5 Novels about Women and Space, Recommended by Eliana Ramage

5 Novels about Women and Space, Recommended by Eliana Ramage

There are not a lot of books about women in space! Roughly 100 women have been there (out of roughly 700 total—roughly because there is disagreement on where “space” begins). Now compare that to the roughly 8 billion of us alive today. And yet, astronauts loom large in our collective imagination.

To the Moon and Back, my debut novel, is about the singular dream of Steph Harper: to become the first Cherokee astronaut, no matter what. But over my own more than decade writing this novel—while reading all the space books I could find—stories of people on earth loom large. 

Steph’s story isn’t hers alone. It’s about the complex women she might leave behind—a celebrity activist younger sister, an ex-Mormon college girlfriend, and a devoted mother harboring a painful secret. To the Moon and Back is, at its heart, the story of one astronaut’s love for life on earth.

To love and understand space, I no longer think of it as a question of just women in space – but also women and space. How, in literature and in life, does space touch us? What does that touch teach us about ourselves and our world?

I read books about girls and women who are scientists and stargazers. Who lay awake worried about extraterrestrial life, or about the future of life on our own planet. I wondered, how does space challenge our understanding of time and…well…space? What does it say about our responsibility to this planet, and to one another? 

In compiling this list, I hope to share not just books about women astronauts, but books about what space might mean to women on earth. 

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See the cover for Those Who Vanish by Patricia Grace King

See the cover for Those Who Vanish by Patricia Grace King

Patricia Grace King, winner of the 2026 Drue Heinz Literature Prize, grew up in western North Carolina and has since lived in Spain, Guatemala, and the UK, where she now resides. Her short fiction has won the short fiction has won the Miami University Novella Prize, the Arts & Letters Fiction Prize, the Florida Review‘s Leiby Prize, and the Kore Press Fiction Award.

Her Drue Heinz-winning book, Those Who Vanish, features stories that follow martyrs, missionaries, guerrillas, and gringos across Central America to the Midwestern United States. This year’s judge says of the collection, “King’s unrelenting exploration of our need to survive while retaining our humanity propels these narratives into surprising and heart-breaking terrain.”

Those Who Vanish is set to be published by the University of Pittsburgh Press on September 1, 2026, and is available for preorder now.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover of the story collection, designed by Alex Wolfe, alongside a Q&A with King about its creation.

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See the cover for Road Show by Nikki Ervice

See the cover for Road Show by Nikki Ervice

Nikki Ervice is the winner of the VQR Emily Clark Balch Prize for fiction, whose work has also appeared in The VQRThe Iowa ReviewColorado ReviewWashington Square Review, and Passages North. Her debut novel, Roadshow, is set to be released on November 10, 2026, by Astra House.

Roadshow follows Annie, a burned-out New York performer who leaves behind her life of bartending and burlesque to drive cross-country to Alaska after receiving a letter from her mother, who abandoned her at birth. As her journey grows increasingly desperate and dangerous, Annie confronts questions of identity, inheritance, and survival while being pulled toward a final reckoning with her past. Blending grit and intimacy, the novel explores the cost of passion and the fragile ties between family, class, and selfhood.

Roadshow is available for pre-order now.

Debutiful is excited to reveal the cover, designed by Eli Mock, along with a Q&A with Ervice about how it was created.

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Catching Up with Coleman Hill author Kim Coleman Foote and the books that shaped her life

Catching Up with Coleman Hill author Kim Coleman Foote and the books that shaped her life

In 2023, Kim Coleman Foote debuted with Coleman Hill, a story that follows two American families whose fates become intertwined in the wake of the Great Migration. Since it debuted, it has taken the world by storm, being shortlisted for the Crook’s Corner Book Prize, the Carol Shields Prize for Fiction, and the NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Debut Author.

Debutiful caught up with the author recently and asked her 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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See the cover for Afterlight by Caleb Nolen

See the cover for Afterlight by Caleb Nolen

Caleb Nolen is a poet whose work has appeared in 32 PoemsBat City ReviewFenceThe Georgia ReviewPleiades, and elsewhere. His debut poetry collection, Afterlight, is set to debut on June 5, 2026, by University of Utah Press.

The collection, which won the Agha Shahid Ali Prize in Poetry, revisit the fraught adolescence of a group of boys growing up in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover, which was designed by Jessica Booth with art from Mike Ousley, alongside a Q&A with Nolen about how it was created.

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See the cover for HUM by Sanam Sheriff

See the cover for HUM by Sanam Sheriff

Sanam Sheriff is a queer poet from Bangalore, India. Their debut poetry collection, HUM, won the Backwaters Press Poetry Prize and will be published by the University of Nebraska Press in October, 2026. It is available for preorder now.

The word “hum” in Urdu can mean both “we” and “I”. In English, it’s a gesture of sound—a vibration. HUM features poems that follow queer, trans, Muslim speaker who grew up in southern India and migrated to the United States, and is a trans call to the beauty of attempt rather than the clarity of arrival.

Sanam has received support from the Thomas J. Watson Fellowship, Kundiman, Tin House, the Fine Arts Work Center, Brew & Forge, Atlantic Center for the Arts, and The Watering Hole. They currently live in Philadelphia, where they curate The Poets’ Studio at Twelve Gates Arts.

Debutiful is honored to reveal HUM‘s cover, designed by Lindsey M. Welch, along with a Q&A with Sheriff about its creation.

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Rachel Knox on Leaving, Longing, and Reclaiming Florida in Anywhere Else

Rachel Knox on Leaving, Longing, and Reclaiming Florida in Anywhere Else

Hiding behind the title of Rachel Knox’s debut, Anywhere Else: Essays on Florida, is a braided set of reckonings, of leaving, longing, and return, asking not just what home is, but who gets to define a place so overdetermined in the national story. Knox’s Anywhere Else resists the easy narratives that so often flatten Florida into caricature. What emerges instead is a place rendered through accumulation—of memory, media, desire, contradiction—where personal history and cultural myth are in constant negotiation. These essays trace not a single arc of departure and return, but a series of recursive encounters with “home,” each one reframing what it means to belong to a place so frequently misunderstood, dismissed, or reduced to spectacle.

Knox writes with an attention that is both intimate and analytical, moving fluidly between lived experience and cultural critique. An anecdote opens outward; a fragment of pop culture refracts a deeper emotional truth; a landscape becomes charged with the weight of history. The essay form suits her precisely because it allows for this elasticity—this capacity to hold multiple temporalities and meanings at once. Florida, in her hands, is neither simply refuge nor aberration, but something far more unstable and generative: a site where identity is shaped through tension, distortion, and reclamation. 

What is especially striking is Knox’s refusal to resolve these tensions. Instead, she lingers in them, attentive to the ways narratives about place are constructed and imposed, by outsiders, by institutions, and by those who call it home. In doing so, she restores texture to a landscape often stripped of it, insisting on its complexity without sentimentality. 

The conversation that follows extends these concerns, offering insight into Knox’s approach, her investment in the essay as a form, and her commitment to reimagining Florida not as an anomaly or as a meme, but as a lens through which broader American realities come into focus.

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Five Books that Search Inside the Haunted House, recommended by Emma Cleary

Five Books that Search Inside the Haunted House, recommended by Emma Cleary

When I was writing Afterbirth and someone asked me what it was about, I would usually give them the same, succinct answer: it’s a queer literary horror novel about sisters, monsters, and art. Or I might ask, “Do you like horror movies?” It’s a story about a fledgling artist, Brooke, who feels compelled to watch a lot of them, until the horror crawls out of the screen and takes up residence in her life.

I’ve always been interested in what drives us to seek out horror, and there have been numerous books written on the subject, such as Anna Bogutskaya’s Feeding the Monster. One idea is that horror helps us to process our fears inside a container—as Brooke’s ex-girlfriend, a horror cinephile, argues in my novel. The monsters of Afterbirth are capable of shifting the walls of our homes and burrowing deep inside the bodies we inhabit, but I think its most frightening moments happen between people, within our most intimate relationships. 

What follows is an eclectic list of books about being in the grip of some other entity—whether by invasion, possession, or a bond we can’t escape. In these stories, intimacy twists into the uncanny, a lover slowly dissolves, the language of a long-dead poet bewitches the mind, and a house swallows up its occupants. Mothers, sisters, wives, lovers—these are the relationships that haunt. There is an emotional and physical weight to being intertwined with the people or things we love, and there’s also a shared sense that we are searching for something—some lost meaning, a ghostly sort of contact—inside the haunted house. 

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