named after the tiny turquoise birds who reside there alongside its human tenants. The building has an air of magical secrecy.

When 19-year-old Zoe inherits her late mother’s apartment at the Dellawisp, she meets the quirky and secretive neighbors, including a henna artist, a lonely chef, middle-aged sisters (one of whom is a hoarder), and three ghosts. The property is overseen by Frasier, who has a special affinity for the birds.

When one of the residents turns up dead, the other neighbors search for answers, but each is also hiding secrets of their own. The investigation leads to the island’s famous but reclusive author and to a long-lost relative of the sisters.

The Book Girls Say…

Reviewers recommend giving this unique book a chance, even if magical realism isn’t your usual genre of choice. They say you’ll fall in love with this cast of eccentric and flawed characters, and be sad to say goodbye to them when you turn the final page.

Food plays a special role in this book and helps to unite the characters. That makes Other Birds an especially good choice for book clubs that like to incorporate a menu of food inspired by the book into their meetings.

Contemporary Novels with Single Elements of Magical Realism

In each of these books, you’ll need to suspend your disbelief for one major plot point. However, the bulk of each story is set in contemporary reality. This list is a perfect first step into the genre if it’s new to you!

Book Summary

Clementine has been protecting her heart ever since the worst day of her life. She wants to find love, but she’s scared to get hurt. But then she meets a man with kind eyes, a Southern drawl, and a taste for lemon pies. He’s precisely the kind of man she’d fall for… if only he didn’t exist seven years in the past.

Her late aunt always told her that her apartment was a pinch in time – a place where moments blend together like watercolors. And it seems she was right. When she finds this man standing in the kitchen and realizes she’s living seven years in his future, she knows she shouldn’t let her heart get involved. But she just might anyway.

The Book Girls Say…

Ashley Poston is also the author of The Dead Romantics, which we both loved so much more than we anticipated. Poston is a master of mixing romance and magical realism elements!

If the character slipping into a different point in time appeals to you, be sure to check out our Books Like The Midnight Library list.

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Best Beach Reads – Best 2023 Summer Books

Book Summary

Mary Jackson is from a long line of women who have spent their lives running the Very Cherry General Store in Good Heart, Michigan. Like her lakeside hometown, the store is constantly inundated by tourists and facing threats from developers. She’s in her eighties and ready to retire, but when she was young, a mysterious prediction told her to await the arrival of a stranger – a young woman – to take over the store and carry on her legacy.

Newly 40, Becky Thatcher takes a vacation to Good Heart with her best friend in order to forget about her real-life troubles for a while. After meeting Mary at Very Cherry and listening to the octogenarian talk about destiny, Becky begins to reflect on childhood memories and future goals.

The Book Girls Say…

Viola Shipman, the pen name for Wade Rouse, is one of our favorite authors of feel-good books. We were eagerly awaiting this summer release, and it did not disappoint! Wade was raised in Missouri and now calls Michigan home for much of the year. His beautiful descriptions of these two states are so vivid that you’ll feel like you are spending your summer alongside his quirky and lovable characters. And, like us, you may also find yourself dreaming up a future trip to northern Michigan!

This is the first Viola Shipman book we’ve read that has a thread of magical realism, and we loved how seamlessly it was woven throughout the story. We also loved that the magical elements did not overpower the very real-life lessons about family and friendship.

You’ll be craving cherries the entire time you read this book – so plan accordingly! 🍒

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Book Girls’ Readers Rate This Book

93% Would Recommend to a Friend

Book Summary

While jogging near her home on Nantucket, novelist Vivi is killed in a hit-and-run accident. After her death, Vivi is granted the opportunity to watch what happens to her family for one final summer. In addition to watching, she gets three “nudges” to change the outcome of events on Earth.

Between troubles for her children, the investigation into her death, and a childhood secret wrapped into the final novel she was writing, Vivi must be cautious with her nudges while learning to let her family make decisions without her.

The Book Girls Say…

When we asked our readers to rank their favorite Elin Hilderbrand books, Golden Girl was in the top 5!

Book Girls’ Readers Rate This Book

100% Would Recommend to a Friend

Book Summary

Neighbors Celeste and Wendy are both moms. As far as they can tell, that’s the only thing they have in common – other than their mutual disdain for each other!

Celeste is a stay-at-home mom who spends her days volunteering and creating a Pinterest-worthy life that makes other moms despise her. Wendy is a career-driven working mom who lives by her minute-to-minute schedule as she balances her business and keeps things afloat at home.

After a bit too much sangria at a softball potluck, Celeste and Wendy wake up in each other’s bodies – Freaky Friday style. Soon everything they thought they knew about the other is turned upside down. Their messy lives are about to get a whole lot more complicated, but along the way, they’ll discover they might not be so different after all.

The Book Girls Say…

This book is a heartwarming reminder – presented in a laugh-out-loud funny package – that we shouldn’t be so quick to judge one another and that parenting and adulting are easier when we have each other’s backs!

Kindle Unlimited as of: 08/09/2023

Book Girls’ Readers Rate This Book

96% Would Recommend to a Friend

Book Summary

Lillian and Madison were boarding school roommates and friends from very different backgrounds. However, they’ve barely spoken since a scandal forced Lillian to leave school.

A decade later, Lillian’s life is not on the track she’d imagined for herself, so when she receives a call from Madison asking her to help care for Madison’s twin step-children who are moving in, Lillian figures she has nothing to lose.

But there is a catch: both kids spontaneously burst into flames when they are agitated. Madison needs to keep this fact somehow a secret while her husband runs for public office. Despite knowing nothing about raising kids, Lillian agrees to take on the role, and throughout one summer, she and the kids learn together how to keep their cool – literally. It may even prove to be the start of a whole new life for Lillian.

The Book Girls Say…

We were both very skeptical about the premise of this book, but it’s an excellent and worthwhile short read! While the concept of children who catch fire makes it sound like this book is HEAVY on magical realism, it’s actually the only unusual element and serves as a great metaphor throughout the novel.
Some of our readers for the Lifetime Challenge did not enjoy that there is adult language in the book, so if you never enjoy books with curse words, skip this one.

Historical Fiction with Magical Realism Storylines

Each of these novels combines the genres of historical fiction and magical realism. Some draw more heavily on magical elements, while others have just a hint of magic, but all will transport you to another time and place.

Book Summary

Ashlyn Greer is a rare-book dealer who loves the smell of old paper, ink, and leather. Old volumes appeal to all of her senses, including a sense the rest of us don’t have. She is gifted with the unique ability to feel the echoes of the books’ previous owners.

When Ashlyn discovers a pair of beautifully bound, unpublished volumes with no evidence of how they came to be, she gets wrapped up in a decades-old literary mystery. Each volume bears a curious inscription, as well as the emotional fingerprints of the authors, Hemi and Belle. The books tell conflicting sides of a tragic romance. The more Ashlyn learns about Hemi and Belle, the closer she comes to bringing closure to their love story, and to the unfinished chapters of her own life.

The Book Girls Say…

This 2023 release is already receiving rave reviews! It’s perfect for book lovers and those who love a story within a story. This novel also delves into deeper historical issues, including anti-Semitism and the roles of women in society in the 1940s.

Kindle Unlimited as of: 08/09/2023

Book Summary

In the present-day timeline, Caroline arrives in London on what was supposed to be a 10th Anniversary trip with her husband. Just days before the trip, she discovers that her husband had been cheating on her, so she’s making the trip solo in hopes of sorting out what her future will hold.

Her passion for history – the career path she gave up when she married her husband – is unexpectedly reignited when she stumbles upon a small vial with an unusual etching. As she seeks to learn more about where the vial may have come from, she begins to unravel the story behind a string of “apothecary murders” dating back to the 1790s.

This dual-timeline novel transports us back to 18th-century London where we meet Nella, a female apothecary with a dark secret. As Nella’s story slowly unfolds in the 1791 timeline, Caroline gets closer to discovering Nella’s secret in the present. However, when their two stories collide, it’s Caroline who may face some unexpected consequences.

The Book Girls Say…

Angela initially hesitated to read this book after seeing some classify it as “fantasy,” which is not a genre she’s normally drawn to. But The Lost Apothecary is actually a historical fiction mystery with just a few elements of magical realism. All that to say that if you enjoy historical fiction with strong female characters, this book just might surprise you!

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Book Girls’ Readers Rate This Book

100% Would Recommend to a Friend

Book Summary

Kerala, on India’s southern coast, is a slender, coastal state with almost 373 miles of Arabian Sea coast and beaches. Being surrounded by water makes this a popular tourist destination. But for the family at the heart of this novel, being surrounded by water has plagued three generations. In every generation, at least one person dies by drowning.

This new literary fiction epic is a tale of love, faith, and medicine in which the family is seeking answers to this strange secret. The family is part of a Christian community that traces itself to the time of the apostles, but times are shifting, and the matriarch of this family, known as Big Ammachi—literally “Big Mother”—will witness unthinkable changes at home and at large over the span of her extraordinary life.

The Book Girls Say…

This new release is a hefty book, at over 700 pages, but. like Verghese’s past work, it receives rave reviews! With elements of magical realism and straddles myth and reality. You’ll be transported Kerala, where you’ll experience all of the sights and sounds, including clothing, dance, music, architecture, customs, food, and so much more.

A tip, though – keep your dictionary handy if you’re a little rusty on your Latin or anatomy. The author, Abraham Verghese, is a doctor and a professor at the Stanford University School of Medicine. His medical expertise is apparent throughout the book. But, as was the case with Cutting for Stone, some readers may find the descriptions of surgical procedures a bit too graphic.

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Book Summary

Even as a child in 1910, Sara recognized that she was a gifted Jewish matchmaker and a seeker of soulmates. But on New York’s Lower East Side, this profession is dominated by devout older men who see a talented woman as a threat to their traditions and livelihood.

Two generations later, Abby is a successful Manhattan divorce attorney with some of the city’s wealthiest clients. When her beloved Grandma Sara dies, Abby inherits her collection of handwritten journals in which Sara recorded details of her matches. The pages seem to provide Abby with more questions than answers – including why the work she once found so compelling suddenly feels inconsequential and flawed.

The Book Girls Say…

When we saw this novel described as “a captivating, exhilarating, feel-good, heartwarming, and magical historical fiction with loveliest characters,” we immediately added it to our TBRs.

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Book Girls’ Readers Rate This Book

89% Would Recommend to a Friend

Book Summary

After Isla’s father passes away, she’s sent from her home in New Jersey to stay with her grandmother and great-aunt in Puerto Rico. When she is eighteen, her grandmother dies. It is only then that Isla discovers that she has a family gift that has been passed down through her family’s cuentistas (storytellers).

The tales of the dead family storytellers are brought back to life, replaying themselves over and over right before her eyes. At first, Isla is enchanted by this connection to the family cuentistas, but when she has a vision of an old murder mystery, she realizes that she must try to solve it in order to close the loop before these stories cost her her life.

The Book Girls Say…

This Puerto Rican magical realism mystery is the first adult novel from Nuyorican author Ann Dávila Cardinal. Nuyorican is a term used to refer to members of the Puerto Rican culture who live in or around New York City. Ann comes from a long line of Puerto Rican writers and has also authored several YA horror novels.

Our readers particularly enjoyed the audiobook version of this novel.

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Book Summary

This book comes with a unique narrator – Music. Music tells the story of an extraordinarily gifted musician, Frankie Pesto. Starting at Frankie’s funeral, you’ll look back at his Forrest Gump-like life as he navigates the music world. From 1950s jazz to the Grand Ole Opry, Elvis, and even Woodstock, Frankie both finds and loses fame. And all along the way, he’s searching for his childhood love.

When Frankie loses his ability to play the guitar, he disappears for decades, returning just in time for a mysterious final farewell.

The Book Girls Say…

Some readers find this book a bit intimidating at the start because of all the musical terminology, although definitions are given. However, as the narrative begins to unfold, you’ll quickly be pulled into this special story.

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Magical Realism Books Featuring Animals & Nature

Book Summary

Joanna Teale has thrown herself into dawn-to-dusk work studying nesting birds in rural Illinois for her graduate program. It’s a great distraction from the loss of her mother and her own breast cancer battle.

Out of nowhere, a bruised girl named Ursa shows up. The girl claims to have been sent from the stars to witness five miracles, but provides no other background information. Concerned about the bruises, Joanna lets the girl stay while enlisting the help of her reclusive neighbor to solve the mystery of where the girl came from.

Over the summer, miracles occur, but as the end of summer and the 5th miracle approach, Ursa’s dangerous past also gets closer.

The Book Girls Say…

This heartwarming novel is perfect for fans of The Snow Child. At its core, it’s a story of friendship and found family. If you enjoy the atmospheric style of this novel, you may also want to read the author’s 2021 novel, The Light Through the Leaves, which also blends nature, a touch of magic, and mystery.

Kindle Unlimited as of: 08/09/2023

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Book Girls’ Readers Rate This Book

100% Would Recommend to a Friend

Book Summary

In The Snow Child, you’ll be transported to remote 1920s Alaska. Jack and Mabel are nearing 50 when they decide to move to Alaska. As newcomers to the harsh environment, it is a struggle for them. Between the intense physical labor required and the even more extreme loneliness, they’re not sure they’ve made the right decision with the move.

Then, during the first snowfall of the year, they decide to have some fun and build a child out of snow. In the morning, the snow child is gone, but they see a young girl running through the trees with the items they had used to dress the snow child. Is she real, or are they hallucinating and dreaming of the child they’ve always wanted?

The Book Girls Say…

Melissa thought the fairytale-like qualities of this book were phenomenal in both the writing and the storytelling.

Book Summary

This debut novel written by Ruth Emmie Lang is magical, both in story and language. Weylyn Grey was raised by wolves after being orphaned. After surviving on his own in nature, he has developed some supernatural abilities. He first realizes his powers when he single-handedly stops a tornado.

His powers, amazing as they may be, tend to manifest at inopportune times and places. In Beasts of Extraordinary Circumstance, Weylyn’s story is told by those who have encountered him throughout many years.

The Book Girls Say…

Melissa hasn’t been able to stop recommending Beasts of Extraordinary Circumstances since she read it a few years back.

Book Summary

Ted is a writer, struggling at work and in relationships. His closest companion is his elderly dachshund, Lily. They do everything together. But now Lily has a new condition that Ted is having a hard time accepting.

This quirky novel turns into an adventure, which then spins into magical realism and beautifully written truths of loss and longing. It reminds us how it feels to love fiercely, how difficult it can be to let go, and how the fight for those we love is the greatest fight of all.

The Book Girls Say…

This is a really hard book to explain without spoilers. Melissa went into the novel only knowing it was written by one of her favorite authors, Steven Rowley, and it was about a man and his dog. And that is how this book should be enjoyed. It’s heart-warming, tear-jerking, and laughter-inducing. At some point, you will absolutely wonder what the heck is going on when magical realism makes an entrance. But just keep reading with your box of Kleenex close by.

Book Girls’ Readers Rate This Book

100% Would Recommend to a Friend

Book Summary

Harry has always loved trees, but he spends his days behind a computer as an analyst in a treeless US Forest Service office. After his wife dies suddenly and tragically, Harry can’t seem to move forward. One day he decides to follow his wife’s advice – he quits his job and escapes to the remote woods of northeastern Pennsylvania to be with the trees.

There he meets Oriana, a young girl who has suffered a significant loss of her own. She spends most of her time in the forest with her book in the treehouse her father bought for her. They bond over their love of the forest and the trees.

The octogenarian librarian in town gives Oriana a strange, handwritten book called The Grum’s Ledger. With this book as their guide, Oriana helps Harry believe in the magic, if only he’s willing to open his eyes and see it.

The Book Girls Say…

Because of its thread of magical realism, some describe this book as a fairy tale for adults. But it’s more than that. It’s a story of grief, sadness, and the power of friendship and connection set against the beauty of Pennsylvania’s Endless Mountains. This story is told from many points of view, including Harry and Oriana’s, as well as numerous others – but it’s written in a way that it’s easy to follow and understand.

Book Summary

This is a moving coming-of-age novel about how fragrances connect us to our memories and help us share our lives. Emmeline grows up on a remote island with her father, who teaches her about the world through her sense of smell. Throughout her enchanted childhood, the one thing her father won’t explain, however, are the mysterious scents stored in the drawers that line the walls of their cabin, or the origin of the machine that creates them.

As Emmeline gets older, her curiosity gets the better of her and she finds herself vaulted out into the real world, with all its ups and downs – love, betrayal, ambition, and revenge.

The Book Girls Say…

This book is lyrical and immersive and unique in its exploration of scent. We especially recommend it for fans of Where the Crawdads Sing and The Great Alone.

Kindle Unlimited as of: 08/09/2023

Classic & Literary Magical Realism

The final section of our list includes some of the most highly-rated classics of the magical realism genre, as well as some other deep, literary fiction novels that lean into utilizing magical elements.

Book Girls’ Readers Rate This Book

100% Would Recommend to a Friend

Book Summary

The House of the Spirits is a sweeping epic that follows three generations of Chilean women through good times and bad. Spanning WWI through the 1970s, through the Trueba family, Allende illuminates the history, political unrest, and cultural richness of 20th-century Chile. 

The Book Girls Say…

This novel includes elements of magical realism, which is a prominent subgenre in Latin American literature. Isabel Allende is considered a master of this genre, and this was her first novel. The magical elements are woven into this story in such a way as to make readers believe and leave them questioning what is real.

Two of Allende’s other books, although written decades later, are essentially prequels to The House of the Spirits. Daughters of Fortune and Portrait in Sepia trace the history of earlier generations of the Trueba family, from the mid-1800s to the early 1900s.

Allende continues to write highly-rated books with threads of magical realism. If you’d like to read one of her more recent works, we recommend her 2022 novel, Violeta.

HEADS UP: This book includes depictions of rape, abortion, and sexual contact between an adult and a young child.

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Book Summary

This modern classic crosses genres from historical fiction and romance to magical realism. Set in 1910-1917 Mexico, Like Water for Chocolate is the story of the all-female De La Garza family. The youngest daughter, Tita, is expected to follow the Mexican tradition of caring for her mother instead of having her own husband and family.

However, she’s fallen in love with Pedro, who has been seduced by Tita’s magical food. So, knowing the tradition, Pedro takes the extreme action of marrying Tita’s sister Rosaura so he can stay close to Tita. And that is just the beginning of Tita’s problems, which include everything from a kidnapped sister to war.

The story is told in monthly installments, with recipes and home remedies mixed into the romance.

The Book Girls Say…

Originally published and translated in 1989, the novel topped the bestseller charts in both Mexico and the US for over two years. If you missed it back then, now is a great time to see what all the excitement was about!

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Book Girls’ Readers Rate This Book

70% Would Recommend to a Friend

Book Summary

In this 2017 National Book Award winner, you’ll be transported through Mississippi’s past and present. Magical realism is in full effect in this literary fiction novel. The story is told from multiple perspectives, including that of a ghost.

Jojo lives with his grandparents and toddler sister, with their drug-addicted mother making occasional appearances in their lives. Their grandmother, Mam, is dying of cancer, leaving their grandfather, Pop, to run the household. When Jojo’s white father is released from prison, Leonie picks up the children and heads out on a dangerous road trip to Parchman Farm (a notorious, real Mississippi prison).

The Book Girls Say…

While Jesmyn Ward’s novels are consistently praised for their poetic writing, she doesn’t shy away from hard topics and graphically descriptive scenes that some wish were less descriptive. For one example, early in this book, the grandfather teaches Jojo how to slaughter a goat in detail, so be prepared.

This is the second book set in the fictitious town of Bois Sauvage, so it is sometimes listed as a sequel to Salvage the Bone. But aside from the location, these two books are unrelated and do not need to be read in order.

Book Summary

Sethe was born a slave and escaped to Ohio, but eighteen years later she is still not free. She has too many memories of the Sweet Home plantation in Kentucky. And her new home is haunted by the ghost of her baby, who died nameless. The baby whose tombstone is engraved with a single word: Beloved. Throughout the novel, the ghost of Beloved embodies the collective memories of enslaved people, allowing them to tell their stories.

The Book Girls Say…

Several of Toni Morrison’s novels incorporate elements of magical realism. In the 2013 publication, Conversations with Toni Morrison, Morrison is quoted as saying, “I want my work to capture the vast imagination of [B]lack people. That is, I want my books to reflect the imaginative combination of the real world, the very practical, shrewd, day-to-day functioning that [B]lack people do, while at the same time, they encompass some great supernatural element.”

Book Summary

Cora is enslaved on a cotton plantation in Georgia, where she is an outcast even among her fellow Africans. With womanhood on the horizon, she knows that she’ll soon face even greater problems and pain unless she is able to escape to freedom. When she learns about the Underground Railroad, she decides to take the terrifying risk to escape. In this novel, however, the railroad is not merely a network of secret routes and safe houses. Instead, Colson Whitehead employs an element of magical realism. His Underground Railroad has engineers and conductors operating a secret network of tracks and tunnels beneath Southern soil

Along the way, Cora kills a young white boy who tries to capture her. She is now being hunted as she continues to make her harrowing journey northward, state by state. She encounters different worlds at each stage of her journey, each created by the author to illustrate the unique terrors and dangers for African Americans in the pre-Civil War era.

The Book Girls Say…

This novel won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2017, as well as the Goodreads Choice Award for Best Historical Fiction in 2016. If you are interested in a nonfiction companion book about the Underground Railroad, we recommend Harriet Tubman: The Road to Freedom.

Book Summary

In Exit West, two young people meet and fall in love in a country that is teetering on the brink of civil war. Nadia is fiercely independent, while Saeed is gentle and restrained. As the violence in the streets escalates and their city becomes overwhelmed with checkpoints and bomb blasts, they began to hear whispers about doors. Doors that can whisk people far away. When they feel they no longer have a choice, Nadia and Saeed find a door and step through. Leaving their old lives behind, they struggle to hold onto each other, their past, and the very sense of who they are.

The Book Girls Say…

At just 231 pages, this novel is described as a profound work of literary fiction and magical realism. Although it is set in the near future, it is also a timeless story about the struggles of refugees around the world. While the majority of this novel is grounded in realism, the magical element (the doors that can transport people to safer countries) is very important to the overall story.

Book Summary

This classic book is considered one of the most influential books in the magical realism genre. It tells the story of the mythical town of Macondo, Colombia, through the multi-generational history of the Buendía family. Throughout a century, it chronicles the conflict between the desire for solitude and the need for love.

The Book Girls Say…

Our magical realism list wouldn’t be complete without this title since it’s widely considered to be the book that put this genre on the map. But keep in mind that it’s not an easy read! It will likely take you several chapters (at least) to begin making sense of it, but it’s not supposed to come easily. Pick this book up when you are ready for something to exercise your mind, rather than when you are looking for a light and entertaining read.

We hope you enjoyed this list of books that will help you escape your real life without immersing you in total fantasy. If you love any kind of time loops, average characters experiencing alternate realities, or second chance at life decision novels, be sure to check out this list of book recommendations next!

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Comments on: Best Magical Realism Books

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2 Comments

  1. Carol Haworth says:

    I think the book The Hummingbird’s Daughter by Urrea could easily be included in this group of books. Also, The 4 part series about the Lost books written by Zafron. Finally, all of Erin Morgenstern’s books unless you classify them as fantasy.

  2. I just finished Covenant for Water, and I highly recommend it. It is a large book, but it grabs you from the first sentence and keeps you hooked until the last word. The size of the physical book is unwieldy, so you might want to read it as an e-book where you can also look up words and locations.