See the cover Artifacts by Natalie Lemle

See the cover Artifacts by Natalie Lemle

Natalie Lemle is a writer and visual art advisor who founded the Boston and Montreal-based advisory art_works. Her debut novel, Artifacts, is something she has been thinking about for years. “The seed of it is probably my obsession with ancient things,” she told her MFA alma mater Emerson shortly after the novel sold. “I don’t know where that came from; it’s not something anyone else in my family was super interested in. But ever since I can remember, I’ve been captivated by archeology.”

The novel follows a lawyer who once dreamed of being an archeologist and, years later, realizes she may have played a role in looting a valuable site in the Italian Alps. Artifacts is set to be published by Simon & Schuster on May 29, 2026.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover, designed by David Fassett, along with a Q&A with Natalie Lemle about its creation.

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See the cover for Paradise Pawn by Meg Richardson

See the cover for Paradise Pawn by Meg Richardson

Meg Richardson‘s debut novel, Paradise Pawn, draws on her experiences working at a pawn shop. The writer/translator/cartoonist earned her MFA from Columbia and is releasing her debut novel on July 14, 2026, from Tin House. It is available for pre-order now.

In Paradise Pawn, Richardson follows two best friends who can sell anything. When the girls, Jackie and Kayla, realize that Kayla won’t be able to attend the private school Jackie will due to family money troubles, the two teens hatch an embezzling scheme against the pawn shop where they work alongside their families. What follows is a heist gone wrong, and the fallout the two teens must navigate as their world comes crashing down.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover, designed by Beth Steidle, along with a Q&A with Meg Richardson about its creation.

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Read an excerpt from I Make My Own Fun by

Read an excerpt from I Make My Own Fun by

The following is an excerpt from I Make My Own Fun by Hannah Beer. She is a writer from North West England, currently living in London, and writes the newsletter Emotional Speculation

I Make My Own Fun is about an A-List movie star named Marina who is secretly the worst. Things spiral out of control when she meets a bartender who isn’t interested in her and then Marina begins to make desperate overtures. It is now available from Anasi International.

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My Reading Life: Christian Moody is Lost in the Forset of Mechanical Birds

My Reading Life: Christian Moody is Lost in the Forset of Mechanical Birds

Christian Moody, author of the debut story collection Lost in the Forst of Mechanical Birds, has had his work appear in Esquire, Alaska Quarterly Review, The Cincinnati Review, the Best New American Voices anthology, and the Best American Fantasy anthology. He lives in Indianapolis and works as Brand Director for an e-commerce company.

In his collection, he writes about climate change, surveillance, privacy, and technology. Mechanical Birds was the 2023 Dzanc Short Story Collection Prize winner.

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

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My Reading Life: Herculine author Grace Byron loves Wicked for the gay sex

My Reading Life: Herculine author Grace Byron loves Wicked for the gay sex

Grace Byron is a writer and critic whose work appeared in The New Yorker, New York Magazine, The Nation, and Vogue. Her work has explored topics ranging from what the current administration’s policies mean for trans travelers and their passports, gun ownership in the trans community, and the state of trans healthcare.

Her debut novel, Herculine, is about a woman who seeks refuge at an all-trans commune in rural Indiana, only to discover buried secrets that force her to face her own demons and the ones she was running from.

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

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Six Cat Books That Go Beyond Cozy by Rebecca van Laer

Six Cat Books That Go Beyond Cozy by Rebecca van Laer

When I tell people that I’ve written a book about my cats, they often ask if it’s a children’s book or a humor book. One person who had read my first book—a cross-genre novella with a healthy dose of literary theory—asked if it featured cartoons. I understand that this is where the mind goes when someone thinks of cats: to the silly, the cute, the cozy. After all, our Instagram feeds are populated by cat memes.

This assumption bothers me to no end. I want another language to talk about my book; I want to do an interview where I don’t talk about cats at all. I wrote about two years of my life with my partner and our decision not to have kids; I wrote a book about making a family in the age of climate collapse. But, of course, it’s called Cat, and the story is impossible to tell without talking about our nonhuman family members. If you order it, the algorithm will serve you content about cats, not species decline.

And, aside from my book, the history of feline literature already shows that our relationships to cats are not always tender and sweet. Cats are complex creatures, and so are we. When we move beyond coziness, we better understand our history not just with cats but with animalia writ large. These six books do just that.

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See the cover for The Summer My Mother Had Green Eyes by Tatiana Țîbuleac

See the cover for The Summer My Mother Had Green Eyes by Tatiana Țîbuleac

Tatiana Țîbuleac is an award-winning Moldovan-Romanian author whose novels have been translated into 17 languages. A former journalist and UNICEF staffer, she now lives in Paris. Her latest book, The Summer My Mother Had Green Eyes, was translated from Romanian by Monica Cure, a Romanian-American writer, translator, and two-time Fulbright recipient and winner of the 2023 Oxford-Weidenfeld Translation Prize.

This novel, which will be published by Deep Vellum on January 13, 2026, traces Aleksy’s return to the pivotal summer he spent with his mother in rural France, when her revelation of a terminal illness forced them to confront old grief and unspoken tensions. Fourteen years later, through memory and therapy, he revisits those months of fragile reconciliation. Intimate and tender, it explores family, loss, and the difficult work of forgiveness.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover, featuring a painting by Cecilia Omara and design by Jen Blair, along with a Q&A with Țîbuleac and Cure about its creation.

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See the cover for Honey by Imani Thompson

See the cover for Honey by Imani Thompson

Imani Thompson is a London-based writer of Scottish, Irish, and Jamaican heritage who studied Sociology at Cambridge University and worked as a bookseller at Daunt Books. Now, she’s set to release her debut novel, Honey, on April 21, 2026, from Random House.

The novel follows Yrsa, a disillusioned PhD student whose accidental role in a professor’s death sparks a killing spree against sexist, exploitative men. With each murder, the story dives into dark humor and explores feminism, rage, and the thin line between justice and obsession. It’s a sharp, satirical look at power, vengeance, and what it means to channel personal and political frustration.

Debutiful is excited to reveal the intoxicatingly stunning cover, designed by Michael Morris, along with a Q&A with Thompson about its creation.

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