Álvaro Enrigue’s “Now I Surrender” revives the Apache‑Mexican‑American frontier
Álvaro Enrigue’s 2026 novel Now I Surrender, translated by Natasha Wimmer, returns to the late‑19th‑century Apache‑Mexican‑American frontier. The narrative follows Geronimo’s early life in Mexico amid tangled wars among Apaches, Mexican forces and U.S. troops, blending documented events with imaginative flourishes.
Ahmad Saber's debut novel, Ramin Abbas Has MAJOR Questions, follows Ramin Noor Abbas, a gay Pakistani‑Canadian teen in a conservative Toronto Muslim high school as he wrestles with faith, family expectations, and his emerging sexuality. Drawing on Saber's own immigrant experience and his work as a rheumatologist, the book blends humor, raw emotion, and nuanced character portraits to depict the complexities of queer Muslim identity. Critics praise its authentic first‑person voice and the way it treats Islam with respect, though some note mid‑book pacing issues and an overabundance of subplots. The novel positions itself as both a coming‑of‑age story and a broader commentary on immigration, belonging, and the search for self‑acceptance.

The legendary manga One Piece has topped 600 million copies in global circulation with the release of Volume 114, marking a historic publishing milestone. To commemorate, creator Eiichiro Oda recorded the answer to the series' central mystery—the nature of the One Piece...
Robert MacSwain’s new volume, *Saints as Divine Evidence*, bridges religious epistemology and comparative hagiography to argue that holy lives function as evidence for God. The first part surveys analytic and pragmatist debates, highlighting Austin Farrer's claim that saints serve as...
I get asked to show up to book clubs, online and offline. Here is why from now on the answer is always "no." If you think this might have something to do with "AI" ruining yet another thing for everyone,...

The 2026 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards have released the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction shortlist, featuring four titles: *The Book of Guilt* (Catherine Chidgey), *All Her Lives* (Ingrid Horrocks), *How to Paint a Nude* (Sam Mahon) and *Hoods Landing* (Laura Vincent). The article notes the...
Andy Hageman’s essay in the Los Angeles Review of Books examines Stephen King’s original manuscript of The Dark Half, complete with handwritten notes and marginalia. The archive reveals a title page and ending that differ markedly from the published novel. King’s annotations...

My Commercial Fiction Club newsletter, where I'm documenting the journey from $0 as a new fiction author, is about to hit $10,000/year. This isn't bad, but I'm still figuring out what readers want most from me. Drop a comment—what do you want...
“Wait for Me” by Amy Jo Burns is a dual‑timeline historical fiction that follows vanished 1970s folk singer Elle Harlow and her possible daughter Marijohn Shaw, whose lives intersect after a 1991 meteor strike reveals hidden artifacts. The novel weaves...
The post offers a ready‑made discussion guide for Amy Jo Burns’s novel *Wait for Me*, featuring 19 spoiler‑light questions and links to a PDF and a detailed plot recap. It frames the book’s dual‑timeline narrative, music‑driven storytelling, and Southern‑flavored setting...

The Paris Review announced its 2026 literary honors, naming Renny Gong the George Plimpton Prize winner and Bud Smith the Susannah Hunnewell Prize recipient. Both awards will be presented at the Spring Revel gala on April 14, alongside a lifetime‑achievement Hadada award for Edward P. Jones....

Namwali Serpell’s new book, On Morrison, provides a chronological walk through Toni Morrison’s novels, short stories, and play, emphasizing the author’s formal innovations. Serpell argues that Morrison’s work demands rereading, making readers co‑creators of a literary experience. The book also...

Eva Illouz’s sociological lens explains why *Fifty Shades of Grey* became a cultural megahit, arguing the novel dramatizes unresolved existential tensions of modern love. The book’s blend of BDSM erotica and self‑help promises temporary resolution of conflicts between autonomy and...

The blog post examines a growing sub‑trend in romantasy where the classic powerless heroine is replaced by the "Poison Girl"—a morally ambiguous, danger‑laden protagonist. It argues that this shift reflects readers’ appetite for richer emotional architecture, blending romance with peril....
The Marginalian essay reflects on Pablo Neruda’s poetic meditation about holding time, quoting his "Elemental Odes" that split time into backward‑flowing memory and forward‑moving presence. Neruda urges readers to seize the present moment, shaping it with love, justice, and creativity. The...

If you're experiencing a creative block, I know a guaranteed way to overcome it: Take a break. But not just any kind of break. (No scrolling on your phone for two hours.) Here are 3 tips for taking an intentional, creatively restorative break....

Victoria Weisfeld’s second novel, *She Knew Too Much*, thrusts travel writer Genie Clarke into a deadly mafia conspiracy after she overhears a cryptic conversation in Rome. The story weaves classic Hitchcockian suspense with modern twists, including a subplot about experimental...

The author argues that 19th‑century British novelists are overrated, preferring the English Renaissance (1580‑1680) for its worldview and language. While acknowledging personal enjoyment of Austen and Dickens, the piece suggests their works lack the universal impact of earlier poets or...
Making the leap from journalism to book-length work brought one writer into contact with a new challenge: being truly edited. Lessons from @julietizon: https://janefriedman.com/how-editing-like-a-journalist-will-make-your-publishing-journey-easier/
In a Yale University Press interview, avant‑garde Chinese writer Can Xue discusses her latest novel, *The Enchanting Lives of Others*, describing it as an experimental, chapter‑less work that unites essential and worldly lives through the act of reading. She frames reading...
Today is the paperback release of THE STAIRCASE IN THE WOODS and I talk about that and the book a little bit at the blog. Remember those? Blogs? Good times.

Amber Husain’s third book, *Tell Me How You Eat*, expands her previous explorations of flesh and labor to a sweeping meditation on humanity’s relationship with food. Drawing on examples from World War II starvation experiments to modern vegan debates, the work...

M.L. Stedman returns with *A Far‑Flung Life*, a 448‑page novel set in 1958 Western Australia. The story follows 17‑year‑old Matt MacBride, the sole survivor of a fatal crash, who awakens with amnesia and a hidden child he must protect. Stedman...

The Audio Publishers Association’s 31st Audie Awards in New York honored Suzanne Collins’ *Sunrise on the Reaping* as Audiobook of the Year, while recognizing top narrators across fiction, nonfiction, and comedy. The ceremony also inducted five veteran narrators into the APA...

Publishing Perspectives and Digital Publishing Report are hosting a virtual half‑day conference, AI@media International, on March 24, 2026, to showcase practical AI applications in publishing. A recent BISG survey revealed that under half of North American publishers use AI, primarily...

Lee Heejoo’s debut English translation, *Holy Boy*, thrusts readers into a 1990s South Korean psychological horror‑crime hybrid. A 21‑year‑old K‑pop idol named Yosep is kidnapped by four obsessive women, each with a twisted motive, and awakens paralysed in a nightmarish...
Jennifer A. Nielsen’s new middle‑grade novel *Magnitude* dramatizes the 1906 San Francisco earthquake through the eyes of Cora, an 11‑year‑old searching for her family. The hardcover, released March 3, 2026 by Scholastic Press, delivers fast‑paced action, mystery, and vivid descriptions...
Liz Tomforde’s *In Her Own League* introduces Reese Remington, the first female owner in Major League Baseball history, and field manager Emmett Montgomery in a slow‑burn, dual‑POV romance. The novel weaves baseball’s competitive world into every conflict, exploring gender dynamics,...

Anjali Sachdeva, award‑winning speculative fiction author and MFA instructor, discusses her Uncanny Magazine story “Chimera.” The piece blends futuristic brain‑transfer technology with reality‑TV competition tropes to examine parental estrangement and identity. Sachdeva reveals that the story grew from reality‑show observations...
Tayari Jones joins host Miwa Messer on the Poured Over podcast to discuss her novel *Kin*, a deep dive into mother‑daughter, sister, and friendship bonds in the American South. The conversation expands to Jones’s Atlanta upbringing, her time at Spelman...
Susan Engel’s new book *American Kindergarten* chronicles two years of visits to 29 classrooms across fourteen states, uncovering five core promises—reading, order, thinking, identity and love—that shape kindergarten experiences. Her observations reveal that classroom quality does not align neatly with...

Tobi Coventry, a former book scout turned author, released his debut novel "He's the Devil," which was chosen as the February pick for the Otherppl Book Club. Over the past ten years he sourced material for film and television, and...
The new edited volume *Traces of the Distant Human Past* argues that archaeology’s rapid technological gains have outstripped its ability to interpret early human behavior. While LiDAR, radiocarbon dating, and ancient DNA provide unprecedented data, the authors contend that theoretical...

Sudipta Datta reviews *That’s a Fire Ant Right There*, a new anthology of 50 short stories by Telugu author Mohammed Khadeer Babu, translated into English by D.V. Subhashri. The collection uses a young narrator’s Nellore‑dialect voice to expose myths, caste bias, patriarchal norms,...
Alice Wickenden’s essay examines Thomas Johnson’s 1636 ginger woodcuts—one true, one feigned—to illustrate how seventeenth‑century knowledge was deliberately produced through contradiction. She links this paradox to Hans Sloane’s massive library‑museum collection, showing that the fluid mixing of books, specimens, and...

Paul Fischer’s "The Last Kings of Hollywood" centers on a 1977 White House dinner that brought together Steven Spielberg, George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola, three directors at the apex of New Hollywood. Using Eleanor Coppola’s diary and extensive research, the book chronicles...

Anna’s Archive’s .li domain went offline, prompting users to seek alternative access points. The shadow library previously scraped roughly 86 million Spotify tracks—about 300 TB of audio and metadata—and has temporarily halted the release after intense legal pressure. Ongoing lawsuits from music...
Alright blood moon, let’s manifest some good book news. Agent signings, deals, bestseller lists, and not like, all the ways you keep f*cking with Link in the Zelda games. We need a break.

Andrew Weissmann announces his upcoming book, Liar’s Kingdom: How to Stop Trump’s Deceit and Save America, slated for publication on May 19. The work proposes concrete legal reforms to prevent habitual liars from holding elected office, drawing on anti‑misinformation statutes...

I'm here for fun BUT I also need to pay my bills. So 1) there's a giveaway for review copies of my novel The Intrigue, a 1940s noir about a romance scam artist. If you're a Goodreads user and you...
hey so did the the people involved in the Wuthering Heights film actually read Wuthering Heights

In this episode Frank Schaefer interviews actress‑writer Mary Ann Leone about her new novel *Christina the Astonishing*, a darkly comic tale of a young Italian‑American girl raised in a strict Catholic environment near Boston. They explore the book’s vivid opening...
What's behind the blockbuster success of novels like People We Meet on Vacation and The Housemaid? It’s not just the prose, the characters, or the plot. It’s how the authors manipulate time to keep readers hooked. In today's video, I reveal how...

We are in a reading crisis. People have access to more books than any point in history, but are reading less than ever. Here are 10 concerning charts about the state of reading:
Maïssa Bey’s novel *Blue White Green*, set in post‑independence Algiers, will be released in English in April 2026, translated by Georgetown professor Erin Twohig. The narrative follows Lilas and Ali, whose intertwined lives mirror Algeria’s shift from French colonial rule through...
In this archival episode, poet and writer Brandon Shimada discusses his memoir The Grave on the Wall, which traces his grandfather’s World War II internment at Fort Missoula and situates it within a broader history of U.S. detention sites—from Indian‑War forts...
I wrote all about how I once believed in the power of paying one’s dues. And now I believe that the only dues publishing workers should be paying is for a union. https://lithub.com/a-series-of-unfortunate-salaries-maris-kreizman-on-fighting-the-publishing-industrys-elitism/

The author surveyed the most‑comped novels from January‑February 2026 deals on Publishers Marketplace, noting how these titles differ from earlier 2025 favorites. The list serves as a benchmark for writers seeking effective comparative titles when querying agents. The piece also...

Feminist Giant and The Strand Book Store are co‑hosting a live discussion on March 16 in the Strand’s Rare Book Room, focusing on Sheima Benembarek’s nonfiction work *Halal Sex: The Intimate Lives of Muslim Women in North America*. The book, released...
Veronica Mang’s new picture book, *Copland: A Story About America*, published Feb. 24, 2026 by Viking Books for Young Readers, offers a concise biography of composer Aaron Copland for children ages 4‑8. The hardcover volume, priced at $18.99, blends conversational text with vibrant illustrations...
Bret Anthony Johnston, director of UT Austin’s Michener Center, releases his first short‑story collection in two decades, Encounters With Unexpected Animals. The book revisits his Corpus Christi roots and showcases gritty, cinematic tales that emerged from years of intensive drafting—often 20‑25 revisions...