We spotlight six of the season’s most promising children’s and YA debuts.

Beth Lincoln

In Beth Lincoln’s debut middle grade mystery, The Swifts: A Dictionary of Scoundrels, an eccentric family bequeaths each newborn with a name from the dictionary that the child is intended to live up to. Released in February, the book became an immediate bestseller and has now been sold in 14 territories. 



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Jesús Trejo

Comedian Jesús Trejo’s childhood experience working weekends alongside his father in the family landscaping business became the basis for his dynamic debut picture book, Papá’s Magical Water-Jug Clock, illustrated by Eliza Klinz.



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Ari Tison

Structured in vignettes and verse, Ari Tison’s debut YA novel, Saints of the Household, tells the poignant story of Bribri American brothers as they navigate the fallout after a misguided act of violence.



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Balint Zsako

“Generous” is a word that Hungarian-born artist Balint Zsako uses often in conversation, and it’s a good one to describe his debut, Bunny & Tree, a wordless hand-painted picture book that overflows with conceptual fireworks and deep emotion.



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Thien Pham

Thien Pham builds each chapter of his debut graphic memoir, Family Style, around resonant food memories from his experience immigrating to the U.S. from Vietnam as a child.



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Terry J. Benton-Walker

Terry J. Benton-Walker brings young Black heroes to the forefront of his YA debut fantasy, Blood Debts, which is flooded with Southern culture and a magical system inspired by Afro and Afro-Latinx rituals and practices.



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