In the Ring With Alison Lyn Miller, author of Rough House

In the Ring With Alison Lyn Miller, author of Rough House

Can you smell what Alison Lyn Miller is cooking? Her book, Rough House: A Father, a Son, and the Pursuit of Pro Wrestling Glory, explores what it takes to break into wrestling. From backyards and dark gyms in rural Georgia, Miller takes readers into the world of Hunter James, an aspiring superstar. Expertly researched and luciously written, Miller peels back a curtain of the mythical world of pro wrestling in ways that haven’t been seen since 1999’s haunting documentary Beyond the Mat.

We caught up with Miller via email to explore why she loves wrestling, how she wrote this book, and the relationship between writer and subject in nonfiction.

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Inside the Collection: Senaa Ahmad dissects The Age of Calamities

Inside the Collection: Senaa Ahmad dissects The Age of Calamities

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 The Age of Calamities, writer Senaa Ahmad gives readers a collection of mind-bending, absurdist, funny, and speculative short stories. Each story plays with tropes and structure in a brilliant way. Prior to releasing her debut, her writing has appeared in The Paris ReviewMcSweeney’sBest American Science Fiction and Fantasy,  and Best Canadian Stories. Ahmad has received support from the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, the Toronto Arts Council, the Speculative Literature Foundation, and the Carl Brandon Society’s Octavia Butler Scholarship.

In our first “Inside the Collection” Q&A, Ahmad dissects her debut short story collection, The Age of Calamities.

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I Could Be Famous author Sydney Rende shares the books that shaped her life

I Could Be Famous author Sydney Rende shares the books that shaped her life

Sydney Rende‘s short stories and travel writing have appeared in Joyland, Carve Magazine, T: The New York Times Style Magazine, and Who What Wear. The writer, who earned her MFA in fiction from Syracuse University, has now published her debut collection of short stories.

I Could Be Famous is a collection of ten stories that follow ten ambitious women and one male superstar as they pursue their (sometimes delusional) dreams and desires.

We asked Rende 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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See the cover for The Body Riddle by Sam K MacKinnon

See the cover for The Body Riddle by Sam K MacKinnon

In their debut novel, The Body Riddle, Sam K MacKinnon introduces readers to Lex, who finally receives top surgery, but nothing that comes after is what they imagined. Their partner finds a new flame, well within the boundaries of their non-monogamous relationship’s rules, but Lex starts to spiral. That is, until they meet a nonbinary coworker who helps Lex discover something new about themself. What follows is a meditation on queerness, the body, and belonging.

The Body Riddle will be published on May 19, 2026, by House of Anasi Press and is available for preorder now.

MacKinnon was previously nominated John Hirsch Emerging Manitoba Writer Award and has had their writing appear in Catapult, Prairie Fire, CBC, them., and elsewhere.

Debutiful is honored to reveal The Body Riddle‘s cover, designed by Alysia Sewchuk, along with a Q&A with MacKinnon about its creation.

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The Best Debut Nonfiction Books of 2025

The Best Debut Nonfiction Books of 2025

Debutiful tends to cover novels and short story collections the most for a myriad of reasons, but in recent years, there’s been a more concerted effort to read and cover more nonfiction at Debutiful HQ. Most of what founder Adam Vitcavage finds interesting are memoirs and essay collections. Many of the titles you see will fall into those two categories, and some of the titles can also be found in the Best Debut Books of 2025 list.

Below are the 10 Best Debut Nonfiction Books of 2025.

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6 books about Radical Care by Jennifer Eli Bowen

6 books about Radical Care by Jennifer Eli Bowen

Nothing makes me bawl like a book in which characters fiercely look after one another. Maybe that’s because my dad bailed on us when we were little, never to return. Or maybe it’s because my mother was a hospice nurse, setting an example of caretaking in the hardest moment a family will face. Or maybe, it’s good old-fashioned co-dependence–some of us find our worth through being needed. Whatever the reason, I’ve been drawn to literature of radical care since my earliest reading days.

My collection, The Book of Kin: On Absence, Love, and Being There, is a series of linked essays that span twenty years. The essays speak to each other about connection, isolation, community building, seeing, and of course, care– as ingrained habit, as rebellion, as a quiet fuck you to abandonments. Living things need other living things to care for us and about us, but that doesn’t mean it always happens. 

Hanif Abduraquib says, “That anyone loves us at all is not a given.” We’re born alone and we die alone, this we all know. But in between we make thousands of daily choices about if we will give a damn and for whom and how: a rooster, a community, prisons, our kids, students, a neighbor. And from our caring stems our deepest failures and richest successes. Something else I’ve learned from reading and writing about care, my own especially, is that it’s imperfect, hard to sustain, and still, the only work that really matters in the end. 

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8 books about Fame, Family, and Art by Allie Tagle-Dokus

8 books about Fame, Family, and Art by Allie Tagle-Dokus

When I started my debut novel Lucky Girl, I named the Microsoft Word document “Fame.” Essentially, all I knew was that I wanted to write a novel inspired by the journey of several tween Dance Moms stars, and I knew I wanted to interrogate fame—namely, childhood fame. I began writing with a loose message that children should not be famous. And yet. I started writing a book against fame, secretly hoping this would be my stellar, famous debut—best-seller, known throughout the seven kingdoms, celebrated, external validation all around. While drafting Lucky Girl, I wrote into that tension: Can a good artist also be ambitious?  

By the novel’s end, I had concluded that while art is great and important, the people around you matter more. I spent a good bit of the novel trying to get Lucy home to her family. Serendipitously, the same month Lucky Girl departs into the wider world is the same month I’m due to have my first child. As I approach this debut, I find myself continuing to navigate how to both care and fret about the “success” of my art, while also trying to focus on how I can be a good Mom. Can good Moms also worry about their art?

In that spirit, I offer a list of novels that deepen my exploration. These books interrogate how fame shapes our relationships to other people. And beyond that, how fame corrades how we approach our art.  Some novels conjure characters that are burned out from chasing their dreams. Others examine how public expectation reforms identity on a cellular level. All these characters—obsessive, hardworking, vulnerable—helped me render Lucy. 

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