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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Five Books That Bring Saskatchewan to Life, Recommended by Blair Palmer Yoxall

Five Books That Bring Saskatchewan to Life, Recommended by Blair Palmer Yoxall

As an Indigenous person on Northern Plains in Canada, I never understood why my home couldn’t be the setting of a mystical Western like the ones I’d read, seen, played, heard all about. The most important components of a fantastic Western were everywhere—larger-than-life landscapes that only larger-than-life people could survive. Big sun, big water, big trees, big animals, big prairies, big sky, big history, big problems. My home had it all. My grandpa’s home in Saskatchewan had it all too.

I think all Indigenous people have uncomfortable fondness for Westerns. No other genre features us so integrally. Yet no other genre is predicated on the legend of the extermination of an entire people. If Indigenous Peoples’ fight for existence is the foundation of the Western, why can’t Indigenous Peoples tell Westerns from our perspectives too? If overwhelming landscapes produce overwhelming characters, who better to tell those stories than the characters indigenous to that land?

Because of its Indigenous history, Saskatchewan has an outsized footprint on the history of the Northern Plains. In fact, some of the most consequential violence in Canada happened in modern Saskatchewan—including the North-West Rebellion, which was the largest authorization of deadly force against Indigenous Peoples in Canada that left a monumental scar across the Northern Plains. Wouldn’t that be perfect for a Western?

For my debut novel, Treat Them as Buffalo, I wanted to return to my family and my grandpa’s home in Saskatchewan—the land, the people, and the history. Here are six books that help me understand somewhere as historical and mythological as Saskatchewan.  

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Imani Thompson on Writing Honey, Misogyny, and the Lovable Psychopath

Imani Thompson on Writing Honey, Misogyny, and the Lovable Psychopath

Imani Thompson’s debut novel, Honey, explores the sticky side of what it means to be a woman in a world full of men that functionally disregards women. Yrsa is fed up and bored with her school life, so she kills. At first, because she can, but essentially, because she feels that ridding the earth of the kind of man that makes it hard for women to live here is important work. Men who hurt her, her friends, and women in general. Thompson’s novel is witty, electric, thrilling, and thought-provoking. She blends themes of misogyny, narcissism, race, and class with ease, while assuring that the reader can still see the softness and humanness of the story’s protagonist, Yrsa.

I spoke with Thompson about writing the terrible thing, what community looks like in the literary world, and the rhythm of language and words.

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Vincent Yu, author of Seek Immediate Shelter, says literary influence has always been inextricably tied to anxiety

Vincent Yu, author of Seek Immediate Shelter, says literary influence has always been inextricably tied to anxiety

Set in a small Massachusetts town, Vincent Yu‘s debut novel, Seek Immediate Shelter, follows a group of residents whose lives fracture in the moments after a false ballistic missile alert forces them to act on their most instinctive impulses. In the aftermath, each must confront the consequences of what they revealed about themselves, as the ripple effects of those choices unfold over years.

We asked Yu 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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See the cover for To Stay, To Stay, To Stay by Devon Halliday

See the cover for To Stay, To Stay, To Stay by Devon Halliday

To Stay, To Stay, To Stay, the debut novel by Devon Halliday, is set over the course of a single humid week and traces seven interconnected lives of an ensemble cast in a small Appalachian college town as private crises surface and begin to collide. As secrets spread and choices sharpen, it becomes a study of staying versus leaving, and how even our most certain decisions can feel provisional under pressure.

To Stay, To Stay, To Stay will be published on October 27, 2026, by McSweeney’s and is available for preorder now.

Halliday is a Pushcart Prize–winning writer with fiction published in PloughsharesOne Story, and West Branch, among other journals. Her essays and criticism appear in Liberties, the Los Angeles Review of Books, and CRAFT.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover of To Stay, To Stay, To Stay, designed by Justin Carder, along with a Q&A with Halliday about its creation.

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Good News author Alexa Yasemin Brahme wishes she had read Melissa Broder as a teen

Good News author Alexa Yasemin Brahme wishes she had read Melissa Broder as a teen

Alexa Yasemin Brahme‘s writing has earned her nominations for is a Pushcart Prize, the Robert J. Dau PEN Award, and Best of the Net. Originally from Southern California, she received her MFA from the New School and currently lives in Brooklyn, where she works as a bookseller at Books Are Magic (aka Debutiful’s favorite bookstore in America).

Now, her novel Good News has arrived. Set in New York City, Good News follows a young artist whose creative ambitions and personal life begin to unravel as her thesis falters, her relationships strain, and a magnetic ex reenters her orbit. As pressures mount from family, love, and the art world, she is forced to question not just her work but the life she’s been building.

We asked her to answer our 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 Mistranslation by Madeleine Moss

See the cover for Mistranslation by Madeleine Moss

Mistranslation, the debut novel by Madeleine Moss, follows twin sisters in upstate New York as childhood fractures into diverging identities shaped by family absence, cultural inheritance, and the arrival of a boy who unsettles both. Spanning years and continents, it traces how early misunderstandings calcify into lifelong tensions, asking what we inherit, what we misread, and what it costs to finally understand.

Mistranslation will be published on September 22, 2026, by University of Iowa Press and is available for preorder now.

Moss grew up in Ithaca, New York, and received a degree in French literature from Cornell University before obtaining her MFA in fiction from Washington University in St. Louis in 2020.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover of Mistranslation, designed by Kimberly Glyder, along with a Q&A with Moss about its creation.

Plus, see the covers that almost made the final cut.

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6 Books about Books, Writers, and the Hopefulness of Storytelling, Recommended by Andrew Forrester

6 Books about Books, Writers, and the Hopefulness of Storytelling, Recommended by Andrew Forrester

I have been trying to publish a book for long time—like, a long time—which is maybe not something you should confess when you’re staring down the publication date of your debut novel. It’s possible that this is not the sort of admission that instills confidence in potential readers, but alas, it’s an important detail in the story of how that book came to be.

For years (we won’t say how many), I’d been attempting to write kid lit, and I was stuck in the middle of a fantasy thing I had no business writing. Magic systems and whimsical, made-up first names are just not one of my strengths. But there is that annoying adage about how no writing is wasted, and it held true for me here: in trying to craft a sort of classic children’s story, I found myself wondering what it was about the books of Madeleine L’Engle, Garth Nix, and C.S. Lewis that had such a hold on me as a young, avid reader.

That question didn’t immediately result in a singular, universally applicable answer, but it did get me thinking about the immense pressure of writing for kids, especially if you’re helming a series like, say, Rick Riordan’s Percy Jackson books. So much anticipation, such high expectations—and then, just as a thought experiment, what if a beloved children’s author happened to die before completing her series—what would happen? And if her husband was also a writer himself—a mystery writer, sure, but someone capable of plotting out a story—what then?

Those were the questions that eventually resulted in my debut, How the Story Goes, which is about an author trying to make good on his late wife’s dying wishes, and another writer trying to sort herself out after her experiences at an MFA program have made the business of storytelling feel bleak and hopeless. Eventually I realized, oh, that’s what this is all about: finding your way back to yourself through writing; believing in the potential of storytelling. In short, hope. 

Here are some of my favorite books that scratch that same itch, written by people who, like me, believe in (there’s no non-corny way to say this) the power of a good book.

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