The best debuts of 2026, and all time

Brilliant new voices to add to your reading list this year.

Book covers on a teal and light orange background

Hot-off-the-press new arrivals plus the debut works of some of our most esteemed literary and classic authors.

Why read this: This is a stunning story of devotion and sacrifice. David is young, handsome, charismatic and sworn to celibacy. He is freshly ordained, and about to return to England to begin life as a priest. In London, Margaret is entangled in an impossible love affair. Committed to living on her own terms without sacrificing her faith, she becomes drawn to a women’s movement challenging the archaic rules of the Church. When their lives are thrown together at a Catholic college in a quiet village, an undeniable connection forms between them.

If you’re looking for: A love story, faith, complex and compelling characters.

Great for fans of: Possession by A S Byatt, Trespasses by Louise Kennedy, Atonement by Ian McEwan, Graham Greene.

Why read this: Exquisite writing and an increasing sense of unease combine to create a sinister, chilling story, based on Welsh folklore. When Carwyn discovers a buried prehistoric ruin in one of the fields on his land, his curiosity quickly descends into obsession. As the harsh winter closes in, his wife, Rhian, finds herself alone with her increasingly peculiar husband, and the mountains, and the looming megalithic stones.

If you’re looking for: Literary fiction/horror crossover, books based on folklore, rural isolated setting, books with a growing sense of dread.

Great for fans of: Unsettled Ground by Claire Fuller, The Loney by Andrew Michael Hurley.

Why read this: The world of 1930s Berlin becomes a lethal game of survival for two women consumed by desire and art, in the debut novel from art historian Rebecca Birrell. Hannah is an artist and a runaway, finally creating and loving without boundaries. But when she begins an affair with a powerful man’s wife, it threatens to do more than ruin their reputations. People are disappearing. The shadows of something unspeakable are growing darker. And Hannah's art could be the thing that secures her survival – or that will deny her any chance of escape.

If you’re looking for: Gripping literary historical fiction, LGBTQIA+ love story, books about art.

Great for fans of: In Memoriam by Alice Winn, The Safekeep by Yael van der Wouden, Sarah Waters.

Why read this: A story of doppelgängers and corporate intrigue: in this literary speculative fiction crossover, when you emigrate, you leave a version of yourself behind. Literally. Some keep in touch with their separated identities, hoping for future reintegration. Others, like Soyoung Rose Kang, leave home at age ten and never speak to their other selves again. But then her grandfather dies, and her Korean instance calls her back home from New York. . .

If you’re looking for: Speculative fiction, books on identity and immigration, a nerve-wracking read.

Great for fans of: The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley, Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel, Stories of Your Life and Others by Ted Chiang, Past Lives (film).

Why read this: This is a devastating and beautiful exploration of sisterhood. The three Ryan sisters are all together at their family's Long Island house for the first time in years. Each brings with them a secret. Cait still feels guilty for her role in a boat accident two decades earlier, an accident that drove their brother to suicide. Alice's career, and marriage, are under threat. And Maggie is finally bringing the woman she loves home to meet her devoutly Catholic mother. As they prepare for Thanksgiving dinner, old tensions boil over and new truths surface. 

If you’re looking for: Family drama, dysfunctional dynamics, sibling rivalry, a book club read.

Great for fans of: Clare Lombardo, Blue Sisters by Coco Mellors, Hello Beautiful by Ann Napolitano,The Wedding People by Alison Espach.

Cormac McCarthy was one of America’s finest and most celebrated authors, with over ten books to his name across a career spanning nearly sixty years. If you’re a fan, you’ll know McCarthy wrestles with the dark aspects of America’s past and present - but have you travelled all the way back to his earliest classic? McCarthy’s first book, The Orchard Keeper, is a standalone novel, set in a small, remote community in rural Tennessee in the 1920’s. Winner of the Faulkner Foundation Award for the best first novel, this book has earned a place among literary giants. 

Douglas Stuart’s blistering, Booker Prize-winning debut is a heartbreaking story that lays bare the ruthlessness of poverty and the limits of love. Set in Glasgow in the early 1980s, it focuses on Agnes Bain and her youngest son, Shuggie. Agnes has always dreamed of greater things. But when her husband abandons her she descends deeper and deeper into drink. Her son Shuggie, picked on by the local children and condemned by adults as 'no’ right’, tries to help her long after her other children have fled, but eventually he too must leave her in order to save himself. 

Don't Miss

The new book from Douglas Stuart, John of John, published in May

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Can you honestly say you love literary fiction if you haven’t read a book by Emma Donoghue? You’ve probably read Room, a beloved novel-turned blockbusting film, but her first novel, Stir Fry, is equally poignant, and will stay with you long after the final page. This insightful coming-of-age story explores love between women and probes feminist ideas of sisterhood. There’s nothing like reading an author's entire body of work, especially one that is so sparklingly diverse and has been adapted for the screen not once, but twice, with The Wonder out on Netflix on 16 November.

You’ve probably read or at least heard about the award-winning A Little Life, by Hanya Yanahigara. But you can’t be a true admirer if you haven’t read her first, debut novel, The People in the Trees, which marked her as a remarkable new voice in American fiction. It is 1950, when Norton Perina, a young doctor, embarks on an expedition to a remote Micronesian island where he encounters a strange tribe of forest dwellers who appear to have attained a form of immortality. We know that Hanya Yanaghiara has a way with words that can puncture you emotionally, and this all began with the haunting, but bewitching, The People in the Trees.

Charles Dickens’ era-defining novels undoubtedly belong in a list of the best books of all time. But we’re here to talk about The Pickwick Papers, his debut novel and a comic masterpiece which first brought this iconic writer to fame. Originally published in a series of magazine instalments, in novel form it is a hefty 1,080 pages, but you’ll be acquainted with some of fiction’s most endearing and memorable characters. It’s a classic, so you’ve got to give this work of literary invention your utmost attention if you haven’t already.

What would you change if you could go back in time? You’d read this novel when it was a bestseller in Japan in 2015 of course. . . Before the Coffee Gets Cold is the first book in this eponymous series about a coffee shop which offers its customers the chance to travel back in time. You’ll become captivated by four heartwarming characters as you follow their wistful attempts to change their respective pasts, whether that be seeing a loved one for one last time or confronting someone who did them wrong. An incredibly moving series that you have until September 2023 to become emotionally invested in, before the fourth adventure blesses our bookshelves.

Set in the golden city of Amsterdam, The Miniaturist is a historical novel with a strange secret at its heart. It’s 1686, eighteen-year-old Nella Oortman arrives in Amsterdam to begin a new life as the wife of illustrious merchant trader Joannes Brant, who gifts her a cabinet-sized replica of their home. As she engages the services of a miniaturist, an elusive and enigmatic artist, his tiny creations start to mirror their real-life counterparts in eerie and unexpected ways.

Jamaica Kincaid’s books are beloved for their honest exploration of colonial legacy, full of unapologetic passion and defiance. Her first work, At the Bottom of the River, is a selection of inter-connected prose poems told from the perspective of a young Afro-Caribbean girl. You’ll not forget the way Kincaid explores the nature of mother-daughter relationships, and the short prose style will leave you wanting more. We think you should get to know this unique and necessary literary voice, starting with At the Bottom of the River.

Years before American Psycho, Bret Easton Ellis shocked, stunned and disturbed with his debut, a fierce coming-of-age novel about the casual nihilism that comes with youth and money. Less Than Zero is narrated by Clay, an eighteen-year-old student, whose story is filled with relentless drinking, wild, drug-fuelled parties and dispassionate sexual encounters. This unflinching depiction of hedonistic youth and the consequences of such moral depravity, is neither condoned or chastised by the author. Published when he was just twenty-one, this extraordinary and instantly infamous work has become a cult classic and a timeless embodiment of the zeitgeist.


No one can write quite like Jane Austen. Her six novels are famous for their witty social commentary of British society in the early 19th century. Sense and Sensibility, her first novel, features two sisters of opposing temperament and their respective approaches to love. This comedy of manners is the humorous history lesson everyone needs.

If you’ve not heard of Emily St. John Mandel before, the New York Times bestselling author of Station Eleven, you have an incredible list of books to look forward to, starting with her extraordinary debut, Last Night in Montreal. Lilia has been leaving people behind her entire life, moving from city to city, abandoning lovers and friends along the way. Gorgeously written, charged with tension and foreboding, Last Night in Montreal is a novel about identity, love and amnesia, the depths and limits of family bonds and — ultimately — about the nature of obsession. 

Inspired by actual events, Burial Rites is an astonishing and moving first novel that will transport you to Northern Iceland in 1829, where Agnes Magnúsdóttir is a woman condemned to death for her part in the murder of her lover. But all is not as it seems, and time is running out to uncover the truth – winter is coming, and with it is Agnes’ execution date. Hannah Kent announced her arrival into the literary space with this speculative biography and it's rare to find a debut novel as sophisticated and gripping as this one.