Read an Excerpt from All Them Dogs by

Read an Excerpt from All Them Dogs by

The following is an excerpt from All Them Dogs by Djamel White. He is an Irish writer and editor living in Dublin. He earned an MFA in creative writing from University College Dublin and was fiction editor for the inaugural issue of the literary and art journal Profiles.

All Them Dogs follows Tony Ward, who returns to Dublin after five years in exile in England, hoping to rebuild his place in the city’s criminal underworld after murdering a rival gang member. When he begins working for Flute Walsh, the enforcer of a local crime boss and a boy from his past, Tony finds himself drawn to him in ways he never expected. It is now available from Riverhead.

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Salomé author Leslie Baird loves the Goosebumps that scared her as a child

Salomé author Leslie Baird loves the Goosebumps that scared her as a child

In Leslie Baird‘s debut thriller Salomé, an American journalist named Courtney follows a magnetic French woman to a remote town in France, where fascination quickly curdles into paranoia. As Courtney becomes entangled with Salomé’s unsettling family, a mysterious wellness empire, and whispers of a cult obsessed with immortality, she must decide whether she’s uncovering the story that could define her career or walking willingly into something deadly.

Baird currently lives in Europe and received an MFA in fiction from Sewanee, the University of the South.

We 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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Nerve Damage author Annakeara Stinson’s bed is surrounded by books 

Nerve Damage author Annakeara Stinson’s bed is surrounded by books 

Annakeara Stinson‘s writing has appeared in BustleBrooklyn MagazineThe Inquisitive EaterIndieWirePaste, and Marie Claire. Her debut novel, Nerve Damage, has been called “witty, sexy and moving” by PEOPLE. In it, Clarice flees New York for Los Angeles after a terrifying breakup spirals into stalking, harassment, and obsession. But when she believes her ex has resurfaced three years later, her search for the truth sends her into an increasingly unstable psychological spiral where paranoia, trauma, and reality begin to collapse into one another.

We asked Stinson 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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Ten Debut Multiple POV Novels Recommended by Rachel León

Ten Debut Multiple POV Novels Recommended by Rachel León

I love the depth multiple POV novels offer. Multiple perspectives allow us to see characters from different angles, complicating our idea of who they really are. While I appreciate a voicey first-person narrator, and know they’re a popular trend (I don’t have stats to back this up, but I’m sure a high percentage of contemporary novels are written in first-person), multiple POVs can widen the scope of the narrative, allowing the reader to know information one character has that another doesn’t, which adds delicious story tension. And multiple perspectives can bring extra richness, texture, and nuance to stories.

I’ll make another claim I can’t back up with hard data: multiple POV novels can be more difficult to query and sell. That was the case for my debut, How We See the Gray, which includes nine (yes, nine) perspectives. So for the querying writers out there—or just anyone hungry for beautiful, nuanced stories—I put together a list of some of my favorite multiple POV novels from the past few years… and they all happen to be debuts! 

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Six Metafictional Novels Recommended by Thomas Elrod

Six Metafictional Novels Recommended by Thomas Elrod

People are always looking for stories to sweep them away, to help them escape. There’s not inherently anything wrong with that, though sometimes I worry about taking that impulse to an extreme. When does immersion in a story start being harmful, both to the creators but also to the readers, viewers, and fans as well?

My new novel, The Franchise, imagines a fantasy film series that has taken the escapism mantra seriously. Unfortunately, since it’s owned by a growth-obsessed corporation, that means expanding the series beyond the bounds of mere films and into something like The Truman Show: a living set of the films’ world populated with characters acting out stories and scenarios in the world of the franchise (and being filmed). Fans can pay to have their memories altered and then live in this world – truly escape into it. Of course, there’s a cost to that.

I think the impulse to create stories that envelop us entirely is worth a little push back, which is why I always appreciate books that bounce up against the limits of their fictional constructs. These are books that are aware that the story, and the text itself, is not real, but that doesn’t mean that they think the story or the words don’t matter. Indeed, it’s often the case that the more metafictional a book is, the more urgent and serious it takes its mission to tell its story.

Here are some novels that engage with this metafictional impulse in various and often surprising ways.

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Lake Effect author Hillary Behrman has too many book recs to count

Lake Effect author Hillary Behrman has too many book recs to count

Hillary Berhman‘s debut short story collection, Lake Effect, was selected by Lauren Groff as the winner of the 2024 Mary McCarthy Prize in Short Fiction. In it, characters move through wild landscapes and emotionally fraught relationships as they struggle with isolation, longing, and the complicated ways people try to care for one another. Spanning settings from Seattle to Istanbul, these stories explore intimacy, family, labor, and dislocation in lives shaped as much by emotional distance as by fierce human connection.

We asked Berhman 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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Rajendrani Mukhopadhyay on Cross-Cultural Tensions in Chitra Demands to Go Home

Rajendrani Mukhopadhyay on Cross-Cultural Tensions in Chitra Demands to Go Home

Chitra’s mind is in Kolkata, India, where she has a house she lovingly built with her late husband. But her physical body is stuck in a power wheelchair — in an assisted living facility in Columbus, Ohio. Because of this, Chitra is in a terrible mood most days. Rajendrani Mukhopadhyay’s debut novel, Chitra Demands to Go Home (out now from Modern Artist Press), follows the 75-year-old Bengali widow as she navigates her new existence after suffering a stroke. 

Chitra, it seems, will stop at nothing to leave this place she refuses to call home. 

This is a story with many themes: cross-cultural tensions, a mother’s immovable expectations for her adult children, friendship, and late-in-life identity. Readers can also expect plenty of humor thanks to the novel’s cantankerous main character. Mukhopadhyay herself was trained as a scientist and has spent much of her career in science communications. But for her book, she was largely inspired by her personal observations as a third culture kid who has lived in India, Kuwait, and Canada. We spoke with Mukhopadhyay about the demanding and difficult Chitra, humor’s role in this bittersweet, and much more.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarification.

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See the cover for What Kind of Mother by Judy Sandler

See the cover for What Kind of Mother by Judy Sandler

What Kind of Mother, the debut memoir by Judy Sandler, follows a mother confronting her son’s descent into severe mental illness as what first appears to be substance use disorder evolves into a dual diagnosis of bipolar disorder. As he rejects medication and cycles through alternative treatment programs that ultimately fail him, Sandler reckons with denial, guilt, and the painful realization that she cannot save her son—only he can save himself.

What Kind of Mother will be published on September 8, 2026, by West Virginia University Press.

Sandler’s work has appeared in The New York Times’ Tiny Love Stories, Yale University Journal of Medicine’s The Perch, The Atticus Review, Pangyrus, Grown and Flown, The University of Chicago’s The Awakenings Review, among other publications.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover of What Kind of Mother, which was designed by Kelley Galbreath, along with a Q&A with Sandler about its creation.

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Kerri Schlottman, author of Daytime Moon, learned to read from Are You My Mother

Kerri Schlottman, author of Daytime Moon, learned to read from Are You My Mother

Kerri Schlottman is the author of Daytime Moon and Tell Me One Thing. In Daytime Moon, readers meet Isa, an adrift woman who has a gift of premonition and a knack for tarot.

We asked Schlottman 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 Let All Our Ghosts Depart by Meghana Mysore

See the cover for Let All Our Ghosts Depart by Meghana Mysore

In Let All Our Ghosts Depart, the debut short story collection by Meghana Mysore, readers follow women and girls of the South Asian diaspora who grapple with belonging, intergenerational trauma, and the surreal inheritances that shape their lives. Blending the speculative with the emotionally intimate, Mysore’s stories follow characters haunted by grief, desire, family, and memory as they search for freedom, transformation, and a sense of self in worlds at once absurd and deeply familiar.

Let All Our Ghosts Depart will be published on September 1, 2026, by West Virginia University Press.

Mysore’s stories, essays, and poems have appeared in The Yale ReviewThe Massachusetts ReviewThe Audacity, and more. She is the winner of the Barry Hannah Prize in Fiction. Mysore has been a Steinbeck Fellow and a scholar at McCormack Writing Center and Bread Loaf.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover of Let All Our Ghosts Depart, which was designed by Elisha Zepeda, along with a Q&A with Mysore about its creation.

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