See the cover for Don’t Cure Me by Catherine Foulkrod

See the cover for Don’t Cure Me by Catherine Foulkrod

Don’t Cure Me, the debut novel by Catherine Foulkrod, follows a young woman navigating a world where illness determines every aspect of life, from social status to where people are allowed to live. As doctors race toward a medical breakthrough and society reduces human worth to blood-test numbers, a group of outsiders begins to challenge the very foundations of the system. Inspired by the history of the autoimmune disorder thrombocytopenia, the novel examines illness, surveillance, gender, and the violence of measuring human value.

Don’t Cure Me will be published on January 26, 2027 by McSweeney’s and is available for preorder now.

Catherine Foulkrod is a writer based in Naples, Italy. Her fiction and essays have appeared in The Believer, New York Tyrant, Unsaid, Bookforum, Forever Magazine, El Malpensante, and exhibition catalogs for Thomas Dane Gallery and Contemporary Fine Arts Berlin. She is also the co-founder and director of The Giancarlo DiTrapano Foundation for Literature of the Arts.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover of Don’t Cure Me, designed by Daniele Catellano, along with a Q&A with Foulkrod about its creation.

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Love, Grief, and Hawai’i: Alicia Upano Discusses Her Debut Everything to the Sea

Love, Grief, and Hawai’i: Alicia Upano Discusses Her Debut Everything to the Sea

What happens when one day, one impulsive decision, one declined call is what defines the rest of your life? Alicia Upano‘s debut is a love story, it’s a natural disaster novel, and most of all, it’s a haunting reckoning with the many ways that the people and places we come from stay with us, even as, in the case of Everything to the Sea, they have been swept out to sea.

Following Jane and Kenji from the summer fling of their early twenties, unable to withstand the destruction of their hometown, the novel takes us from the Island of Hawai’i, to O’ahu, to San Francisco, where, years later, the two reconnect as Jane works as an architect and Kenji curates an art exhibit on the tsunami that upended their lives. Upano captures the messiness of first love, the comfort and claustrophobia found in the social ecosystem of island life, and, in spite of how her characters misunderstand each other, finds a way to bring them back to each other, and to the land that made them.

There is a specific comfort in reading a book written to and from the places and people you love most, of seeing the language found in the mouths of your childhood, the smells of the places that raised you, on the page. Everything to the Sea reminds us that even in our worst moments, in the times we are most lost, there are people who are willing, who want, to love us. It took me home. I hope it does the same for you.

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Arielle Hebert and Chelsea Krieg on Poetry, Place, Water, and Friendship

Arielle Hebert and Chelsea Krieg on Poetry, Place, Water, and Friendship

Few people understand a poetry collection better than another poet. We asked Arielle Hebert, author of Bottom Feeders, and Chelsea Krieg, author of Everything Is Water, to chat about their collections and how poetry informs their life.

The two discuss the landscapes that shaped them, the role of water and the natural world in their work, caregiving, motherhood, friendship, and the complicated process of writing toward forgiveness. Their exchange is both an exploration of craft and a testament to the writing communities that sustain poets through every stage of the journey, from first drafts to first books.

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See the cover for Creatures of Habit by Jennifer Yeh

See the cover for Creatures of Habit by Jennifer Yeh

Jennifer Yeh‘s debut novel, Creatures of Habit, follows Gina Lee on the day of her ex-husband’s engagement party, as the life she once imagined gives way to an uncertain future. When an amphibious stranger crawls through her window asking for help, an unexpected friendship begins to reshape her understanding of loss, possibility, and what comes after the life you thought you were meant to have. Told over the course of a single day, the novel explores reinvention, grief, and the quiet courage required to begin again.

The novel will be published on March 2, 2027, by William Morrow and is available for preorder now.

Before writing her debut novel, Jennifer Yeh earned a Ph.D. in integrative biology and worked as a frog biologist after studying science and creative writing at Harvard College. Her fiction has appeared in Analecta and Embark. She was a 2021–2022 BookEnds Fellow at Stony Brook University, and she also writes science and evolution textbooks. She lives in San Francisco with her family and rescue dog, Cumulus.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover of Creatures of Habit, designed by Paul Miele-Herndon with artwork by Dan Bransfield, along with a Q&A with Yeh about its creation.

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Krista Diamond on Close Relationships with Strangers, Parasocial Relationships, and Celebrity Obsession

Krista Diamond on Close Relationships with Strangers, Parasocial Relationships, and Celebrity Obsession

In her debut novel, Close Relationships with Strangers, Krista Diamond examines the strange intimacies we form with people we’ll never meet. Blending celebrity culture, wildlife photography, and questions of loneliness and commodification, her debut novel asks what it means to watch, to be watched, and to mistake proximity for connection.

I caught up with Diamond via email to discuss parasocial relationships, Las Vegas and Los Angeles, empathy, and writing a character whose greatest obstacle is his inability to truly connect with others.

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Jayson Greene wishes he had gotten into literary sci-fi and speculative fiction earlier in life

Jayson Greene wishes he had gotten into literary sci-fi and speculative fiction earlier in life

When Jayson Greene‘s debut novel, UnWorld, came out last year, he appeared on our First Taste Reading Series podcast, where he read an excerpt from the novel.

The book, out now in paperback, follows four interconnected lives after the mysterious death of a young man in a near-future where human consciousness can be digitally replicated, and AI has begun to reshape what it means to be alive.

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

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Sofia Montrone on Nymph and the Strange Way Time Shapes Us

Sofia Montrone on Nymph and the Strange Way Time Shapes Us

There is a specific feel to the way time moves during a childhood and adolescent summer. It’s both sludgy and warp-speed, too slow when you need it to end, too dreadfully quick just when you need it to last. These summers are foundational in how a person learns to be: how you are when you’re bored is as important as how you are when you’re in the middle of the starburst of feeling. 

Sofia Montrone, in her outstanding debut Nymph, displays a mastery of the effects of time, how the days themselves characterize us. The novel, set in rural Italy over two very distinct summers, is an elegy for the way time leaves us. It is a love story as much as it is a loss story as much as it is a celebration of the brutal, giddy risk of feeling. It has a wicked sense of humor. There are retellings of The Odyssey, deeply-felt family pains, a formative romance and a consistent sense of becoming. 

But above all, it achieves what all great art aspires to: it makes the reader feel less alone. I came upon this novel in the noblest way, I think. A friend recommended it. He said, “This one’s something special.” He was right. 

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Wasp’s Nest author Kat Stoddard asks readers to reconsider how they view intimacy

Wasp’s Nest author Kat Stoddard asks readers to reconsider how they view intimacy

When I heard there was going to be a queer love triangle novel inspired by one of my favorite queer-coded movies, The Philadelphia Story (1940), I got my hands on it. Kat Stoddard’s Wasp’s Nest introduced me to the alternating POVs of bride-to-be Tess, her ex-husband Peter, and Peter’s fake wedding date Mitch over a chaotic wedding week on Cape Cod. Layers of tension, including class divisions, untold truths, and lingering feelings, are baked into this situation and the story that unfolds, which makes for sharp comedy. More dramatic are the tensions the characters feel within themselves, which are heightened as they come together, each “on the precipice of a new life,” as Kat told me.     

I couldn’t have imagined that as Wasp’s Nest claimed a spot on my bedside table, Kat would quickly become a friend and confidant during a singularly crazy experience–publishing our debut books a few weeks apart. It was a delight to talk with her about the importance of relationships to art making, censorship parallels between 1940 and today, our mutual disdain for culturally mandated milestones, and why a creative life is worth pursuing, no matter how much money it leads to.  

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Inside the Collection: Mac Crane Dissects Perverts

Inside the Collection: Mac Crane Dissects Perverts

What makes a great short story collection? In Debutiful’s latest Q&A series, Inside the Collection, short story writers will take readers through their writing, editing, and sequencing of their debut short story collection.

In Perverts, writer Mac Crane explores the messy intersections of desire, shame, intimacy, and identity through seventeen audacious stories that push queer life to its exhilarating and unsettling extremes. Set in worlds where people pay to reenact hate crimes, ogle mythical performers, or blur the lines between fantasy and exploitation, Crane’s characters search for connection in places most people would rather ignore. Equal parts provocative, darkly funny, and unexpectedly tender, Perverts argues that those living on society’s margins often see its contradictions most clearly. Crane is also the author of the novel I Keep My Exoskeletons to Myself, a New York Times Editors’ Choice, Indie Next pick, and Lambda Literary Awards winner, as well as A Sharp Endless Need. Their fiction has appeared in Literary Hub, The Sun, TriQuarterly, Prairie Schooner, Joyland, and elsewhere, and they have received fellowships from the Sewanee Writers’ Conference, American Short Fiction, and the Vermont Studio Center.

In our latest Inside the Collection Q&A, Crane takes readers inside their debut short story collection, Perverts.

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