This content contains affiliate links. When you buy through these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.
I’m always here for all of the most anticipated book lists that come at the beginning of the year. They follow the flood of best-of lists and mirror the hopeful energy of the new year.
Turns out, this batch of the most anticipated releases is as exciting as ever. King of literary satire Percival Everett has a reissue our Executive Director of Content is looking forward to, and I’m super hype for a Black American family saga that I first learned about in person.
Our writers take us through the other 35 books that should be on everyone’s radars this year. There’s Cleopatra’s story, the last book in Colson Whitehead’s trilogy, a book with weird girl vibes, poetry by Hanif Abdurraqib, and lots more.
Ready to refresh your shelves? We have a giveaway that can help! Enter to win a 1-year subscription to Book of the Month!
In Reading Color
A weekly newsletter focusing on literature by and about people of color!
A History of the African-American People (Proposed)
by Percival Everett and James Kincaid
Yes, I am spending a most anticipated selection on a reissue, but what a reissue and what timing. Percival Everett is at the top of his game with the adaptation of Erasure and the unstoppable James, but how many read this political satire coauthored by James Kincaid when it published in 2004? Not enough. This epistolary novel lampoons publishing, academia, and politics with former South Carolina senator Strom Thurmond hell-bent on penning a history of African Americans at its center. I have cried, now I’m ready to laugh, and there’s no one I trust more with a heady searing than Everett. —S. Zainab Williams

Behind Five Willows by June Hur
Every single book June Hur has written so far has captivated me, so you can imagine how excited I’ve been for her take on a historical Korean romance inspired by Pride and Prejudice. And that was before I found out this book deals with censorship and characters involved in illegal writing and transcribing of government outlawed fiction. Be still my heart! —Rachel Brittain

Cemetery Boys: Espíritu by Aiden Thomas
The graveyard gays are back! It’s been almost six years since Aiden Thomas first introduced us to Yadriel and Julian (and my fave Maritza, a real one). This fall we’re headed back to the graveyard in Espíritu, which follows Julian as he navigates life post sacrificial ritual. Things are mostly pretty sweet—except for the part where he sees shadows in his eyes, glowing eyes in the dark, and these ominous dark spots on people that no one can explain. There’s also a mysterious new nonbinary bruje in the mix, one who Julian is drawn to but Yadriel is looking at with some side eye for their cutthroat approach to brujeria. Let’s gooooo. —Vanessa Diaz

Cleopatra by Saara El-Arifi
If you went through (or are still in) an Egyptology phase, enjoy books that reimagine the stories of maligned women (Circe, Kaikeyi, Malinalli) or read Stacy Schiff’s brilliant biography of the Queen of the Nile and wondered why this fascinating woman’s legacy has been reduced to seduction and womanly wiles (sexism, it’s sexism), you should probably be as excited for this book as I am. I’ve been waiting for someone to flesh out Cleopatra’s story through fiction, and Saara El-Arifi has answered my readerly prayers. —Vanessa Diaz

Cool Machine (The Harlem Trilogy) by Colson Whitehead
A literary fiction trilogy is already a rare treat for readers, so one from an incredible two-time Pulitzer Prize winner is a glorious freaking gift. Cool Machine closes out Whitehead’s Harlem Trilogy about Ray Carney, an NYC furniture salesman and master fence. This third story is set in the 1980s, when Reaganomics has been unleashed on the economy, and the country is lulled into thinking they have money to spend. In need of a loan to get his wife’s travel agency off the ground, Ray makes one more questionable (and certainly illegal) business decision. How will Ray and his partner, the lovable sociopath Pepper, fare this last time around? —Liberty Hardy

Deathly Fates by Tesia Tsai
This debut gives us a look at Chinese folklore from a bit of a different angle. In it, Kang Siying is a necromancy priestess who must take a dangerous job retrieving the corpse of a prince for a big commission to take care of her ailing father. But when she reanimates the dead prince, he doesn’t respond to her like reanimated corpses usually do. Instead of obeying her commands, he comes back as himself, but he needs life force, or qi, to stay on the earthly plane. The two journey around the countryside, purifying evil spirits for qi for the prince, and uncovering secrets along the way—secrets that could threaten the entire kingdom. —Erica Ezeifedi

Enemies to Lovers by Alisha Rai
Once upon a time, we were blessed with at least one Alisha Rai book per year, but she took a break to like…grow a human, so I understand not also giving birth to another amazing book. Enemies to Lovers is another adventure romance following the events of Partners in Crime that includes a road trip, some Big Secrets, and two really smart people who don’t want to put up with the other’s crap. Alisha Rai is one of those people who is somehow good at both intense emotional drama and slapstick comedy, so I’m excited to see how she continues the criminal rom-com genre that she is currently queen of. —Jessica Pryde

Heiress of Nowhere by Stacey Lee
It’s 1918 on Orcas Island, Washington, and Lucy’s spent her life working at the estate of an eccentric shipbuilder. She washed ashore in a canoe as a child, and the shipbuilder took her in. Lucy’s wanted answers that the island can’t give her, but she didn’t want to find those answers by stumbling across her employer’s severed head. Lucy now not only has to ward off the local rumors of a mischievous spirit being the murderer, but she also has been unexpectedly named heir of the estate—putting her future in peril and casting suspicions that she may be the killer. Stacey Lee does historical mysteries like no other, and this sounds outstanding. —Kelly Jensen
How Simi Got Her Groom Back by Sonali Dev
A decade ago, I read Sonali Dev’s A Bollywood Affair and wrote, “I will now officially read any book she writes.” That still holds true, hence my shouting about her upcoming contemporary novel about sisters having to deal with childhood trauma and a fake marriage scheme. Knowing Dev, it’s gonna be emotional and I’m ready. Also, she had me at a title nod to How Stella Got Her Groove Back! —Jamie Canaves

I Love You, Don’t Die by Jade Song
Song’s debut Chlorine was one of the most visceral reading experiences I’ve had, and her sophomore novel sounds like a more-than-worthy followup. Vicky is obsessed with all things death. It brings her a comfort she’s never had in making meaning or relationships in her life. Periodically, her best and only friend Jen can pull her away from spending her non-work time in bed. So when Vicky gets involved with a throuple thanks to a dating app, all seems to be changing for her. But it won’t take long before death beckons to Vicky again. This one’s got all of the weird girl vibes that make for excellent (and cringey) reading. —Kelly Jensen
I’m Always Looking Up and You’re Jumping by Hanif Abdurraqib
Announced on Publishers Marketplace two Halloweens ago (yes, I saved a screenshot of the gleeful news to my desktop), this marks Abdurraqib’s first poetry collection in seven years. An excerpt from the forthcoming title appeared in Harper’s, and I’ve lost track of how many times I’ve revisited “There Are More Ways to Show Devotion.” Two lines my mind keeps circling follow: “at the end of my chain there are two flightless birds / at the end of the anguished birdcall there is a dying.” If you, too, can’t wait for new poems from the beloved author, join me in counting down the days with A Fortune for Your Disaster and The Crown Ain’t Worth Much. —Connie Pan

Japanese Gothic by Kylie Lee Baker
It’s 2026, and Lee Turner doesn’t know why he killed his college roommate. What he does know is that he needs to get out of New York, and that his father’s new house in Japan might make the perfect hideout. But there’s something wrong with the place— the bedroom window isn’t always a window, and a sword-wielding woman appears at night. Then there’s Sen, who, in 1877, is also in exile. She hides from the imperial soldiers in her family’s house, and, on top of everything else, there’s now a young foreign man who appears outside her window.
And the gag is? “One of these people is a ghost, and one of these stories is a lie.” —Erica Ezeifedi

Kin by Tayari Jones
From the bestselling, award-winning author of An American Marriage comes a tale of sisterhood, mothers, and daughters in the American South. Vernice and Anne are two motherless girls who grow up as best friends in Honeysuckle, Louisiana, but whose lives are set on very different trajectories. Vernice eventually goes to Spelman, where she enters into a world of affluent and connected Black women. And then there’s Anne. The hole left by her mother’s absence sends her on an all-consuming journey, which takes her down a road of love and hardship. Throughout it all, we see the various permutations and complexities of women and girls in community. —Erica Ezeifedi

Last Night in Brooklyn by Xochitl Gonzalez
Putting aside my discomfort that a historical novel can be set in 2007, this is a fantastic meditation on a very particular moment in Brooklyn history. The neighborhood where the main character, Alicia, lives is Fort Greene. She finds joy and possibility in the all-night parties thrown by her neighbor La Garza. Neither Alicia nor her friends realize that the coolness of Fort Greene is going to upend the neighborhood. Before the construction of the Barclays Center, and right at the tipping point of Brooklyn becoming expensive, Alicia and her friends and family try to find their way in NYC. —Julia Rittenberg

My Dear You: Stories by Rachel Khong
There is always a remarkable economy of language in Rachel Khong’s books. She doesn’t waste any time—or any words—getting to the point, but she doesn’t sacrifice artistry, either. Khong’s generous affection for her characters and ability to capture mundane human moments and anxieties with uncommon grace and humor make her exactly the kind of writer whose novels have made me wonder what she’d do with short stories. I can’t wait to find out. —Rebecca Joines Schinsky

Passage to Tokyo by Poppy Kuroki
Yui Sanada desperately searches for her missing little brother, Hiro, in a Tokyo park in 1995, only to be transported to 1923, WWII Japan, weeks before a massive earthquake that destroys Tokyo and kills over a hundred thousand. As she goes looking for her brother among temples and samurais, the threat of an impending earthquake intensifies, and she must act quickly to save him and hopefully return to their time. Yui, who’s stuck in a bygone era, meets Chiyo Aiko, and they strike a clandestine romance. This sapphic historical romantasy hits all the right notes. —Arvyn Cerezo

Python’s Kiss: Stories by Louise Erdrich
If you’ve never read Louise Erdrich, I envy you the joy of discovery wherever you start in her extensive catalog. If you have read Louise Erdrich, you know that her signature blend of the sacred, the mundane, and the mythic is unlike anything else in contemporary fiction. Erdrich’s stories are deeply human and real. Her writing is somehow both spare and lyrical. She’s a master of her craft with a Pulitzer and National Book Award under her belt, and she routinely shows up as someday-contender for the Nobel Prize for Literature. Wherever she wants to take me, I’m ready to go. —Rebecca Joines Schinsky

Sashimi by Dan Santat
Sashimi is a fishboy. He’s never met his parents or anyone who looked like him. Rumors of a strange beast bring him to Barnacle Bay, where he tries to pass for human at the local school to gather intel. Students question his fishy smell, wet skin, and close connection with Kevin the class fish. But Sashimi is undeterred, hoping the beast might be a long lost relative. Plenty of slap fights, names like Taco Fart and Brocano, and the etymology of the term “poop deck” are peppered in throughout this graphic novel about his journey to find out. —Alison Doherty

Seasons of Glass & Iron: Stories by Amal El-Mohtar
After experiencing the brilliance of her novella The River Has Roots and the Bigolas Dikolas Wolfwood-famed and stunning This is How You Lose the Time War, co-authored with Max Gladstone, I am chomping at the bit for Amal El-Mohtar’s upcoming short story collection. Mohtar’s writing has always struck me as masterful, lyrical, and mesmerizing, and I can’t wait to dive into the full scope of her talent. Seasons of Glass and Iron is sure to be a compendium of beautiful stories, folktales, and imaginings of our world’s possibilities. You don’t want to miss it. —Lyndsie Manusos

Stars, Stripes & Summer Nights by Celeste Dador
After a minor media scandal, First Daughter of the United States Abby Alzona is banished to a rundown inn in a small Virginia town for the summer until things cool off. But Abby makes lemons into lemonade by embracing her chance to be a normal teen: planning an Independence Day festival, going to barbecues and pool parties, and maybe even having her first kiss. I have a feeling a lot of us will be looking for a little escapism from the current political climate in 2026, and this delightful YA Fourth of July romance about the daughter of the first Filipina American president is just the palate cleanser we all need. —Susie Dumond

Tailbone by Che Yeun
This is poised to be a breakout debut novel from a writer whose short fiction has garnered praise and attention. Following an unnamed teenage girl who seeks safety from her abusive father in a boarding house for single women, Tailbone tells the story of two friends surviving a global financial crash, where survival relies on the patronage of wealthy men. By all accounts this sounds like the kind story of friendship, identity, and soul-searching that stays with you long after the last page. —S. Zainab Williams

The Body by Bethany C. Morrow
The moment I first laid eyes on the red shovel and stained glass on this cover, my brain immediately went, “Oh yeah, that’s some church horror.” My suspicions were confirmed when I saw Bethany C. Morrow describe The Body as being about the horror of churchianity, Godless religion, and of abuse begetting abuse. My own body is likely wholly unprepared for The Body,but in Morrow’s capable hands, I look forward to what promises to be an absolutely bloody reckoning. —Vanessa Diaz

The Edge of Space-Time: Particles, Poetry, and the Cosmic Dream Boogie by Chanda Prescod-Weinstein
What can looking to the farthest reaches of the cosmos show us about ourselves? Theoretical cosmologist Dr. Chanda Prescod-Weinstein is a professor of astronomy, physics, and gender studies, and her multidisciplinary approach to some of the biggest questions in space-time is nothing short of mind-blowing. From black holes to dark matter to the particle horizon, Dr. Prescod-Weinstein introduces readers to some of the most fascinating conversations in astrophysics, drawing on pop culture, music, and poetry along the way. It’s a brilliant book that explores what we can learn about life here on Earth by looking up. —Susie Dumond

The Girl with a Thousand Faces by Sunyi Dean
Sunyi Dean’s debut novel, The Book Eaters, was a bloody good time and one of my favorite books of 2022, so I was wicked excited to learn she has a new book coming in 2026! It’s a historical dark fantasy set in Hong Kong about a woman named Mercy Chan. Mercy arrived in Kowloon years earlier with no memory of who she is and has since made a life as a ghost talker for the triad. But then a murderous spirit starts drowning people, and catches Mercy’s attention. The spirit claims to know her and her unremembered past. And if Mercy can’t remember where she came from and how she ended up in Kowloon, it may drag her down into the depths for good. —Liberty Hardy

The Intrigue by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
Silvia Moreno-Garcia could write a guide on knitting sweaters for earthworms, and I’d be out here cheering, “Yesss, clothe the tiny invertebrates!” She has, of course, crafted an irresistible plot in a noir tale of desire, greed, and seduction. In 1940s Mexico, a handsome grifter charms women into giving him their money through letters. Intent on securing a bigger, more reliable bag when the letter scheme runs its course, he sets his sights on the owner of a boardinghouse in a small town in Veracruz. There are two holes in this plan: his intended victim’s niece clocks him right away and wants in on the scheme as a means to escape this small town, and his victim is not the gullible mark he thinks she is… —Vanessa Diaz
The Last Thorn by Talia Hibbert
By the time The Last Thorn hits bookstores, it will have been half a decade since Talia Hibbert published a brand-new adult romance. She’s been republishing her indie titles (to the deep gratitude of those finding them for the first time), and of course no author owes their audience new books or material of any kind. But for Hibbert to be bringing her comedic and authentic romance storytelling to a “spicy, magical Beauty and the Beast retelling”? There’s no question in my mind that Hibbert’s is a return readers will be ready for. —Trisha Brown

The Moon Without Stars by Chanel Miller
After adoring Magnolia Wu Unfolds It All, talk of another middle grade novel by Miller had me on the edge of my blue sofa. But with a comp like Judy Blume’s iconic Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret (a comfort book of mine), I cozied up with this moving story featuring 12-year-old Luna the day it arrived. When classmates begin confiding in the seventh grader, she and her best friend, Scott, create zines to uplift them. Delving into attentiveness, insecurities, friendship, and growing up, this—with its Mean Girls vibes—made me laugh, and I marked up so many passages and hearted so many sentences that my copy resembles a bathroom stall wall. —Connie Pan

The Seven Daughters of Dupree by Nikesha Elise Williams
I first heard of this book directly from Williams at a writing conference. The Emmy Award-winning producer and podcast host told me the first line, and I was hooked. The Dupree women only give birth to daughters, but that’s not the only mysterious thing about them. In 1995, 14-year-old Tati goes down a rabbit hole trying to find out who her father is, but just uncovers more secrets and questions. Like, why did her grandmother Gladys leave Land’s End, Alabama in ’53, and what happened to Jubi when she tried to pass for white in 1917? At the beginning of it all is the story of one enslaved ancestor who paid the ultimate price for freedom. —Erica Ezeifed

The Star from Calcutta by Sujata Massey
I’m so happy to see Perveen Mistry return! She’s the only Parsi woman lawyer in 1920’s Bombay—inspired by the real life Cornelia Sorabji—and the star of this wonderful historical mystery series. This time around we get the exciting early days of Bollywood with a murder mystery + missing person case that involves a movie censor and leading lady! —Jamie Canaves

The Valley of Vengeful Ghosts by Kim Fu
I fell hard for Fu’s writing through their short fiction in Lesser-Known Monsters of the 21st Century, so I was delighted to learn that we’re getting a new novel from this award-winning author. I love a novel perched in the uncanny valley and this story about a woman unmoored by the death of her controlling mother, a woman who, ever-obedient, buys a house built on shadowy foundations with her inheritance, sounds right up my alley. Lesser-Known Monsters taught me that Fu is the writer to tell an immersive story grounded in earthly issues and haunted by ghosts. —S. Zainab Williams

The Witch by Marie NDiaye, translated by Jordan Stump
A witchy book in translation about a mom of twins, written by a Black woman? Did Reparations Club publish this book just for me? I’m new to NDiaye, but I can see this book introducing the prolific and award-winning novelist, playwright, and screenwriter to an even wider audience. Translated from the French, this novel set in modern France tells of a woman, a witch, a mother whose twins fly the coop upon initiation. For anyone who understands or seeks to understand the multitudes motherhood contains, this book is set up to deliver. —S. Zainab Williams

This Is Where the Serpent Lives by Daniyal Mueenuddin
Daniyal Mueenuddin earned acclaim through a short story collection that won a Story Prize and was a finalist for major awards, including the Pulitzer. He makes his triumphant return with a novel about caste, culture, and wealth in Pakistan’s contemporary feudal system. Following the lives of characters born with and without privilege, all attached to the estate of a wealthy colonel, and adorned with struggles of the heart, morality, and power, this promises to be one of the year’s seminal literary works. —S. Zainab Williams

To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before: The Graphic Novel by Barbara Perez Marquez (Adapter), Jenny Han, Akimaro (Illustrator), Li Lu (Illustrator)
I recently inhaled the manga series adaptation of Rainbow Rowell’s Fangirl, so when I saw that To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before is getting adapted into a graphic novel, my hands immediately started doing all the gimme gimme gestures. Fans will now have the original books, a great film trilogy adaptation, and soon a graphic novel adaptation. This is just all the wins for lovers of YA romance, Jenny Han, and her characters! —Jamie Canaves

We Could Be Anyone by Anna-Marie McLemore
Lola and Lisandro are siblings who are actors out to swindle the rich. Lola pretends to be a ghost haunting the home of a wealthy person, while Lisandro pretends to be a spiritualist who can help. Bixby Fairfax, newspaper tycoon and owner of The Coterie estate, is the siblings’ next target. But things start to go wrong the moment Lola and Lisandro decide to switch roles. Weird things keep actually happening at The Coterie, and no matter how hard the siblings try to solve the mystery, they’re dragged further in. Can they pull off their biggest scam or is their act about to be unraveled? This historical thriller sounds fun. —Kelly Jensen

Whidbey by T. Kira Madden
Here is a whodunnit that offers the thrill of a mystery in need of solving alongside scrutiny of our incarceration system. T. Kira Madden is best known for her memoir about growing up queer and biracial, Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls, and now we’re getting a debut novel from the writer known for a thoughtful and compassionate approach to storytelling. Whidbey follows the women whose lives are forever altered by an abuser—an abuser who has turned up dead. If Liz Moore’s The God of the Woods was the book club book of 2024, I predict this will be ours for 2026. —S. Zainab Williams

Year of the Mer by L. D. Lewis
I once read a horror story by L. D. Lewis that frightened me so much that I put the book down for a full year before picking it up again. This is a violent, dark sapphic extension of The Little Mermaid tale that will for sure keep you reading up past your bedtime. We know how Arielle got her fairytale ending, but Yemi, her granddaughter, is living a much different life. Yemi’s father, the king, was assassinated and her mother is dying. A coup forces Yemi into exile and the only place she can think of turning to is to Ursla, the sea-witch. Yemi wants vengeance and so, too, does Ursla. Will Yemi be tempted by her own rage and Ursla’s power? —Patricia Elzie-Tuttle

You Should Have Been Nicer to My Mom by Vincent Tirado
Papi Ramon is the recently deceased patriarch of a wealthy family, and he’s sown a little chaos by dropping this banger in his will: “One of you is a demon I made a bargain with long ago. Get rid of ’em or you’ll all be damned. Ciao!” No one takes the proclamation seriously, save for his undisputed favorite, Xiomara. But when the rest of the family sends the lawyer away to retrieve the original draft of the will, a storm hits and leaves them all stranded together. Over the course of 12 harrowing hours, all hell breaks loose, and it will be up to Xiomara to suss out the demon and take them out. If you love a modern Gothic, add this one to your list. —Vanessa Diaz
For more of our Most Anticipated books of 2026, make sure to check out the entire list.



