The Greatest Postmodern Books of All Time

Click to learn how this list is calculated.

This list represents a comprehensive and trusted collection of the greatest books. Developed through a specialized algorithm, it brings together 759 'best of' book lists to form a definitive guide to the world's most acclaimed books. For those interested in how these books are chosen, additional details can be found on the rankings page.

Follow on:

What should I read next?

Get personalized book recommendations based on your reading history and preferences. Our algorithm analyzes your favorite books and reading patterns to suggest your next great read.

Get Recommendations

Genres

Postmodern

Postmodernism is a literary movement that emerged in the mid-20th century, characterized by a rejection of traditional narrative structures and a focus on self-reflexivity and intertextuality. Postmodern literature often features fragmented narratives, unreliable narrators, and a blurring of the lines between reality and fiction. It is a genre that challenges the notion of a single, objective truth and instead embraces the idea of multiple perspectives and interpretations. Postmodern literature is often seen as a response to the modernist movement that preceded it, and it continues to be a popular and influential category for contemporary writers.

Add additional genre filters

Countries

Date Range

Filter books by their publication year. Enter the earliest year (Start) and latest year (End) to find books published within that period. Leave either field empty to search from the beginning of time or up to the present day.

Filter

Reading Statistics

Click the button below to see how many of these books you've read!

Download

If you're interested in downloading this list as a CSV file for use in a spreadsheet application, you can easily do so by clicking the button below. Please note that to ensure a manageable file size and faster download, the CSV will include details for only the first 500 books.

Download

To download this list as a CSV file, please log in to your account. Once logged in, you'll be able to download the data for use in spreadsheet applications.

Login to Download
View: List Grid Table
Filter by: Genres Dates Countries
  1. 1701. Landscape Painted With Tea by Milorad Pavic

    A labyrinthine, metafictional quest follows a restless architect returning to Belgrade to unravel the mystery of his past and a vanished love, moving through a maze of Balkan history, myth, and desire. Structured like a crossword that can be read across or down, it invites the reader to piece together clues from shifting perspectives, apocryphal documents, and dreamlike episodes. Playful and haunting, it meditates on identity, exile, and the power of narrative to reconstruct lives.

    The 17163rd Greatest Book of All Time
    Purchase from Bookshop.org
  2. 1702. The Last Voyage Of Somebody The Sailor by John Barth

    A self-conscious, picaresque sea tale in which an unreliable narrator recounts improbable voyages, castaway encounters and absurd adventures that parody classic nautical romance and myth. Drifting between reality and invention, the story unfolds through playful digressions and metafictional games that probe storytelling, identity, mortality and rebirth, offering a comic yet haunting meditation on narrative artifice and the human need to invent meaning.

    The 17163rd Greatest Book of All Time
    Purchase from Bookshop.org
  3. 1703. Ratner's Star by Don DeLillo

    A surreal, experimental novel that follows a young mathematical prodigy recruited by a secret scientific project to decode an enigmatic signal from the stars; through fragmented, playful prose it satirizes Cold War science and institutional bureaucracy while probing language, mathematics, meaning, and existential dread as the team’s obsessive quest edges into apocalypse and metafictional reflection.

    The 17163rd Greatest Book of All Time
    Purchase from Bookshop.org
  4. 1704. Focault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco

    A dense, witty novel about a trio of publishing editors who, as an intellectual game, stitch together scattered myths, historical tidbits, and occult lore into an elaborate conspiracy they dub “the Plan,” only to watch their invented pattern take on a life of its own; the book blends satire, detective elements, and philosophical reflections on interpretation, paranoia, and the human need to find order and meaning in chaos.

    The 17163rd Greatest Book of All Time
    Purchase from Bookshop.org
  5. 1705. Harold by Stephen Wright

    The 17163rd Greatest Book of All Time
    Purchase from Bookshop.org
  6. 1706. The Windup Bird Chronicle by haruki murakami

    An ordinary Tokyo man’s life is upended when his wife vanishes, launching him into a strange, dreamlike search that brings him into contact with psychic mediums, a menacing politician, and a cast of enigmatic figures; as he descends into a dry well and into other people’s memories, wartime violence and buried secrets surface. The story blends domestic mystery, surreal episodes, and haunting historical flashbacks to blur the line between reality and the unconscious, probing themes of loss, alienation, and the hidden forces that shape personal and national histories.

    The 17163rd Greatest Book of All Time
    Purchase from Bookshop.org
  7. 1707. Ghiaccio Nove by Kurt Vonnegut Jr.

    A sardonic narrator traces the life and legacy of a brilliant but indifferent scientist whose final invention — a crystalline form of water that instantly freezes any liquid it touches — becomes a doomsday device. In pursuing the story he encounters the scientist’s eccentric children, a mock-religion called Bokononism, and the poverty-stricken Caribbean island where political cynicism and superstition collide, exposing how human vanity, scientific irresponsibility, and blind faith combine to bring about catastrophic consequences. The result is a darkly comic satire on science, religion, and the absurd search for meaning in a chaotic world.

    The 17163rd Greatest Book of All Time
  8. 1708. Melvill by Rodrigo Fresán

    A hypnotic, metafictional meditation in which a narrator becomes consumed by the life and work of a nineteenth-century author of sea tales, using fragments of biography, criticism, dreams and family memory to blur the line between reading and living. The prose drifts between obsession and tenderness as it maps how stories—whales, oceans, shipwrecks and solitary sailors—shape identity, exile and the act of storytelling itself. Playful and elegiac, the book collapses genres to examine how language and literary inheritance haunt and sustain the writer and reader alike.

    The 17163rd Greatest Book of All Time
    Purchase from Bookshop.org
  9. 1709. Drift by Caroline Bergvall

    A hybrid, multilingual poetic meditation that maps linguistic and bodily drift across seas and histories, assembling fragments—from Old Norse echoes and archival traces to contemporary reportage and spoken rhythms—into a collage about migration, memory, climate and the erosion of language and borders; through translation, repetition and sonic play it traces how words and people are carried, transformed and lost by currents of time, water and political movement.

    The 17163rd Greatest Book of All Time
    Purchase from Bookshop.org

Reading Statistics

Click the button below to see how many of these books you've read!

Download

If you're interested in downloading this list as a CSV file for use in a spreadsheet application, you can easily do so by clicking the button below. Please note that to ensure a manageable file size and faster download, the CSV will include details for only the first 500 books.

Download

To download this list as a CSV file, please log in to your account. Once logged in, you'll be able to download the data for use in spreadsheet applications.

Login to Download