
Books Like Normal People: 9 Literary Love Stories About Almost Getting It Right
Nine novels of class, miscommunication and the people we can never quite leave behind
Normal People by Sally Rooney follows Connell and Marianne from a school in Sligo to Trinity College Dublin and beyond, circling each other for years without ever quite saying the one true thing that would fix everything. Rooney's genius is making that silence feel inevitable rather than contrived: class runs under every conversation (his mother cleans her mother's house), and each of them keeps mistaking the other's shame for indifference. The prose is spare to the point of transparency, and somehow that makes the feelings hit harder.
Readers who love it tend to love a very specific thing: intimacy observed at close range, over years, between people whose timing is always slightly wrong. The novels below all live in that territory. Some share Rooney's Irish millennial milieu, some take the on-off structure elsewhere entirely, but all of them understand that the gap between two people who love each other is the most interesting distance in fiction.
What to read after Normal People
Conversations with Friends by Sally Rooney
The obvious next step, and for many readers the better book. Frances, a cool-surfaced student poet, drifts into an affair with an older married actor while her magnetic ex-girlfriend Bobbi watches from close range. It has the same forensic attention to power inside intimacy, but the geometry is messier: four people rather than two, and nobody behaving well. If you wanted Normal People with sharper edges, start here.
Find Conversations with Friends at Ever After Books
Exciting Times by Naoise Dolan
Ava, a young Irish woman teaching English in Hong Kong, moves in with a wealthy banker while falling for a Hong Kong lawyer, and narrates the whole triangle in dry, grammar-obsessed asides. Dolan is often compared to Rooney and the kinship is real: class anxiety, emotional withholding, texts drafted and deleted. But her comedy is more overt, closer to standing outside your own life and heckling it.
Find Exciting Times at Ever After Books
One Day by David Nicholls
Emma and Dexter meet on the night of their graduation in 1988, and the novel visits them on the same date every year for two decades as they orbit, misfire and grow up. It is warmer and funnier than Rooney, built for weeping on trains, but the underlying machinery is identical: two people who are obviously right for each other, kept apart by class, ego and terrible timing. The structure alone makes it irresistible to Normal People readers.
Find One Day at Ever After Books
Open Water by Caleb Azumah Nelson
Two young Black British artists, a photographer and a dancer, meet in a south east London pub and fall slowly, cautiously in love. Written in a rhythmic second person that reads like being spoken to gently, it shares Rooney's fascination with the moments where intimacy stalls, but adds the specific pressure of moving through a city that polices Black men's bodies. Barely 150 pages and it lands like a much bigger book.
Find Open Water at Ever After Books
Luster by Raven Leilani
Edie, a young Black painter adrift in New York, gets entangled with a middle-aged man in an open marriage and ends up living, improbably, in his family home. Leilani's sentences are hotter and more baroque than Rooney's, and the humour is savage, but the core is the same: a sharp young woman anatomising her own bad decisions in real time. For readers who liked Marianne's self-destructive streak and wanted it centre stage.
Find Luster at Ever After Books
Cleopatra and Frankenstein by Coco Mellors
Cleo, a British painter about to lose her New York visa, impulsively marries Frank, a wealthy ad man twenty years older, and the novel follows the marriage and everyone caught in its blast radius. Mellors widens Rooney's two-hander into an ensemble, hopping between perspectives, but keeps the same interest in how love survives (or does not) the things people cannot say aloud. Glamorous on the surface, quietly sad underneath.
Find Cleopatra and Frankenstein at Ever After Books
Expectation by Anna Hope
Hannah, Cate and Lissa share a house in London in their carefree late twenties, then the novel jumps forward to find their thirties failing to match the plan: fertility struggles, stalled ambitions, envy between best friends. Less a romance than Normal People, but it scratches the same itch of watching a decade of adult life accumulate on the page, and it is devastating about the gap between the life imagined and the life lived.
Find Expectation at Ever After Books
Writers and Lovers by Lily King
Casey is 31, grieving her mother, drowning in debt, waitressing in Boston and still refusing to give up on the novel she has been writing for six years, while two very different men complicate things. King is warmer than Rooney and more openly hopeful, but she shares that gift for making ordinary decisions feel enormous. The rare book about a struggling writer that is genuinely about work as much as love.
Find Writers and Lovers at Ever After Books
Queenie by Candice Carty-Williams
After a break from her long-term boyfriend goes wrong, Queenie, a 25-year-old Jamaican British journalist in south London, spirals through disastrous flings, workplace trouble and the slow realisation that she needs help. Louder and funnier than Rooney, with group chats where Rooney has emails, it is nonetheless doing the same serious work: showing how old wounds teach people to accept far less love than they deserve.
Find Queenie at Ever After Books
Keep the streak going
Want a recommendation tuned to exactly how Normal People left you feeling? Try What Should I Read Next?, save these to your TBR list, or browse our Fiction collection for more love stories told in lower case.

