Caernarfon Herald

19 great debut books to look out for in 2023

HANNAH STEPHENSON asks the experts for the new writers they expect to make a big splash this year

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A FLURRY of debut novels are always heavily pushed by publicists at this time of year, but only a handful will make the bestseller list.

In 2022, one of those names was Tessy Gunty, whose debut The Rabbit Hutch (Oneworld) won both the Waterstone­s Debut Fiction Prize and the National Book Award for fiction in the US.

Looking ahead to 2023, these are the debuts Bea Carvalho, head fiction buyer at Waterstone­s, suggests are the ones to watch...

1. Really Good, Actually by Monica Heisey (Fourth Estate, Jan 17)

This debut novel from the screenwrit­er of Schitt’s Creek and Everything I Know About Love is a funny, satirical and, at times, profound story about a young woman trying to navigate her way through life following a divorce after a shortlived marriage.

“This one is hotly anticipate­d and inspired by the author’s own experience of getting married and divorced in her 20s, ideal for readers of Dolly Alderton,” says Bea.

2. The New Life by Tom Crewe (Chatto & Windus, Jan 12)

This novel is inspired by the story of two men in the 19th century, who wrote the first book about homosexual­ity at the time of Oscar Wilde’s trial.

“The author has really researched their lives and written this novel about them meeting and writing the book, in the historical context of that time,” Bea explains.

3. Chain-Gang All-Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah (Harvill Secker, Jul 6)

Nana Kwame AdjeiBreny­ah had a collection of short stories a few years back (called Friday Black), but this first novel is a dystopian imaginatio­n of where the American prison system could end up going. It’s about a sports league which pitches prisoners against each other for entertainm­ent.

“It’s beautiful and brutal,” says Bea.

4. Bellies by Nicola Dinan (Doubleday, July 6)

“This begins as a boymeets-boy love story, but when the couple leave university to go to London, one goes through the process of transition­ing and the story is about what happens to their relationsh­ip after that. It’s a really beautiful, underrepre­sented love story in fiction,” says Bea.

5. In Memoriam by Alice Winn (Viking, Mar 7)

This is a story of forbidden love between two soldiers in the trenches of the First World War, where among the death and devastatio­n they find moments of solace in one another.

6. Lady MacBethad by Isabelle Schuler (Raven Books, Mar 2)

This action-packed historical tale is a reimaginin­g of the life of the Scottish queen who inspired the story of Shakespear­e’s Lady Macbeth.

7. Maame by Jessica George (Hodder & Stoughton, Feb 14)

This coming-of-age debut follows Maddie Wright, a 20-something British Ghanaian, as she navigates identity, love, loss and becoming the woman she wants to be, while caring for her father who has Parkinson’s. For fans of Queenie.

8. Wandering Souls by Cecile Pin (Fourth Estate, Mar 2)

“This is a heartbreak­ing, beautiful novel about three young kids who migrate from

Vietnam to London in the 1980s, and have to find their way in Thatcher’s Britain having left their family behind in very tragic circumstan­ces. It’s a real tearjerker and it’s going to be huge,” Bea predicts.

9. The Theory Of (Not Quite) Everything

by Kara Gnodde (Mantle, Mar 16)

From this debut writer comes a warmhearte­d tale about two siblings who, bound by the death of their parents, find themselves living together as adults – even though they have different outlooks on life. Mimi feels constraine­d by her genius brother Art, who devises a mathematic­al algorithm to help her find love. For fans of Lessons In Chemistry, and Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine.

10. The Things We Do To Our Friends

by Heather Darwent (Viking, Jan 12) A dark and gripping novel set in Edinburgh, it tells a compulsive tale of feminist revenge, toxic friendship­s and deadly secrets. A lead fiction debut for Viking in 2023, it’s already received brilliant early praise from the likes of Emma Flint, Nikki Smith and Julia Heaberlin.

11. Arthur And Teddy Are Coming Out by Ryan Love (HQ, Apr 13)

Described by the publishers as the ‘feelgood read of 2023,’ this novel is a dual-narrative coming out story of Arthur, a 79-yearold who has spent his life in the closet, and his 21-year-old grandson Teddy, who is trying to find the right moment to come out to his family. It follows the characters as they navigate first loves, heartbreak, and finding a place in their community.

12. Ink Blood Sister Scribe by Emma Torzs (Century, Jul 6)

This edge-of-your-seat fantasy thriller sees two estranged sisters tasked with guarding their family’s collection of rare and dangerous magical books. To survive, they have to unravel the secrets their parents kept hidden.

13. Fire Rush by Jacqueline Crooks (Jonathan Cape, Mar 2)

An explosive debut about dub reggae, love and freedom set in the late Seventies and early Eighties across Bristol and Jamaica.

14. One Small Voice by Santanu Bhattachar­ya (Fig Tree, Feb 23)

Lauded by the likes of

Max Porter and Nikesh Shukla, this debut novel begins in India in

1992, when the country is ablaze with riots. 10-year-old Shubhankar witnesses a terrible act of mob violence, in which his family are complicit. In the decades that follow, he must wrestle with his past.

15. Dirty Laundry

London,

by Disha Bose (Viking, Mar 30)

There’s a lot of buzz around this debut about three mothers who, behind the perfectly managed routines of their lives, are not the women you’d expect.

It’s a deliciousl­y scandalous story about the dark side of suburbia.

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 ?? ?? BOOK AHEAD: It’s well worth reserving a copy of these titles
BOOK AHEAD: It’s well worth reserving a copy of these titles

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