In the U.S., May is
Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, dedicated to celebrating the culture, history, and contributions of those with Asian and Pacific Island backgrounds.
In honor of the monthlong celebration, we’ve put together this collection of recent fiction and nonfiction books from authors around the globe with Asian and Pacific Islander heritage. These are books published since the beginning of 2025 and through early May 2026. This isn’t meant to be a comprehensive list, but rather a sampling of interesting books to discover, across genres.
For instance, if you’re in the market for an innovative riff on the haunted house story, consider
Kylie Lee Baker’s
Japanese Gothic, which combines elements of horror and historical fiction with interesting details on sword ferns.
Canwen Xu’s subversive thriller
Boring Asian Female explores the dark side of academic overachieving. And fans of cerebral sci-fi will want to check out
The Subtle Art of Folding Space, a debut novel about generational trauma and particle physics from Hugo-winning short fiction author
John Chu.
On the nonfiction shelf, Indian author and activist
Arundhati Roy delivers an intimate memoir on family with
Mother Mary Comes to Me.
Light and Thread is the first collection of nonfiction writings from Nobel Prize winner
Han Kang. And
Sarah Chihaya writes about the enduring power of books themselves in
Bibliophobia. (Chihaya also introduces the useful term “Life Ruiners” for books so good they kind of mess up your whole thing.)
Finally, if you’ve ever wondered about the boyfriend potential of sentient plops of goo, don’t miss
Maggie Su’s delightful debut from early last year,
Blob.
Click on the book covers to learn more about each title, and be sure to add the ones that pique your interest to your
Want to Read shelf!