See the cover for Hafa Adai by E.E. Hussey

See the cover for Hafa Adai by E.E. Hussey

E.E. Hussey is a Philippine-born writer and professor whose work has appeared in The Kenyon Review, PANK, and elsewhere. She has received support from Goodyear Arts, the Vermont Studio Center, the Virginia G. Piper Center, Tin House, and the Bread Loaf Environmental Writers’ Conference. Currently, she lives in North Carolina. 

Hussey’s debut novel, Hafa Adai, explores sisterhood, identity, and death. It will be published by Curbstone Books/Northwestern University Press on January 15, 2027, and is available for pre-order now.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover of Hafa Adai, designed by Morgan Krehbiel, along with a Q&A with Hussey about its creation.

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Boyhood, Bruce, and Boots: Steven Pfau Discusses Say Nephew

Boyhood, Bruce, and Boots: Steven Pfau Discusses Say Nephew

When I received my galley of Steven Pfau’s Say Nephew: On Boyhood, Unclehood and Queer Mentorship. I was really excited to read it. Book covers are my love language, so when I saw the cover of Steven’s book, I thought, This is going to be a good read. I chatted with Steven over Zoom about being under the tutelage of his loud, humorous, and swagger-filled Uncle Bruce. We chatted about nephews, guncles, and cowboy boots. 

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Joe Bond on Hope House, Psychology, and the Troubled Boys of 1980s Kentucky

Joe Bond on Hope House, Psychology, and the Troubled Boys of 1980s Kentucky

Hope House, Joe Bond’s debut novel, dares to wish for more than the world can offer to the “troubled boys” at its center. The boys – AWOL who runs away, Karvel who’s in charge, and Damico who just had a child – are limping towards adulthood and the five phases needed to graduate from their treatment home in 1980s Kentucky. Together their interweaving narratives paint a picture of a home that is on the verge of closing, a father who would sacrifice everything for his court-ordered sons, and a world where hope can be written on the nametag of a fast food uniform.

Joe Bond grew up in these places and gives them an earnestness that no other writer could. He can make a story turn in one five-letter sentence, revealing a morsel of information that demolishes what you previously thought about a character, a situation, a worldview.

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Exploring Body, Queerness and Music with The Maidenheads Author Benny Peterson

Exploring Body, Queerness and Music with The Maidenheads Author Benny Peterson

If Kate Bush and Björk had a baby, it would be The Maidenheads, the debut book from Benny B. Peterson. This novel is a queercore punk symphony of the human heart and limbs. Benny and I discuss trans resilience, art, and the soundtrack of our lives. This book is front row to the concert where you are checked out, and move with body and soul. We dive deep into queer history, and hope for the trans youth of today. 

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Paige Lewis, author of Canon, was obsessed with the strangeness and despair of Edgar Allen Poe as a child

Paige Lewis, author of Canon, was obsessed with the strangeness and despair of Edgar Allen Poe as a child

Canon, the debut novel from poet Paige Lewis, is about two damaged outsiders trying to earn God’s favor in a violent world split between “Good Guys” and “Bad Guys.” Yara, isolated after family rejection and a toxic relationship, is chosen for a divine mission to kill a feared army leader, while Adrena, a prophet desperate for heaven and recognition, pursues her own dangerous vision of heroism. As their paths converge, the novel becomes an irreverent, emotionally charged exploration of faith, destiny, power, and what it means to deserve salvation.

We asked Lewis, who previously released the poetry collection Space Struck and is the coeditor of Another Last Call: Poems on Addiction and Deliverance, to answer our recurring My Reading Life so readers could get to know the books that shaped their life and influenced their writing.

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Finding Company Elsewhere: Emily Haworth-Booth Discusses Mare

Finding Company Elsewhere: Emily Haworth-Booth Discusses Mare

Emily Haworth-Booth’s novel, Mare, explores the intricacies and dynamics of relationships with others, yes, but more specifically, with a horse. The unnamed protagonist is emotionally struggling with loss; loss of her dog, loss of the expectations of her body, loss of a life imagined. To cope, she lets a horse as a way to fill her time and her emotions. She learns the difference between need and obsession as she navigates learning and loving her new companion. Mare is a soulful ride that will pull at your heart if you let it.

I talk with Emily about writing for children versus adults, what having a strong literary community means to her, and what’s next from her pen.

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Ten Books About Mothers and Their Queer Sons, Recommended by Mario Elías

Ten Books About Mothers and Their Queer Sons, Recommended by Mario Elías


My mom gets every saying wrong. Not occasionally. Consistently, creatively, and with complete confidence. “Don’t be a stick in a butt! It’ll be fun!” Some of my most joyful memories are sitting around the kitchen table with my sisters and cousins, laughing until we cried at whatever she’d mangled that day. “Pickers can’t be choosers, Mayito!” That is exactly what they are, Ma.
She also taught me to dance salsa so I could impress my abuela and my tías. She was my champion when a guidance counselor denied me entrance to accelerated classes I had qualified for simply because I was bilingual. She accepted everything about me without question. Her response to me coming out was simply “Don’t you think I know that already?” as she steered the car around a corner, ‘Hey Ya’ by Outkast playing in the background.

My mother wasn’t always laughing, and I often felt it was my responsibility as a kid to pick her up when she was down. I was there cheering when she decided to make changes for herself. I was there when she walked across a stage to receive her first college degree while raising three kids. And my grandparents, who had been through more than I understood at the time, beamed like it was the best day of their lives. It probably was. Most kids don’t get to witness their parents achieve milestones like that, but I did. I feel lucky to have been celebrated by my mother and also get to celebrate her successes as well. To lift her up when she’s down and to lift her even higher when she is up.
I say all this because the ten books I compiled for this list are, at their core, about that specific current of love that runs between mothers and sons: complicated, sometimes devastating, and when you’re lucky, mutual in ways that surprise and eventually define you. 

For Queer sons and their mothers, that current carries extra voltage. There’s more to navigate, more that can go unsaid, more that has to be invented from scratch because there’s no existing script to follow. These ten stories are heartbreaking yet hopeful, often strange and surreal, but they all capture a different facet of the unique bond between mothers and their Queer sons.

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Sara Van Os on Death, OCD, and Lesbian Longing in Decomposition Book

Sara Van Os on Death, OCD, and Lesbian Longing in Decomposition Book

Decomposition Book, Sara Van Os’s debut novel, is a deeply strange and surprisingly tender book about loneliness, connection, and the lengths we’ll go to hold onto someone who makes us feel less alone. It’s funny in the way only truly sad things can be — Savannah’s inner monologue is relentless and real, and her OCD intrusive thoughts are rendered with a specificity that will feel uncomfortably familiar to many readers. The dual structure — Savannah’s present-tense unraveling alongside Ava’s past-tense journal — builds toward a question the novel asks without quite answering: what does it mean to finally find your person, if that person is already gone?

After a catastrophic falling-out with her best friend, Savannah retreats to her parents’ empty lake house in upstate New York, where she spends her days in a fog of wine and obsessive, spiraling thoughts. She has no plan, no real purpose — just the particular kind of aimless grief that comes from losing someone you loved and knowing, at least partly, that it was your fault.

Then one morning she wakes up in the woods behind the house, next to a dead body.

Any reasonable person would call the police. Savannah reads the journal.

It belongs to Ava — a hiker who got lost in the wilderness and spent her final months fighting to survive, documenting every desperate, darkly funny, heartbreaking day. As Savannah moves through Ava’s pages, something unexpected happens: she starts to fall for her. Not just as a story, but as a person — sharp, irreverent, fully alive on the page in a way that makes the cold fact of her death feel unbearable.

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