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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Sarah Wang, author of New Skin, wants you to read Carceral Capitalism

Sarah Wang, author of New Skin, wants you to read Carceral Capitalism

Sarah Wang’s writing has appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, the London Review of BooksThe Nation, The New Republic, Harper’s Bazaar, n+1, and BOMB, among other publications. Now, her debut novel, New Skin, has hit the shelves at bookstores.

Following a mother and daughter trapped in a toxic cycle of love, resentment, and reinvention, New Skin is a scalding, darkly humorous debut novel about plastic surgery addiction and the false promises of the American Dream. When Linli Feng returns home to care for her estranged mother after another botched procedure, she is pulled into the dangerous world of black-market beauty treatments and exploitative reality television, forcing both women to confront the damage that obsession and survival have inflicted on their lives.

We asked Wang 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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Abundance author Hafeez Lakhani wishes he had found The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao earlier in life

Abundance author Hafeez Lakhani wishes he had found The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao earlier in life

In Hafeez Lakhani‘s debut novel, Abundance, readers meet two generations of a Muslim Indian family in suburban Miami as they grapple with ambition, faith, and the limits of control in pursuit of the American dream. When sixty-year-old Sakeena refuses a life-saving organ transplant, her husband and children are forced to confront their own choices, compromises, and beliefs about fate. Set against the backdrop of contemporary Miami and the pressures of immigrant family life, Abundance explores the tension between destiny and self-determination.

Lakhani was born in Hyderabad, India, and raised in suburban South Florida. Since then, his writing has helped him earn fellowships from PEN America and the Center for Fiction, he’s been recognized twice with a Notable Essay in Best American Essays, and has been nominated twice for a Pushcart Prize.

Lakhani answered our My Reading Life Q&A so readers could learn the books that shaped his life and influenced his writing.

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Inside The Outer Country: Davin Malasarn on Immigration, Queerness, Family, and the Limits of Belonging

Inside The Outer Country: Davin Malasarn on Immigration, Queerness, Family, and the Limits of Belonging

What does it cost a family to cross an ocean — and who pays the price for generations to come? That is the quietly devastating question at the heart of Davin Malasarn’s debut novel The Outer Country.

The story begins in Thailand, where two sisters have their lives irrevocably split when their parents make the agonizing decision to send only one daughter to America — the foreign land the family calls “the outer country.” When the choice defies expectation, a wound opens between the sisters that time and distance only deepens.

Years later, one sister’s young son, Ben, becomes the center of the family’s unspoken tensions. When signs of gender nonconformity surface in him, a fateful decision is made that will cast a long shadow over his childhood — and set in motion a story about inheritance, silence, and the slow, difficult work of self-becoming. As Ben grows, he must navigate his queer identity, fractured family relationships, and the weight of a past that no one wants to name, moving between Thailand and Los Angeles and eventually to Stanford.

The Outer Country is a book about what we inherit, what we survive, and what it takes to finally tell the truth.

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See the cover for The Younger and Other Stories by Daniel J. O’Malley

See the cover for The Younger and Other Stories by Daniel J. O’Malley

The Younger and Other Stories, the debut short story collection by Daniel J. O’Malley, gathers haunting stories that trace the moments when ordinary life begins to drift into the uncanny, when circumstances shift, reality dissolves, and the familiar world reveals itself to be far stranger than it first appeared. By turns tender and unsettling, the collection explores the unstable spaces between connection, consequence, and uncertainty in prose that is elemental, precise, and quietly unnerving.

The Younger and Other Stories will be published on April 13, 2027, by Hub City Press.

Daniel J. O’Malley’s fiction has appeared in The Atlantic, The Kenyon Review, Granta, Subtropics, Alaska Quarterly Review, and The Best American Short Stories, among other publications, and has been featured on NPR’s Selected Shorts. He grew up in Missouri and currently lives in West Virginia, where he teaches at Marshall University.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover of The Younger and Other Stories, which features art by Nancy Friedland, along with a Q&A with O’Malley about its creation.

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Mercy Hill author Hannah Thurman wants to read all the Pulitzer fiction winners

Mercy Hill author Hannah Thurman wants to read all the Pulitzer fiction winners

Set in the late 1990s and early 2000s, Hannah Thurman‘s debut novel, Mercy Hill, follows four sisters growing up on the campus of the underfunded state mental hospital where their strong-willed mother serves as head of psychiatry. Richard Russo says it “will stay with you long after you put the book down.”

Thurman, who is based in Brooklyn, was the winner of the Florida Review’s 2023 Editor’s Prize for Fiction, and her stories have been published in The Iowa Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, The Brooklyn Rail, and Southern Indiana Review, among others. She has been chosen for residencies at Yaddo, Ragdale, Vermont Studio Center, and Virginia Center for the Creative Arts.

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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Hasan Dudar on the Complexities of the Family-Owned Corner Store in Carryout

Hasan Dudar on the Complexities of the Family-Owned Corner Store in Carryout

Hasan Dudar’s Carryout is a marrow-deep collection of linked stories rooted in the Arab diaspora, with themes of displacement and identity, as well as threads of melancholy and humor. Out now from the University of Iowa Press, the book follows Ziad Idilbi, a Palestinian refugee from Lebanon, and his wife Salma, a Lebanese refugee who escaped the war in Beirut, as they set roots in Toledo, Ohio. The displaced couple open a carryout, a corner store, from which they carve out a living. They have three children: eldest son Mustafa, only daughter Nawal, and youngest son, Walid — an aspiring poet.

With great lucidity and wit, Dudar brings readers a vivid portrait of immigrants and refugees who have no other choice but to create a new community for themselves in the United States. Carryout is poignant and tender — a mosaic of life experiences and the complex inner monologues of characters who are grappling with the complicated legacy that is displacement. 

I spoke with Dudar about the inspiration behind Carryout, the complexities of the corner store, and major themes embedded in his debut.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarification.

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