Iboth love and hate end of the year book lists—love because they’re fun roundups full of great titles. But they also make me cringe, even silently rage, because without fail, they leave out amazing books that deserve the spotlight, arguably more than the mega bestsellers often dominating the lists. But the cold mechanics of how books are marketed and promoted shouldn’t stop us from reflecting on the incredible books we’ve spent time with this year and celebrating the ones that built lasting homes in our hearts and minds. 

I won’t deny this list is subjective. I’ve admittedly left off many great books, but here is a round-up of some of the best debuts I read this year, all of which deserve a place on your TBR.

Brother & Sister Enter the Forest by Richard Mirabella

This beautiful novel is about the limitations of love and the anatomy of memory deals with a complicated sibling relationship between Justin and Willa. The novel opens when Justin shows up on Willa’s doorstep and then goes back in time so we see how he got to where we meet him. It’s so gorgeous and haunting that it’s truly unforgettable. (Also, be sure to check out Richard’s incredible essay “Writing My Novel Wasn’t Therapy,” which we published earlier this year.) 

Temple Folk by Aaliyah Bilal 

Shortlisted for this year’s National Book Award, this stunning collection by Aaliyah Bilal features Black Muslims as they reckon with family, faith, and community. A collection dealing with faith of any kind, regardless of the particular religion, should wrestle with the gap between what the characters believe and their actions, and Bilal is a master at drawing those contradictions. The characters come to life in these stories, which are often quiet, but never without an elegant assuredness. And the collection builds, ending on arguably the strongest story of the collection, “Due North,” about a daughter struggling with the recent death of her father, an imam. Temple Folk announces Aaliyah Bilal as a remarkable talent and a writer to watch. 

Extended Stay by Juan Martinez

This literary horror novel isn’t an easy read, but it is an important one that looks at how capitalism exploits immigrant labor. It follows two siblings from Colombia to a hotel in Las Vegas after their family is lost to an atrocious massacre, but the horrors of the past don’t leave them. Juan Martinez is an incredible writer and brings to life this story with remarkable acuity. (It’s not technically his debut, but it is his debut novel, so I’m sneaking it in.) As Angie Raney writes in her review, “Extended Stay by Juan Martinez is unlike any horror book I’ve ever read. It’s primal, confounding, honest, and terrifying, but brilliant nonetheless.”

The Tip Line by Vanessa Cuti

The thing you need to know before reading this book is it’s not a traditional thriller, but literary fiction with a sharp voice and a deliciously unreliable narrator. The novel follows thirty-year-old Virginia, the operator at the local police tip line, who is eager to meet a man and get married. A tip reveals the location of several women’s bodies and authorities speculate that the murders were done by someone who knows police procedure. But despite the crime thriller elements, this is a deeply psychological novel about compulsion and corruption with a simply masterful execution of unreliability. 

Go Back and Get It by Dionne Ford

This astonishing book should’ve been nominated for all the awards. It still blows my mind how much emotional labor went into this extraordinary debut memoir. Dionne Ford traced her family history back to her great-great grandmother who was enslaved. As I wrote in my review, “Ford’s willingness to stare down her, her family’s, and this country’s painful history makes this book extraordinary, alongside her openness about her path to healing—one that included a wide range of therapies, lifestyle changes, and recovery meetings… Perhaps our country’s roots are too atrocious for a full recovery, but Go Back and Get It shows us that healing is possible, at least on an individual level.”

A Country You Can Leave by Asale Angel-Ajani

I adore everything about this debut novel centering Black biracial Lara and her fiery Russian mother Yevgenia (who is probably the most unforgettable character I’ve ever met). But every character in this prismatic novel is vivid. It’s a coming-of-age tale about survival that deals with race, class, gender, and privilege with thoughtfulness and emotional resonance. It made me laugh, broke my heart, and made me see the world anew.