See the cover of Compensation by Augustine Cerf

See the cover of Compensation by Augustine Cerf

Augustine Cerf‘s debut novel Compensation opens in the immediate aftermath of loss and refuses to look away. When Charlotte’s adult son dies suddenly, grief does not hollow her out; it sharpens her, driving her toward a decision that feels both clinical and unthinkable: to extend his life by any means available, even if it requires bending the boundaries of motherhood, autonomy, and consent.

Compensation will be published on January 19, 2027, by Tin House and is available for preorder now.

Cerf is a London-based writer with an award-winning career in advertising. Compensation is her first novel.

Debutiful is honored to reveal Compensation‘s cover, designed by Lucy Kim, along with a Q&A with Cerf and insight from Kim about its creation.

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A History of Heartache author Patrick Strickland was inspired by his former teacher, Patricia Lear

A History of Heartache author Patrick Strickland was inspired by his former teacher, Patricia Lear

Patrick Strickland is the author of Alerta! Alerta! Snapshots of Europe’s Anti-Fascist StruggleThe Marauders: Standing Up to Vigilantes in the American Borderlands, and You Can Kill Each Other After I Leave: Refugees, Fascism, and Bloodshed in Greece.

His debut short story collection, A History of Heartache, is filled with fourteen stories that chart the small mercies and big mistakes that make a life.

We asked him to answer our recurring My Reading Life Q&A so readers could get to know the books that shaped his life and influenced his writing.

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4 Books with Compassionate Depictions of Neurodivergence, Recommended by kai alonté

4 Books with Compassionate Depictions of Neurodivergence, Recommended by kai alonté

As a ‘late-diagnosed’ autistic, receiving clinical confirmation of my neurotype offered more catharsis and meaningful support than I’d anticipated. It was still a complex road, however, to learn to live and create in full embrace of my wiring. I found myself pushing up against pervasive, pejorative stereotypes of autism, oft-repeated narratives that bore little resemblance to my internal experience, or framed those experiences through a distorted lens. While I knew I didn’t want to be reduced to those stereotypes, neither did I want to rebuild my sense of self in opposition to them. That pressure, to me, was at the root of respectability politics: this desire to stay safe by depicting yourself as the palatable exception to a denigrated rule. I wanted the freedom, and the courage, to experience the full extent of my being, and, when I chose, to allow others to experience it as well. 

Just as two-dimensional, pathologizing narratives of neurodivergence had fed my internalized ableism, nuanced and compassionate narratives of neurodivergence deepened my capacity to embrace the complexity in myself and others, in life and in writing. These narratives offered multi-faceted depictions of people who–whether by inherent wiring or acquired coping–operated differently than what was societally-centered as ‘normal.’ Encouraged by the example of such stories, I wrote my first novel, Somewhere Soft to Land, with a neurodivergent protagonist who has many dimensions. I felt emboldened to allow Dzifa to be sharp, and messy, and tender, and misguided–to release her from the expectation to be likable or relatable and to let her be fully herself. Though there have been plenty over the years, I’m glad I can share at least four of the stories whose nuanced depictions of neurodivergence have moved and fortified me. I will describe as little of the plot of each book as I can manage, as each one is worth experiencing with as few preconceptions as possible. Still, a heads up that I may offer some indications of character arcs.

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Erin Van Der Meer on The Scoop, Tabloid Journalism, and the Ethics of Media

Erin Van Der Meer on The Scoop, Tabloid Journalism, and the Ethics of Media

Erin Van Der Meer’s The Scoop is a piercing look at the horrors of celebrity tabloids, turned on its head: the call is coming from inside the proverbial house, here, as we follow the downward spiral of laid-off journalist Frankie. A once-praised New York journalist, Frankie finds herself washed up in a sea of rejections as she looks for work – any work –  after being let go from her glossy magazine job. 

When her desperation becomes dire, Frankie is offered a position at The Scoop, a clickbait-fueled tabloid. As she joins the ranks as a night editor, Frankie finds the night desk is a constant churn of distasteful fodder, yet her unquenchable thirst for achievement pulls her deeper into her quest for the kind of career she watches her old friends and colleagues achieve. The Scoop asks just how far Frankie must be willing to go to rise up the journalism ranks – and at what cost?

I spoke with Erin about her writing life, her transition from journalism to fiction, and how The Scoop came to be. 

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Gabrielle Sher, author of Odessa, is always inspired by Mary Shelley and Shirley Jackson

Gabrielle Sher, author of Odessa, is always inspired by Mary Shelley and Shirley Jackson

In Odessa, Gabrielle Sher introduces Yetta, a restless teenage girl coming of age in a shtetl shadowed by fear, where disappearances and whispered violence press in on daily life. After a brutal attack leaves her dead, her father turns to forbidden texts and uncertain magic to bring her back, but what returns is not entirely the daughter he lost. As Yetta begins to sense the truth of what she has become, the novel unfolds into a haunting story of grief, identity, and the consequences of trying to reverse the irreversible.

We asked Sher 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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Tom Junod on Writing About His Father, Masculinity, and the Secrets That Shape a Life

In his new memoir, In the Days of My Youth I Was Told What It Means to Be a Man, Tom Junod reckons with the myth and reality of his father, a man whose presence shaped everything, even in what went unsaid. In this conversation, he discusses masculinity, memory, and the challenge of telling the truth without losing the complexity of love.

I caught up with Junod via email to discuss fatherhood, performance, and the tension between who we remember and who we understand.

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Five Adventure Books Where the Journey Is About Humility Recommended by Ailsa Ross

Five Adventure Books Where the Journey Is About Humility Recommended by Ailsa Ross

I thought this was going to be an essay about how adventure books help me sleep (I find it terribly difficult to sleep), but as I was choosing which books to include, I realized something else bound these books: there is a wisdom to the authors. Their stories – which range from raising orphaned grizzly cubs in Russia to meditating alone in a Himalayan cave for over a decade – tend to start from a place of fear: fear of solitude, of discomfort, of cold weather, of shoddy bedding and meager rations and avalanches and wildfires and poachers and all the sorry and terrifying things of the world. But over time, that fear becomes acceptance, and love, for the world as it is. That is freedom, to be humbled by the world until one truly feels one’s connection to it. 

But what does this have to do with my debut novel Hovel, where the narrator is living in the mountains but not exactly raising grizzly cubs? (Her job involves editing internet videos of kittens doing cute things.) Really, she is not feeling so connected to the world. Yet that changes as she embarks on the smallest of adventures – cooking by candlelight, peeing in the woods, foraging in places where foraging definitely isn’t allowed. It is transgressive, in this day and age, to do even these small things. Yet adventure books like the following make me believe probing the world from as many new angles as possible does have meaning.

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Read an excerpt from Wife Shaped Bodies by Laura Cranehill 

Read an excerpt from Wife Shaped Bodies by Laura Cranehill 

The following is an excerpt from Wife Shaped Bodies by Laura Cranehill. She is a writer who lives in the Pacific Northwest with her spouse and three children and has had her writing appear in Strange Horizons, Vastarien, ergot., PANK, and multiple award-winning anthologies. This is her first novel.

Wife Shaped Bodies is about an isolated young bride, raised under rigid rules and covered in fungal growths, who begins to unravel both her body and her beliefs after entering a controlling marriage. As she forms a dangerous connection with another woman, she uncovers buried truths about her community and confronts her own autonomy, desire, and transformationIt is now available from Saga Press.

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