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6 unmissable books coming out in May from Kathryn Stockett and Douglas Stuart

News RoomBy News RoomMay 1, 2026
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May arrives like a long-anticipated gift for readers, its pages filled with stories that promise to captivate, challenge, and console. The month’s publishing slate is a remarkable tapestry, weaving together blistering debuts and celebrated returns, offering narratives that span continents, classes, and profound human crises. From the rugged isolation of Scottish islands to the sun-scorched fields of Depression-era Mississippi, and from the intimate loneliness of a New England teacher to the harrowing reality of contemporary Gaza, these books collectively explore the vast spectrum of human experience. Expect intimacy and unease in equal measure; these are novels designed not just to be read, but to be felt and discussed. Hand-selected as the most anticipated releases, these six titles form a literary compass pointing toward the conversations we need to have now.

Leading the charge is Douglas Stuart with John of John, set for release on May 21st. Since his Booker Prize-winning debut, Shuggie Bain, Stuart has solidified his reputation as a masterful chronicler of queer identity and working-class life. His third novel transports us to the wild, windswept Isle of Harris in the Outer Hebrides, where a young man named Cal returns home from art school to a father who desperately needs him. Stuart promises a piercing exploration of duty, suppressed emotion, and the “terrible secrecy” that can define a father-son relationship. Against this stark and beautiful backdrop, he delves into the silent languages of familial obligation and the pain of homecomings, reminding us why his voice remains one of the most vital in contemporary fiction.

In what may be the publishing event of the season, Kathryn Stockett makes a triumphant return on May 21st with The Calamity Club, her first work of fiction in seventeen years since the global phenomenon The Help. This novel sweeps readers into 1933, in the heart of Depression-era Mississippi, where three unforgettable lives converge: Meg, an eleven-year-old orphan deemed “unadoptable,” and two women named Birdie and Charlie. Early acclaim, including praise from bestselling author Bonnie Garmus, heralds it as a “joyful, heartbreaking, and heartwarming” story of female resilience. Stockett revisits her Southern roots not to retread past ground, but to uncover new layers of struggle and solidarity, crafting a narrative of revolt against circumstance that is poised to capture hearts just as powerfully as her debut did.

The profound quiet of interior life finds its poet in Elizabeth Strout, whose new novel, The Things We Never Say, arrives on May 7th. The Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Olive Kitteridge shifts her compassionate gaze to Massachusetts, following Artie Dam, a 57-year-old history teacher and coach who presents a “jolly” exterior to the world while wrestling with a deep, existential loneliness. Strout has built a legendary career on her ability to unpick the nuances of the human heart with deceptively simple prose. This new work serves as a meditative exploration of the unspoken fears that shape us and the abiding, often quiet, love that sustains us through it all, proving once again her unparalleled skill in illuminating the shadows within ordinary lives.

May also heralds thrilling new voices, including the debut of Ana Kinsella. Her novel, Frida Slattery as Herself, released on May 7th, has already been selected as a BBC Culture Pick. It charts the intricate, seventeen-year relationship between Frida, an actor, and John, a writer-director, told through the plays they create and the life they live in the spaces between. Acclaimed author Elif Batuman has described it as “moving, thought-provoking, and utterly delightful.” Alongside this, Jem Calder enters the novel scene on May 21st with I Want You To Be Happy, a witty and biting portrait of modern romance between a twenty-four-year-old barista and a thirty-five-year-old advertiser in London. Touted by Sally Rooney as “irresistible,” it captures the specific melancholic humor of millennial connections, where mismatched timing turns potential into poignant distraction.

In stark and necessary contrast, Samar Yazbek presents a work of urgent testimony with Your Presence is a Danger to Your Life, also publishing on May 21st. An award-winning Syrian journalist, Yazbek turns her fearless reportage to Gaza in the aftermath of October 2023. The book’s chilling title is taken directly from the flyers dropped by military forces before bombings. Through the direct testimonies of twenty-six Palestinians, aged 13 to 65, Yazbek constructs a human mosaic of survival, loss, and sheer endurance. This is not a novel but a vital document—a raw, harrowing, and indispensable act of witness that pulls the global crisis into piercing, personal focus, demanding our attention and remembrance.

From the wild Scottish coast to the besieged streets of Gaza, the stories unfolding this May invite us into countless worlds, each a testament to the power of narrative to bridge divides and deepen understanding. Whether through Stuart’s rugged emotional landscapes, Stockett’s historical resilience, Strout’s quiet introspection, or the bold new perspectives of Kinsella, Calder, and Yazbek, this collection offers a rich feast for the mind and soul. These are the books that will linger on your nightstand and in your thoughts, sparking conversation and offering companionship. They remind us that in every era, under every circumstance, the need to tell our stories—and to listen to those of others—remains one of our most fundamental, and most human, acts.

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