Every spring the front table fills up with debuts, and every spring we fall hard for a handful of them. Here are five first novels that had the whole shop passing copies across the counter.
1. The Lantern Year — Mireille Okafor
A quiet, devastating book about memory and the things we leave unsaid. Rae read it in a single sitting and immediately bought three more copies for the staff shelf.
2. Field Notes for the End of Summer — J. A. Vance
Technically poetry, spiritually a novel. Vance writes like someone leaving postcards from a life slightly more vivid than yours.
The best debuts don’t announce themselves. They just refuse to leave your head.
Rae, fiction buyer
3–5. The rest of the shelf
- On Keeping a Commonplace Book — Lena Hartveldt
- Saltwater Almanac — Devi Raman
- The Paper Museum — Tomas Brandt
Come in and ask for the spring debuts table — every copy has a hand-written note tucked inside.