Like a lot of self-proclaimed, proud young nerds, the back-to-school season was my favorite time of year growing up. The brand new, perfectly crisp notebooks beckoning with their greedy blank pages, the pencil points sharp as needles, the immaculate backpack begging for books—all of these talismans represented a feeling of possibility and transformation. It was time for the clean slate of fourth grade, seventh grade, senior year—and whatever challenges, insights, and discoveries were waiting to rain down on me like fall leaves.
Many of us carry the vestiges of this feeling as adults or as parents who’ve taken on the mantle of school-supply shopping and giddy first day send-offs. We’re as eager as ever to mark the changing of seasons and what it means for our daily lives: a return to structure and routine after the freewheeling, looser reins of summer. A readiness to engage our minds with relatively more serious fare over the breezier content we gravitated toward on our vacations and hot, lazy weekends. Trading adventure and indulgence for the chance to stay in, snuggle up, and savor early sunsets.
That’s what the best fall books deliver: stories to sit with and warm your heart as much as any rumbling fire or hot cup of tea. The wide-ranging recommendations below have something for everyone—hot-off-the-press novels, captivating essay collections, an early 20th-century classic—but all are ideal for curling up with when you want your reading vibes to be as cozy as the nubby cardigan you just reconnected with like an old friend.
1. The Great Hippopotamus Hotel
The Great Hippopotamus Hotel: No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency by Alexander McCall Smith
Alexander McCall Smith’s No. 1 Ladies Detective series became a sensation when the first novel was published in 1998—it sold 20 million books in English and became an HBO series starring A-lister Jill Scott. The inaugural novel introduces readers to the heroine at the center of the series, budding sleuth Precious Ramotswe who sets about establishing a detective agency in her hometown on the edge of the Kalahari desert in Botswana. Along with lush details that transport readers to this corner of the world, the books feature captivating cases that have Precious outing philandering husbands, finding missing loved ones, and taking down unscrupulous con men. But the real delight is Precious herself, as sassy as she is clever, who refuses to be thwarted in her quest to expose injustice and root out misdeeds.
And now she’s back. This fall, the series continues with its 25th installment: The Great Hippopotamus Hotel. Precious returns to apply her trademark wit and common sense to get to the bottom of another confounding mystery: why a series of inexplicable misfortunes keep befalling staff and guests of a beloved hotel.
2. Demon Copperhead
Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver
It seems all of Pulitzer Prize–winner novelist Barbara Kingsolver’s books become instant classics, and her latest epic, Demon Copperhead, recently out in paperback, is no exception. Drawing inspiration from Charles Dickens’s David Copperfield, this story traces the life of one of the most unforgettable characters in modern literature, Demon Copperhead, a young boy born into poverty in rural Appalachia. Through the long winding odyssey of Demon’s life and his immense trials, a shining portrait of an indomitable spirit emerges. Clocking in at over 500 pages, this deeply immersive, heartfelt, and funny novel is epic in every sense of the word; a voice, a story, and a world to fully inhabit.
3. Most Wonderful
Most Wonderful: A Christmas Novel by Georgia Clark
This feel-good fare will get you in the Hallmark-movie-watching spirit. The novel has all the elements that a festive heart-warmer should have: siblings returning home for the holidays, an over-the-top matriarch, and, of course, surprising romantic connections. Georgia Clark has written the funny queer holiday rom-com she says she’s always wanted to read. Us too.
4. A Bit Much
A Bit Much: Poems by Lyndsay Rush
Many contemporary poets like Kate Baer and Atticus have found huge audiences on Instagram and then published popular poetry collections. Lyndsey Rush (@maryoliversdrunkcousin) now joins those ranks. Her debut collection, A Bit Much, features her irreverent poetry, full of clever wordplay, deep feelings, and poignant observations about motherhood and the female experience. Why does it belong on a best fall books list? It’s perfect for perching on your bedside table when you need an infusion of inspiration first thing on a dark, moody morning—or before falling asleep at night instead of online shopping or doomscrolling.
5. All That She Carried
All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, a Black Family Keepsake by Tiya Miles
Fall means we’re sliding into holidays and holidays mean family, which is the subject at the beating heart of this tender historical narrative. In 1850, Rose, a woman in bondage, learned she was about to be sold away from her only daughter, Ashley. She furtively filled a burlap sack with the few precious items she owned and slipped it to the young girl before they were separated forever. Generations later, Ashley’s granddaughter embroidered Rose’s intention on the sack, a heartfelt message that read: “It be filled with my love always.” Historian Tiya Miles uses archival records to bring to life this incredible true story, tracing the history of this heirloom and of these women’s lives through generations. The result is a moving and illuminating picture of the unshakable love between mothers and daughters, through centuries and under the weight of tremendous oppression and obstacles. A poignant story of love and resilience that will remind you of the universal power of the ties that bind us.
6. The Life Impossible
The Life Impossible by Matt Haig
Matt Haig, author of the wildly popular novel The Midnight Library, is known for delighting readers with his heady explorations of life and love that unfold with imaginative, speculative twists. In his newest one, he’s penned a winsome story that Benedict Cumberbatch described as a “wry and tender love letter to the best of being human.” When Grace Winters is unexpectedly left a house in Spain by a friend who mysteriously disappeared from her life years before, she decides to leave England and head for the Mediterranean Sea. She has many questions about what happened to her long-lost pal, and her search for answers leads her on a wild, wondrous, and ultimately life-changing journey. Haig’s trademark mix of magic and philosophy infuses this one of a kind tale of self-discovery.
7. Stand In My Window
Stand in My Window: Meditations on Home and How We Make It by Latonya Yvette
Long, chilly days tucked inside? What better time to reflect on what it means to make a home. In this book of essays and photographs, writer and activist LaTonya Yvette explores how we nurture peace and joy through our intimate surroundings and spaces. How do we create havens that offer escape and protection from a sometimes hostile world? She makes a convincing case that home (and community) building is a revolutionary act, especially for Black women, and the ultimate expression of self-care.
8. Women’s Hotel
Women’s Hotel by Daniel M. Lavery
This novel by Daniel Lavery is as quaint and endearingly offbeat as the location it’s set in: the Biedermeier, a women’s hotel in New York in the 1960s that’s a fictional (and slightly less glamorous) version of the famed Barbizon Hotel for Women. The story unfolds as a montage following a handful of residents and workers as their dreams, hardships, regrets, and aspirations collide against the backdrop of this unique, historical setting. As laugh-out-loud funny as it is tender, you can read this short novel in one long afternoon for even more of an emotional punch.
9. Be Ready When Luck Happens
Be Ready When the Luck Happens: A Memoir by Ina Garten
Ina Garten is celebrated for her delicious, accessible recipes, her easygoing playfulness, her enviable love story, and her serious storytelling skills, all of which are on full display in her much-anticipated memoir. For the first time ever, the beloved chef is sharing her full life story—the surprising twists, the tough choices, the personal challenges, and the unexpected adventures, culinary and otherwise. Pair the memoir with one of her cookbooks like Modern Comfort Classics so you can whip up some hearty food to enjoy while you read or try out a dish before bringing it to Thanksgiving. Just be mindful of creamy tomato bisque stains on the pages.
10. Hello Beautiful
Hello Beautiful by Ann Napolitano
Ann Napolitano’s novel was a smash hit when it came out in hardcover last May, being selected as an Oprah’s Book Club pick and gracing numerous best-of-the-year lists (and instantly becoming a personal all-time favorite). The paperback arrives this fall and belongs on your TBR if you love a deeply felt family story. And, like Demon Copperfield, this novel also draws inspiration from a classic: Little Women. The four Padavano sisters are as close-knit as they are different. When the oldest, Julia, meets her boyfriend, William, it shakes up the equilibrium of their sisterhood in ways they never could have imagined. Every single paragraph radiates with compassion and an aching tenderness for all the ways we can save each other—and the ways we can fail each other. Once you settle in with this one, cancel any plans and have Kleenex at the ready.
11. The Comfort of Crows
The Comfort of Crows: A Backyard Year by Margaret Renkl
Reese Witherspoon selected this one as the September (and 100th) pick for her popular book club. It’s a collection of essays about the changing of seasons written by Margaret Renkl, who also happens to be Reese’s high school English teacher (awww). The Comfort of Crows celebrates the natural world through the lens of the author’s backyard as it changes and evolves over the course of one year of changing seasons. A meditation on everything nature reveals and has to teach us about joy, growth, death, renewal, and beauty, it’s the perfect companion to a porch or lakeside sit on a brisk afternoon or for a break after a long walk over crunchy leaves.
12. The Age of Innocence
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton
How about channeling those fall back-to-school vibes by assigning yourself a classic? Maybe with the season’s turn inward, you have more time and bandwidth to tackle a longer, denser read that will impress your friends (and perhaps your own high school English teacher). Don’t worry, no homework or tests; just the pleasure of accomplishment. Penguin Classics has a sizable catalog of stellar options including the books that inspired some of the above recs, like Little Women and David Copperfield. Or there’s my personal favorite, The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton. Wharton was the first woman to ever win the Pulitzer Prize for the novel, set in Gilded Age New York. The story centers around a man caught between two women—his fiancée, who represents conforming to the rules and rigid expectations of upper-class New York, and an enigmatic woman he’s drawn to who dares defy society’s conventions. It’s a timeless meditation on how we reckon with our defiant hearts.
Related:
- Go Ahead—Quit the Books and Shows You’re Not That Into
- A Moody Playlist for Your Next Fall Road Trip
- 13 of the Best Self-Help Books for Anyone Looking for a Little Inspiration
Get more of SELF’s great pop culture picks delivered right to your inbox—for free.