Scott Broker on The Disappointment: Grief, Art, and the Brutal Honesty of Love

Scott Broker on The Disappointment: Grief, Art, and the Brutal Honesty of Love

Life is anticipation.  Are the moments that shape our lives the result of our own actions?  Or are they the culmination of the long-dammed reservoirs of other peoples’ desires:  The delayed dreams of parents.  The yearnful longings of spouses.  The anxiety-fueled goals that drive individual pursuit of fame, fortune, and fulfillment.  Welcome to The Disappointment, Scott Broker’s debut novel, a portrait of a couple navigating the emotional minefields of incapacitating grief amid the burdensome responsibilities (demands?) of love.  Partners for more than a decade, over a weekend trip Jack and Randy confront death, fame, and infidelity, questioning their affection and loyalty for each other while they simultaneously, systematically (and sometimes brutally) deconstruct the choices they’ve made about the trajectory of their relationship and artistic careers.  The interiority of their conflicts is intimately wrought, painful in its delicacy and brazenly, bravely human.  The novel is replete with moments of their tender fondness for each other, but also offers perspective on the complicated, at times horrific, honesty of love from those who supposedly know – and love – us the most.  Scott and I spoke via email.  This interview has been edited and condensed for clarification.

Continue reading “Scott Broker on The Disappointment: Grief, Art, and the Brutal Honesty of Love”

Diana Xin discusses the books that shaped her life

Diana Xin discusses the books that shaped her life

Diana Xin‘s debut short story collection, Book of Exemplary Women, was released late in 2025 and her writing was called “quiet intensity, emotional acuity, and impressive range, as though we are peering into a dozen kitchen windows and catching our neighbors at their most intimate, soul-baring, and true” by Kim Fu.

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

Continue reading “Diana Xin discusses the books that shaped her life”

See the cover for In Latin America You Could Be Free by Yesena Barragan

See the cover for In Latin America You Could Be Free by Yesena Barragan

Yesena Barragan is a historian of the nineteenth-century Americas and Atlantic and Pacific worlds, focusing on race, slavery, and emancipation. She earned her Ph.D. in Latin American History from Columbia University and is now an Associate Professor of History at Rutgers University–New Brunswick.

In her new book, In Latin America You Could Be Free: An African American History, she explores a forgotten nineteenth-century geography of Black freedom across the Americas. As countries such as Chile, Colombia, and Mexico abolished slavery decades before the United States, Latin America came to occupy a powerful place in abolitionist imagination and strategy.

It will be published by Basic Books on November 10, 2026.

Debuitul is honored to reveal the cover of the book, which was designed by Alex Camlin, along with a Q&A with Barragan about how it was created.

Continue reading “See the cover for In Latin America You Could Be Free by Yesena Barragan”

Meet Simon Nagel, Winner of the Black List’s Unpublished Novel Award

Meet Simon Nagel, Winner of the Black List’s Unpublished Novel Award

The Black List recently announced the seven winners of its inaugural Unpublished Novel Award, introducing the world to seven writers across various genres from children’s and young adult fiction to adult crime, horror, and literary fiction.

Debutiful recently chatted with all seven winners and is excited to introduce the world to each writer, discover why and how they write, and learn more about the book that won them the award.

Meet Simon Nagel, winner of the Science Fiction & Fantasy award for his manuscript, Gates To Nowhere. Nagel is a writer of many talents. He has written film and television scripts, published short stories, become a passable poet, written two books, performed a one-man play, and created the world’s first choose-your-own-adventure martial arts saga.

We asked Nagel to give readers a brief insight into his writing life and his Unpublished Novel Award-winning manuscript, Gates To Nowhere.

Continue reading “Meet Simon Nagel, Winner of the Black List’s Unpublished Novel Award”

Meet Jessica Ellis, Winner of the Black List’s Unpublished Novel Award

Meet Jessica Ellis, Winner of the Black List’s Unpublished Novel Award

The Black List recently announced the seven winners of its inaugural Unpublished Novel Award, introducing the world to seven writers across various genres from children’s and young adult fiction to adult crime, horror, and literary fiction.

Debutiful recently chatted with all seven winners and is excited to introduce the world to each writer, discover why and how they write, and learn more about the book that won them the award.

Meet Jessica Ellis, winner of the Romance award for her manuscript, We Meet Again.

We asked Ellis to give readers a brief insight into his writing life and her Unpublished Novel Award-winning manuscript, We Meet Again.

Continue reading “Meet Jessica Ellis, Winner of the Black List’s Unpublished Novel Award”

Oliver Munday is a Graphic designer, Creative Director, Fiction Writer, and the Head of Household

Oliver Munday is a Graphic designer, Creative Director, Fiction Writer, and the Head of Household

If you don’t know Oliver Munday‘s name, you’ve most certainly seen his work. He designed Colson Whitehead’s cover for The Nickel Boys. Eli Bautman’s The Idiot cover. The Cover for Thick by Tressie McMillan Cottom. He’s also the former associate creative director at The Atlantic.

Now, he’s released his debut story collection, Head of Household, which explores the evolving role of fatherhood in contemporary life. Many a book about motherhood recently has become Debutiful favorites (The School for Good Mothers, The Nursery, Nightbitch), but this is the first book about fatherhood to catapult into the pantheon of must-read debuts. Munday’s grasp on character, emotion, and scene will extend to the reader. He’ll hold you tight as you navigate the lives of these fathers.

We chatted with Munday via email to learn about his journey to becoming a writer, why he wanted to write about fatherhood, and what it was like to have a book cover designed for him instead of by him.

Continue reading “Oliver Munday is a Graphic designer, Creative Director, Fiction Writer, and the Head of Household”

7 Collections of Prose Poems Recommended by D.S. Waldman

7 Collections of Prose Poems Recommended by D.S. Waldman

My students often have difficulty with the idea of a prose poem.  How do we define it?  How is it a poem and not just prose?  And in truth, I rarely have satisfying answers for them.  Part of what I love about the prose poem is its aversion to tidy definition.  It’s mysterious and amorphous.  It’s a you know it what you see it sort of thing.  

Prose is the everyday form; we encounter it not just in novels and textbooks, but also in our group chats, Instagram captions, emails, MTA service disruption alerts, the little pamphlets in the waiting room at the gastroenterologist.  And the prose poem, to me, uses that approachable, everyday form and charges it with the ancient, underlying current of capital-p Poetry.  There’s no formal trickery—no linebreaks, no rules or received forms—just the spoken voice, laid across the page, bound by nothing but that timeless lyric contract, the direct channel to the gods.

These seven are among my favorite collections of prose poems, books I keep within an arm’s reach of my desk.  They represent a range of what the prose poem is capable of, from frank retellings to criticism-infused confessionals to strange, elliptical leaping lyrics.  In all of them, though, we are welcomed into what I think is a more intimate relationship to the speaker, their voice unburdened by form and convention, free and ready to tell you something surprising.

Continue reading “7 Collections of Prose Poems Recommended by D.S. Waldman”

Meet Rua Morrow, Winner of the Black List’s Unpublished Novel Award

The Black List recently announced the seven winners of its inaugural Unpublished Novel Award, introducing the world to seven writers across various genres from children’s and young adult fiction to adult crime, horror, and literary fiction.

Debutiful recently chatted with all seven winners and is excited to introduce the world to each writer, discover why and how they write, and learn more about the book that won them the award.

Meet Rua Morrow, winner of the Thriller & Suspense award for her manuscript, Pressure. Morrow is an Irish-American novelist who writes about climate science and the human psyche. In August 2025, Pressure was also a finalist in the Best Suspense category of the Killer Nashville Claymore Awards, which honor the best unpublished first fifty pages of a manuscript.

We asked Morrow to give readers a brief insight into his writing life and her Unpublished Novel Award-winning manuscript, Pressure.

Continue reading “Meet Rua Morrow, Winner of the Black List’s Unpublished Novel Award”