7 novels featuring a book within a book

Is there anything more delightful than discovering a novel with a book within a book?

Is there anything more delightful than discovering a book within a book? A few years ago, I shared some of my favorite epistolary novels. Today’s book list goes one nerdy step further and focuses on novels featuring a book within a book.

It’s one thing to read about a character’s bookish life and quite another to be able to read what they’re reading—or, in some cases, what they’re writing. This type of novel provides meta insights and extra bibliophile delight: nested narratives offer both a double dip into a delightful literary world and a pleasant sort of readerly puzzle to solve. (What’s the “extra” book doing there? What is its purpose? Meaning? And, importantly: is it any good?)

While this list features books within their larger books, I’ve also enjoyed variations on this motif that incorporate other forms of longform writing in the pages: for example, one of this year’s Summer Reading Guide books features segments of a screenplay distributed throughout the narrative, which serves essentially the same purpose.

If you have other favorite novels that feature a book within a book, I hope you’ll share in the comments. I’ve omitted some staples of this genre from my list, so there’s plenty of room for you to chime in!

7 novels featuring a book within a book

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Magpie Murders

Magpie Murders

In this series opener we meet Susan Ryeland, an editor who has worked with Alan Conway for years, putting up with his eccentricities for the sake of his bestselling detective series. Every Atticus Pünd mystery novel feels pretty much the same to Susan by now, each one set in a small English village, following an Agatha Christie-like formula. When Susan reads Conway’s latest, however, she finds there might be more to the fictional mystery at Pye Hall. The more she reads, the more she becomes convinced of a real-life mystery between the pages. A tale of greed and gruesome murder prompts Susan to investigate what really happened in this clever (and cleverly structured) novel-within-a-novel. More info →
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The Bromance Book Club

The Bromance Book Club

Author: Lyssa Kay Adams
This second chance love story is so much fun—and gave me a new appreciation for the romance genre. Baseball star Gavin Scott is successful on the field, but at home? He's struggling to make his marriage work. Desperate for help, he turns to his best friends, who—unbeknownst to him—have a secret romance book club in which they read and discuss romance novels. The guys give him a historical romance to read, Courting the Countess, portions of which appear between chapters, and tell him to use it as a guide to win his wife back. Through big gestures and fumbling attempts at vulnerability, Gavin learns how to love his partner better. (Open door.) More info →
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The Woman in the Library

The Woman in the Library

Author: Sulari Gentill
This utterly compelling read features not just a book within a book but a mystery within a mystery! Australian writer Freddie Kincaid is working in Boston after winning a literary fellowship. She's sharing a table with three strangers at the Boston Public Library when the quiet is pierced by a woman's scream—and the four, who quickly bond after sharing this frightening moment, later discover that what they really may have heard was a murder taking place. But wait! Freddie and her pals are actually characters in a novel that established Australian writer Hannah Tigone is working on, and she's mailing chapters we're reading to a doting fan who has some advice for Hannah ... along with pointed tips that grow ever more disturbing. This is a fun little puzzle box of a book, although I've got to warn you: some of you will hate the ending. More info →
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The Secret Book of Flora Lea

The Secret Book of Flora Lea

This heartfelt historical novel about the power of stories, forgiveness, and love was a 2023 MMD Minimalist Summer Reading Guide pick. I was hooked by the strong premise: in 1960s London, a young woman named Hazel unwraps a parcel from America while working at Hogan’s Rare Book Shop. She is gobsmacked to find an illustrated children’s book called Whisperwood and the River of Stars. This book shouldn’t exist, because only two people in the world know about Whisperwood: Hazel and her sister Flora, who created the fairy tale together while billeted in Oxfordshire during WWII. Hazel believes the book is proof that her sister didn’t die, as presumed, back in 1940, and embarks on a quest to find her. A heartfelt historical novel about the power of stories, forgiveness, and love. More info →
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The Connellys of County Down

The Connellys of County Down

Author: Tracey Lange
Lange's debut We Are the Brennans is one of my favorite juicy, big-hearted family novels. This story, Lange’s third, is about the three adult children in the Connelly family. In the opening pages, Tara is released from prison after serving 18 months on a drug charge and goes home to see her siblings: her brother, a single dad who is still struggling with lingering symptoms from a brain injury sustained many moons ago, and sister, the Type A firstborn who always has things under control but who is struggling at the moment, not that she’ll admit that to her siblings. I love stories of complicated families, and was pleasantly surprised to discover this novel features a book within a book: the title references the ongoing story the mother of the now-grown Connolly children once told them at bedtime. More info →
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S./Ship of Theseus

S./Ship of Theseus

A mystery and burgeoning romance unfold between two graduate students in this novel-within-a-novel. Jen and Eric leave notes in the same copy of Ship of Theseus, a literary novel that was the last book written by the anonymous author V.M. Straka. Translator F.X. Caldeira included an introduction and footnotes and wrote the ending, as Straka withheld it before he died. Jen and Eric’s marginalia draws them together as they trade theories about the book and open up about their lives. But danger is afoot and they must race to figure out Straka’s identity before it’s too late. How you read the story—novel or marginalia and ephemera first—matters as much as the story itself. Team members Ginger and Leigh buddy read this a few years ago and say it’s one of the most unique reading experiences they’ve ever had. More info →
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Trust

Trust

Author: Hernan Diaz
This multi-layered Pulitzer Prize winner is told in four distinct parts, each one subtly—or, in the case of the final section, not so subtly—changing the meaning of what came before. Part I is a biographical novel based on the life of an infamous Wall Street trader who flourished after the stock market crash of 1929. Part II, an unfinished draft of the autobiography the trader began writing, with the help of a ghostwriter, to "correct" the novel's portrayal of his life. Part III is from the point of view of that ghostwriter, and Part IV ... no spoilers, but it blows the lid off the whole thing. Structure nerds like myself will find much to appreciate here. More info →
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What are your favorite novels featuring a book within a book? Please share in the comments.

P.S. 20 wonderful books about books and bookstores, 15 books about books for bibliophiles, and 8 wonderful books for Word Nerds.

P.P.S. On display in that top photo: our Ampersand custom Leuchtturm dotted journal (pictured: Sage) and “Happy reading!” book darts, both available now in our shop.

7 novels featuring a book within a book

11 comments

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  1. Colleen O’Brien says:

    I really loved Margaret Atwood’s The Blind Assassin, tho sometimes the switches between time & the story within the dtory had me flipping back and forth page or two.

    I don’t know if this counts the same way, but i enjoyed Erica Bauermeister’s No Two Persons, which follows the progress of a book from the inspiration to the process of writing, publishing, and then public reception of the book & the hands it gets into – a twist on similar stories about the life of wedding dresses, guns or accordions. I loved the way the author of the book within a book pops up throughout the story.

    And finally James Michener’s The Novel, which gives an interesting insight into the relationship between author and editor. This book has stayed with me for quite awhile after reading

  2. Susan Skilton says:

    Oh my goodness all of Anthony Horowitz’s Susan Ryland books are FAB ( There are four I think.) and PBS has done shows for all of them. Leslie Manville voices the audiobooks which are incredible, and she also stars in the PBS series. She was in the Crown.
    All of this series is basically story within a story.

    He has gone onto to write his Horowitz and—–? Series which now has at least five books, which features the author with a former police detective…. and they are all stories within a story. So so great on audio, read by Rory Kinnear, who is a big British star from the book of Dave and the Keri Russell ambassador series….

  3. Lisa Hunt says:

    The Nothing Man by Catherine Ryan Howard! The child survivor or a serial killer is now an adult who writes about the experience. You read her book through the eyes of the serial killer!!!

  4. Colleen says:

    The first one that came to mind, because I enjoyed it so, was The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane (Katherine Howe) and the second, because I recently finished it, was News of the Dead (James Robertson).

  5. Donna says:

    I’m in the middle of reading The Book Witch, by Meg Shaffer. It’s a super fun romp about a witch who can go in and out of books, which she’s frequently asked to do when plots become damaged. All goes reasonably well till she falls in love with a main character, and then ends up needing his help to find her missing grandfather. Kind of reminiscent of Jasper Fforde’s Thursday Next series, which I would also recommend…

  6. Kathy says:

    In my TBR is Death of the Author by Nnedi Okorafor. A disabled Nigerian American woman writes a wildly successful sci-fi novel called Rusted Robots. As her fame rises, she loses control of the narrative. There is even a different cover hidden under the dust cover.

  7. Jill S Fitzpatrick says:

    NNedi Okorafor’s Death of the Author and Emily St. John Mandel’s Station Eleven belong on this list for sure!

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