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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My Reading Life: And I’ll Take Out Your Eyes author A.M. Sosa wants everyone to read Hurricane Season

My Reading Life: And I’ll Take Out Your Eyes author A.M. Sosa wants everyone to read Hurricane Season

A.M. Sosa is a queer Mexican-American whose work has appeared in Zyzzyva and the Santa Monica Review and they received an MFA from UC Irvine. Their debut novel, And I’ll Take Out Your Eyesis an explosive coming-of-age set in Stockton, Calif., in the early 2000s.

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

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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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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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See the cover for Woodwind Harmony in the Nighttime by Reza Ghassemi

See the cover for Woodwind Harmony in the Nighttime by Reza Ghassemi

Reza Ghassemi’s debut novel, Woodwind Harmony in the Nighttime, was first published in 1996 and went on to win several literary awards in its original Persian. Now, Deep Vellum is publishing it in English for the first time. Michelle Quay, who co-edited Routledge Handbook of Persian Literary Translation, was tasked with translating the novel from Persian.

Coming out on March 17, 2026, the book is about an Iranian exile in 1990s Paris whose live unravels into a surreal mystery. The book is now available for pre-order.

Debutiful is honored to reveal the cover, designed by Elisha Zepeda, along with a Q&A with Michelle Quay about how the American cover of this Persian classic came to be.

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My Reading Life: Vulture author Phoebe Greenwood believe the birthplace of stories are The Greek Myths

My Reading Life: Vulture author Phoebe Greenwood believe the birthplace of stories are The Greek Myths

Phoebe Greenwood is a London-based journalist who was a freelance correspondent in Jerusalem covering the Middle East for the Guardian, Daily Telegraph, and Sunday Times between 2010 and 2013. From 2013 to 2021, she was an editor and correspondent at the Guardian specialising in foreign affairs.

Her debut novel, Vulture, is a war satire akin to Catch-22, where an ambitious young journalist is sent to Gaza to cover the war. Throughout it, her writing bites at how tragedy feeds the Western media machine.

We asked Greenwood to answer our recurring My Reading Life Q&A so readers could get to know the books that influenced her life and inspired her debut book.

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My Reading Life: The Sunflower Boys author Sam Wachman wants to shoutout Cindy, his neighborhood librarian

My Reading Life: The Sunflower Boys author Sam Wachman wants to shoutout Cindy, his neighborhood librarian

In Sam Wachman‘s debut novel, The Sunflower Boys, brothers Artem and Yuri embark on a journey after war kills their family in rural Ukraine. As the journey unfolds, so does a beautifully constructed character study of Artem’s identity, loss of innocence, and blossoming love for his best friend.

Before writing his debut novel, Wachman taught English to primary schoolers in central Ukraine and worked with refugee families in Europe and the United States.  His work has also appeared in Sonora ReviewBerkeley Fiction Review, and New England Review.

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

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