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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My Reading Life: Great Disasters author Grady Chambers wants teens to read more contemporary books in school

My Reading Life: Great Disasters author Grady Chambers wants teens to read more contemporary books in school

In his debut novel, Great Disasters, Grady Chambers traces the lives of six men coming of age in early-2000s Chicago, as friendship, first love, protest, and war shape the bonds that push and pull them. Chambers captures the humor, heartbreak, and hope that can be found even in moments of loss and devastation. He is also the author of the poetry collection North American Stadiums, which won the Max Ritvo Poetry Prize, and his work has appeared in The Atlantic, The Paris Review, American Poetry Review, and The Sun.

We asked Chambers to answer our recurring My Reading Life Q&A so readers could get to know the books that shaped his life and what influenced his debut novel.

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E.Y. Zhao on table tennis, wanting more good writing to exist, and her debut novel Underspin

E.Y. Zhao on table tennis, wanting more good writing to exist, and her debut novel Underspin

In her debut novel, Underspin, writer E.Y. Zhao brings readers into the table tennis world. In it, we follow a young prodigy who, from the ages of eight to twenty-five, was taking the sport by storm. Until he abandoned the sport and ended up dead. Zhao carefully crafts a coming-of-age that questions the pressures of ambition, the complexities of intimacy, and the haunting cost of greatness.

Prior to writing her debut, Zhao’s work has appeared i The Georgia Review, Electric Lit, and Chicago Review of Books and she hasbeen recognized by the Georgia Review Prose Prize, the Le Baron Russell Briggs Prize, and various Hopwood awards.

We caught up with the writer via email to learn more about Underspin.

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See the cover for The Outer Country by Davin Malasarn

See the cover for The Outer Country by Davin Malasarn

Davin Malasarn is a biologist-turned-debut-writer. Based in Los Angeles, his work has appeared in Los Angeles ReviewRosebudOpium Magazine, and SmokeLong Quarterly. The Outer Country, which will be published by One World on May 5, 2026, traces the fractured bond between two Thai sisters after one is sent to America and the other is left behind, their rivalry resurfacing when they reunite to raise a child in Los Angeles. Spanning continents and generations, the novel follows Ben’s queer coming-of-age as he struggles with the scars of a childhood exorcism and the heavy secrets binding his family. It is now available for pre-order.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the hauntingly beautiful cover, designed by Na Kim, along with a Q&A with Malasarn about its creation.

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See the cover for Surrender by Jennifer Acker

See the cover for Surrender by Jennifer Acker

Jennifer Acker‘s debut book, The Limits of the World, was a fiction honoree for the Massachusetts Book Award, and her short stories, essays, translations, and reviews have appeared in the Wall Street JournalOprah Daily, the Washington PostLiterary Hubn+1, and The Yale Review, among other places. Now she’s back with another novel, publishing on April 14, 2026. Surrender follows a seasoned New York PR executive who returns to her family’s struggling Massachusetts farm, where she faces the collapse of her marriage, her husband’s failing health, and her own inexperience as a farmer. As she rediscovers love with a childhood friend, Lucy must navigate the tangled pressures of loyalty, loss, and the uncertain promise of starting over.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover designed by Abby Weintraub, along with a Q&A with Jennifer Acker about how the cover for Surrender was created.

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Aisha Muharrar interviews Aisha Muharrar

Aisha Muharrar interviews Aisha Muharrar

In every interview, I like to ask writers, “Is there a question you’d like me to ask?” I’m always surprised by the types of questions they’d want to ask themselves, so I decided to take the idea of the self-interview and give writers some restraints.

One. Use Who/What/When/Where/Why-ish questions.

Two. Have fun.

Today, we have Aisha Muharrar, an Emmy-award-winning writer and producer whose debut novel, Loved One, is out now. Before writing her debut book, she has worked on shows like HacksParks and Recreation, and The Good Place. In her debut novel, Muharrar follows a woman who travels from Los Angeles to London to recover her late best friend’s belongings and clashes with the guarded woman who refuses to give up his beloved guitar. It’s hilarious and heartwarming, and truly a delight to read.

Let’s turn it over to Aisha Muhrarrar.

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My Reading Life: Fetishized author Kaila Yu reads and writes about body

My Reading Life: Fetishized author Kaila Yu reads and writes about body

In her debut memoir-in-essays, former model Kaila Yu writes about being an object of Asian fetish with a sharp eye and eye-opening candor. Throughout Fetishized: A Reckoning with Yellow Fever, Feminism, and Beauty, Yu peels back the curtain on the personal, cultural, and historical forces that shaped her self-image, exposing how pop culture, colonialism, and desire intertwined to distort both her sense of beauty and her sense of self.

We asked her to answer our My Reading Life questionnaire so readers could get to know the books that shaped her life and influenced her debut book.

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