In the Ring With Alison Lyn Miller, author of Rough House

In the Ring With Alison Lyn Miller, author of Rough House

Can you smell what Alison Lyn Miller is cooking? Her book, Rough House: A Father, a Son, and the Pursuit of Pro Wrestling Glory, explores what it takes to break into wrestling. From backyards and dark gyms in rural Georgia, Miller takes readers into the world of Hunter James, an aspiring superstar. Expertly researched and luciously written, Miller peels back a curtain of the mythical world of pro wrestling in ways that haven’t been seen since 1999’s haunting documentary Beyond the Mat.

We caught up with Miller via email to explore why she loves wrestling, how she wrote this book, and the relationship between writer and subject in nonfiction.

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Jacob Rollinson’s debut book The Truth of Carcosa is an homage to The King in Yellow

Jacob Rollinson’s debut book The Truth of Carcosa is an homage to The King in Yellow

Jacob Rollinson is an English librarian and writer who has completed a creative and critical writing PhD at the University of East Anglia. His work has appeared in  Spoonfeed, Moxy, Critical Quarterly , and the Brixton Review of Books. In 2021, he released his novella, Late King in Yellow Wood.

Now, his debut novel, The Truth of Carcosa, has been published. An homage to The King in Yellow, the book follows evil books, shadowy corporations, and interdimensional monsters as they collide in a metafictional and horrific tale of corruption and power.

We asked Rollinson to answer our recurring My Reading Life Q&A so readers could get to know the books that shaped his life and influenced his writing.

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Inside the Collection: Senaa Ahmad dissects The Age of Calamities

Inside the Collection: Senaa Ahmad dissects The Age of Calamities

What makes a great short story collection? In Debutiful’s latest Q&A series, Inside the Collection, short story writers will take readers through their writing, editing, and sequencing of their debut short story collection.

In The Age of Calamities, writer Senaa Ahmad gives readers a collection of mind-bending, absurdist, funny, and speculative short stories. Each story plays with tropes and structure in a brilliant way. Prior to releasing her debut, her writing has appeared in The Paris ReviewMcSweeney’sBest American Science Fiction and Fantasy,  and Best Canadian Stories. Ahmad has received support from the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, the Toronto Arts Council, the Speculative Literature Foundation, and the Carl Brandon Society’s Octavia Butler Scholarship.

In our first “Inside the Collection” Q&A, Ahmad dissects her debut short story collection, The Age of Calamities.

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I Could Be Famous author Sydney Rende shares the books that shaped her life

I Could Be Famous author Sydney Rende shares the books that shaped her life

Sydney Rende‘s short stories and travel writing have appeared in Joyland, Carve Magazine, T: The New York Times Style Magazine, and Who What Wear. The writer, who earned her MFA in fiction from Syracuse University, has now published her debut collection of short stories.

I Could Be Famous is a collection of ten stories that follow ten ambitious women and one male superstar as they pursue their (sometimes delusional) dreams and desires.

We asked Rende to answer our recurring My Reading Life Q&A so readers could get to know the books that shaped her life and influenced her writing.

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Writer/Translator: Simón López Trujillo and Robin Myers discuss Pedro the Vast

Writer/Translator: Simón López Trujillo and Robin Myers discuss Pedro the Vast

Pedro the Vast, the debut novel from Chilean writer Simón López Trujillo, was translated into English from Spanish by Robin Myers. The novel has been called “mind-blowing” by Gabriela Cabezón Cámara and follows a eucalyptus farm worker who survives a deadly fungal outbreak and becomes the focus of scientific obsession and religious fervor, while his abandoned children struggle to interpret his transformation as their separate reckonings collide in an unforgettable, catastrophic end.

In our latest interview series, “Writer/Translator,” we ask a writer and their translator to interview each other about their work. Below, Trujillo and Myers discuss rewriting, intertextuality, and the role of politics in translation.

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See the cover for The Body Riddle by Sam K MacKinnon

See the cover for The Body Riddle by Sam K MacKinnon

In their debut novel, The Body Riddle, Sam K MacKinnon introduces readers to Lex, who finally receives top surgery, but nothing that comes after is what they imagined. Their partner finds a new flame, well within the boundaries of their non-monogamous relationship’s rules, but Lex starts to spiral. That is, until they meet a nonbinary coworker who helps Lex discover something new about themself. What follows is a meditation on queerness, the body, and belonging.

The Body Riddle will be published on May 19, 2026, by House of Anasi Press and is available for preorder now.

MacKinnon was previously nominated John Hirsch Emerging Manitoba Writer Award and has had their writing appear in Catapult, Prairie Fire, CBC, them., and elsewhere.

Debutiful is honored to reveal The Body Riddle‘s cover, designed by Alysia Sewchuk, along with a Q&A with MacKinnon about its creation.

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See the cover for Voyagers by Meg Charlton

See the cover for Voyagers by Meg Charlton

In her debut novel, Voyagers, writer Meg Chalrton introduces readers to Alex and Ana, who vanished decades ago in what was seemingly an alien abduction. Now, grown and distant from one another, they watch as the Signal, a mysterious and extraterrestrial beacon from the far reaches of the universe, contacts the world. Throughout the novel, Charlton explores what friendship looks like at the end of the world and how we confront memory and truth.

Charlton’s fiction and nonfiction have appeared in The Yale Review, Slate, Lux, Atlas Obscura, and Vice, and the anthology Letter to a Stranger: Essays to the Ones Who Haunt Us. Her debut book is available for pre-order now and will be published by Harper on June 16, 2026.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover of Voyagers, which was designed by Milan Bozic, along with a Q&A with Charlton about its creation.

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The Unfolding: 9 Linked Short Story Collections Recommended by Tayyba Kanwal

The Unfolding: 9 Linked Short Story Collections Recommended by Tayyba Kanwal

When I emerge from a masterfully linked short story collection, it feels as if I’m beholding a complex origami figure after having ambled around, Alice-like, in its chambers and passageways: each turn, each fold intentional, yet delightfully surprising in how it informs the world of the collection, the final creation at once weightless and alive. Short stories operate on economy, with silences and gestures as meaningful as dialogue and action. I relish how in a linked collection, each story offers itself up to me as a single facet, a vibrant plane in a whole that depends for its dimensionality on memory and a sense of accumulation. That brief frisson as unanticipated connections cohere keeps me coming back for second and third readings in the hope of a deeper understanding, like unfolding and refolding an intricately transformed square of paper.

The nine books below are each unique not only in the stories they tell, but the terrain that takes shape by the last page. Some collections are lightly linked, more interested in their worlds rather than the lifetimes of characters. Others build toward a novelistic arc, even as each story speaks on its own terms. Each one comes from a singular sensibility.

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