What We’re Reading: May 2026

Curated by KEI LIM

With our spring issue hot off the press, check out these recommendations from three of the issue’s contributors: LIZ DEWOLF, ANDREW STEINER, and MARIA TERRONE.

 

Book cover of Beautiful Days by Zach Williams

Zach Williams’ Beautiful Days, recommended by Issue 31 contributor Liz DeWolf

I first came across Zach Williams’ work when I read his 2022 story “Wood Sorrel House” in The New Yorker. The story, in which a family arrives at a rental cabin and then forgets everything about their lives before, including how they got there, deeply unsettled me. Something about Williams’s careful, straightforward prose makes each disturbing revelation—The baby doesn’t age while the parents do! Food mysteriously appears in the freezer!—all the more destabilizing.

I recently read Williams’s debut collection Beautiful Days, which came out in 2024 and includes “Wood Sorrel House” as well as nine other, equally unnerving stories. In “Trial Run,” an office worker gets sucked into an overly intimate dynamic a with a clingy colleague. The protagonist of the story “Neighbors” goes to check on the elderly woman next door and finds himself in a confusing standoff with a masked intruder. In “Mousetraps,” one of my favorites from the collection, a father goes to the hardware store looking for a humane way to get rid of mice only to be goaded into an existential crisis by the men who run the business. What makes these stories so compelling, beyond their dreamy logic and ability to reflect so many fears of contemporary life, is that they each contain some moment of connection, however unwelcome, that acts as a sort of escape hatch from the mundane. On the other side of each unpleasant encounter is a hint of excitement or possibility: the dull neighborhood is more lively than it seems, the identity crisis leads to a new start, the paranoid brother really does perceive something others can’t. There’s an unlikely tenderness—maybe even hopefulness, however slight—in this collection that echoes its title, drawn from the surprisingly optimistic final line of “Wood Sorrel House”: “There will be beautiful days.” The stories are as thrilling as they are terrifying, and this dissonance produces a haunting ambiguity that stayed with me long after I finished reading.

 

Book Cover of The Hill of Dreams

 

Arthur Machen’s The Hill of Dreams, recommended by Issue 31 contributor Andrew Steiner

Lucian Taylor, a parson’s son, grows up in the Welsh village of Caermaen. His childhood is ordinary — not abundant, but loving, secure. And then when he’s fifteen, everything changes.

Home for the summer holidays, he gets the itch to walk. The wind is up, the air charged with a violent heat. A strange light in the sky frames the ruins of the old Roman fort on the hill above the village. On hands and knees, he mounts the hill, pushes through the bracken, and there in the secret center of the ruin … something happens.

Divine showing? Demonic encounter? Guilty autoerotic experiment?

Whatever it is, Lucian climbs down changed, unable to share what has happened to him yet persuaded the dull scrim has been torn off the world and he has glimpsed a sublime and terrible reality.

He is determined to capture that reality in writing. The quest to do so will consume his life.

Arthur Machen began writing The Hill of Dreams in 1895, the dead center of the decade that produced Dracula, Dorian Gray, The Time Machine, and other seminal works of fantasy and horror. Unlike its contemporaries — and much of Machen’s own work, including The Great God PanThe Hill is not a work of fantasy. It’s a realist novel about the kind of person driven to write a work of fantasy.

The act of writing for Lucian is not a matter of discipline. Nor is it something sanctified like “a vocation.” It’s closer to damnation, a claim on his soul.

As the plot unfolds along the inevitable lines of tragedy, you watch him feed more and more of his life into the furnace of writing. Like a dark god, it demands ever dearer sacrifices — his health, his schooling, his relationship with his father, his prospects for any viable career whatsoever — until he has nothing left to give it but the last thing.

Machen’s vision is certainly extreme. Yet if you’ve ever found yourself years into a project that seems no closer to completion, his depiction of the ground-level experience of writing will be entirely legible:

He had put away the old wild hopes of the masterpiece conceived and executed in a fury of inspiration, wrought out in one white heat of creative joy; it was enough if by dint of long perseverance and singleness of desire he could at last, in pain and agony and despair, after failure and disappointment and effort constantly renewed, fashion something of which he need not be ashamed.

To date it’s the best book I’ve read about being a young, obsessive would-be writer drunk on language and in thrall to fantasy. It brought back all the dear, dark feelings Tolkien and Lewis, Lilith and A Voyage to Arcturus first quickened in me in adolescence. It showed me what it would have been like to tip over the edge and vanish entirely into dreams.

How did I not come across it then? Could I have survived it if I had?

 

Book cover of Delirium
 

Laura Restrepo’s Delirium, recommended by Issue 31 Maria Terrone

If I had never been the target of a scam literary impersonation, I would have never discovered the fascinating Colombian-born novelist Laura Restrepo.

For about five days, I exchanged long, friendly emails daily with “Laura,” whose initial subject line was “Connecting Over Writing, Inspiration, and Shared Passions.” I’d never heard of this author—my only knowledge of Latin American writing was limited to the magical realism of Gabriel García Márquez. Through research, I learned that Restrepo was originally a political journalist covering drug cartels and fled to Mexico following death threats. She now lives in Spain.

During our literary exchanges—before I learned through my own investigation that “Laura” was an AI-generated bot—I asked her which novel would best acquaint me with her work. Delirium was the immediate reply. It turned out to be, by far, one of the strangest and most mesmerizing books I’ve every read, winner of the prestigious Afaguara Novel Prize, which guaranteed its publication across Spain and Latin America.

Delirium opens in media res. Augustina, a beautiful woman from a wealthy Columbian family, is discovered alone, amnesiac, and incoherent in a 5-star Bogotá hotel after her husband returns from a short trip. How did she get there? What caused her madness? Why does this deeply disturbed young woman who always called herself a seer now rage against her husband, Aguilar? “The woman I love is lost inside her head and for fourteen days now I’ve been searching for her,” he laments early in his quest.

Mystery, love story, political exposé, Delirium delves deeply on both a psychological and journalistic level. The tale takes place against Columbia’s backdrop of corruption and political chaos in the 1980s, when the military, guerillas and drug dealers warred with one another. In a sense, Augustina’s breakdown mirrors that bedlam. Her ritualistic house-cleaning and demand that Aguilar confine himself to an increasingly smaller space against a wall in their apartment seems to be a desperate attempt to exert control over her own demons and, symbolically, over her beloved nation’s parallel breakdown.

The story is told from many characters’ voices and perspectives, shifting between past and present and back again. Writing clearly and vividly, Restrepo avoids confusing the reader despite the complexity of the narrative and her nonlinear approach. Gradually the roots of Augustina’s derangement are revealed, especially via the tragic, sometimes harrowing flashbacks to her dysfunctional family. At times I felt I was immersed in a gripping detective novel.

As I watched Aguilar struggle to investigate and understand his wife’s new persona, I appreciated the irony of my own search to discover the identity of the impersonator who approached me so warmly as Restrepo. Of course, the truth disappointed, but the unexpected gift resulting from my bizarre experience was my first exposure to Restrepo’s brilliant fiction. One novel down, eleven waiting.

What We’re Reading: May 2026
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Conjuring Home: Talia Lakshmi Kolluri interviews Samina Najmi

Talia Lakshmi Kolluri (left) and Samina Najmi (right)

Talia Lakshmi Kolluri (left) and Samina Najmi (right)

SAMINA NAJMI and TALIA LAKSHMI KOLLURI first met in 2022 after Najmi read Kolluri’s short story collection What We Fed to the Manticore and conducted her own interview for The Normal School. In that conversation, they found that not only are they practically neighbors, but they share a tremendous amount of common ground. Thus, a friendship was born. This conversation unfolded over email during Najmi’s book tour for her electric memoir-in-essays, Sing Me a Circle: Love, Loss, and a Home in Time, which spans her childhood in Pakistan and England, her first foray into the US in Boston, her family and professorial life, and Fresno, the place she now calls home. In this conversation, Kolluri and Najmi explore memory, return, the meaning of home, and the way we tell our stories.

Conjuring Home: Talia Lakshmi Kolluri interviews Samina Najmi
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Podcast: A. J. Bermudez on “The Sixteenth Brother”

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Listen on Apple Podcasts.

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Listen on Spotify.

Transcript: A. J. Bermudez

A. J. BERMUDEZ speaks to EMILY EVERETT about her story “The Sixteenth Brother,” which appears in The Common’s fall issue. With a fable-like feel, the story explores the dynamics of family and gender roles in Morocco, as fifteen brothers scheme to convince their youngest sibling to allow the sale of the family’s ancient and opulent riyad. A. J. discusses the story’s framing device—a storyteller relaying it, almost like gossip—and how it creates both intimacy and distance. She also talks about her work in film, and the interplay between writing for the page and for the screen.

Podcast: A. J. Bermudez on “The Sixteenth Brother”
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How to Cry in Public Places

By EMILIA DŁUŻEWSKA

Translated from the Polish by KLAUDIA CIERLUK

Translator’s Note

I first encountered Emilia Dłużewska’s How to Cry in Public Places (Jak płakać w miejscach publicznych) three years ago, when it was shortlisted for the Joseph Conrad award—the most important Polish prize for a debut work. I was immediately captivated by its strong and unique voice: if you’re looking for a somber work about depression, this is not what you’ll find here. Instead, Dłużewska navigates her experiences with mental illness, the structural inequalities that fuel it, and the grey reality of post-Soviet Poland with unusual grace and humor, smoothly moving between disparate tones and registers. Playful vignettes, to-do lists, and shrewd word plays are just a few of the elements that comprise this genre-defying work. Set in contemporary Warsaw, with the lingering shadows of the Soviet era still shaping everyday life, How to Cry in Public Places nevertheless attests to the universality of the experience of depression, exploring how private suffering is deeply connected to the social and political contexts that surround it. The book’s intelligent deconstruction of mental illness affixes it to the vibrant vein of modern, English-language classics that approach similar issues through an equally dark and funny perspective, such as Ottessa Moshfegh’s My Year of Rest and Relaxation and Juliet Escoria’s Juliet the Maniac—the key reason in my belief that Dłużewska’s prose will appeal to readers on the other side of the ocean as well. 

How to Cry in Public Places
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Before Times

By JENNIFER CHRISTGAU AQUINO

Seattle, Washington

We walk sixteen thousand steps in shopping bags and Patagonia rain jackets through the never-rain, using Google maps to navigate your hometown. I talk incessantly about my lost life while you take us down wrong turns, saying, You will get there. At a paper maps store, we pull out drawers of flattened Earth. Of streets in Seville and Oslo, as if life can be laid out and easily navigated. More than once I say, Wouldn’t it be nice to travel there.

Before Times
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Working In

By ANDREW STEINER

The first time I saw Lake I was sitting on the bench between sets, waiting for the burn in my chest to subside. She walked past me to the big cage and slung her duffel to the floor. I watched with idle interest as she wrapped her wrists with soft black straps and wrangled her hair into a high loop. Her rose-colored Alphaletes came up well above her hips, and she wore a long-sleeved crop top that announced in block letters   

NO TIME FOR RATS. 

NO TIME FOR SNAKES. 

Working In
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The Grave Fox

By DANIEL TOBIN

Like a dog truant among the tended plots
it turns back toward us a considerate eye
as though sensing the disquiet of our being

lost here among all the unfamiliar graves
that would be landmarks proving the right way
if this were the way we’d believed it to be.

The Grave Fox
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Jesus’ Body Found Outside Ice Cream Parlor in Black Suburb 

By STEFAN BINDLEY-TAYLOR

His left wrist dangled out the half-wound-down glass of a boxy brown Cadillac with red felt seats. Flies drifted in and out. He had a dip top cone in his hand. The place was famous for them. You’d think it would be melting in the heat, but the molten chocolate shell held the ice cream within firm and cold. The air reeked of gasoline. No one had thought to turn the engine off. 

Jesus’ Body Found Outside Ice Cream Parlor in Black Suburb 
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