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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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.

Continue reading “See the cover for Honey by Imani Thompson”