Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Q&A with Manish Chauhan

  


 

 

Manish Chauhan is the author of the new novel Belgrave Road. He is also a lawyer, and he lives in London.

 

Q: What inspired you to write Belgrave Road, and how did you create your characters Mira and Tahliil?

 

A: There were two things, I think.

 

The first was that I met a young woman who had come to England following an arranged marriage. I didn’t know much about her, other than that she wasn’t particularly educated and that she didn’t have any family of her own in England.

 

We had a very brief conversation, but over the days that followed, I found myself thinking about her – or rather the idea of her. What would happen if she decided she didn’t like being married or living in Leicester? Would she be able to get divorced? Would she be able to fend for herself?

 

Perhaps she would she simply grin and bear it, the way so many others before her had? But what if she wasn’t that kind of woman? What might become of her life?

 

The second thing that happened around that time was that I found myself reading a lot about the migrant crossings that were taking place from Africa into Europe.

 

I became interested in exploring the reasons that compel people to flee their home countries. How might it be to end up in Leicester as a grown up? How might a person carry the experience of a migrant crossing with them through their lives?

 

As the son of immigrants, I found both stories equally compelling and, after some time, found that the narratives began to speak to each other. From here, the idea for the novel was born.

 

Mira’s journey to England was similar to the journey my father made after marrying my mother.

 

As for Tahliil’s character, this required research, but I wanted to write about somebody honest and hardworking who attempts to become the master of their own destiny, and about how their circumstances and the structures inside which they are forced to operate help or hinder their attempts.

 

Q: Did you need to do much research to write the novel, and if so, did you learn anything that especially surprised you?

 

A: Most of my research was with respect to Tahliil’s story. That said, even though it was important to understand the life he may have had prior to coming to England, the majority of my research was in looking at the ever-changing asylum process within the UK and how this impacts the people who come to fall under it.

 

Tahliil is an honest person; he is not looking for a free ride. The more I looked into the various processes, the more it became apparent that what was supposed to be fair and transparent ends up achieving the opposite.

 

The delays in the process, sometimes over the course of many years, were very surprising to learn about. That and the lack of support which prevents asylum seekers from working or claiming government benefits, for example, compounded by the fact that many are made to feel as though they are lying and will soon be discovered.

 

This all adds to the trauma that many asylum seekers have already suffered.

 

When it came to researching Somali culture, I watched a lot of documentaries and read novels and poems by Somali writers or about Somalia, always mindful that the research, whilst important, should not intrude with the reading of the novel but sit quietly in its background.

 

One thing I noticed about the Somali people I saw in documentaries was the deep strength and resilience they possessed despite the things they had suffered. This was very much something I wanted to convey via the Somali characters in Belgrave Road.     

 

Q: The writer Crystal Hana Kim said of the book, “In deft, lucid prose, Manish Chauhan asks us to consider the meaning of home, the might of love, and the injustices created by the borders of our contemporary world.” What do you think of that description?

 

A: It’s such a generous, lovely description and it makes me happy to read it as it’s very close to what I intended when writing the novel. The idea of what constitutes “home” and love that operates against society has featured in almost everything I have written, and I continue to find these subjects fascinating.

 

The borders that exist between people are almost all man-made, and I find it both sad and interesting to think about the ramifications of such things which invariably cause much conflict and division. Sometimes I wish we were all birds, for whom such borders mean nothing.     

 

Q: Did you know how the novel would end before you started writing it, or did you make many changes along the way?

 

A: Not entirely. All I knew was that the ending had to be realistic and as hopeful as I could manage given the circumstances. Without giving too much away, I knew where the story would end but it wasn’t until I reached the end of the novel that the details became clear.

 

Usually before I begin writing, I have a sense of the characters and their general arcs but not much more than that. The ending, I feel, should be formed only at the end. 

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: Another novel set in Leicester, but this time about a different sort of love – the sort that accumulates over the course of a very long marriage. My hope is to write three novels set in Leicester which follow people from different ages/classes/circumstances and which showcase the deeply interesting city I was born and raised in.    

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Just a note to say thank you! I hope that those who read Belgrave Road find something in it. 

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Jonathan Yanez

  


 

 

 

Jonathan Yanez is the author of the new novel Hard Reset. His many other books include the Hunters for Hire series.

 

Q: What inspired you to write Hard Reset, and how did you create your character Tom?

 

A: I’ve loved video games ever since I got my chubby little hands on a controller. The LitRPG genre is something that’s always been near and dear to me. Tom has been a fun character to create because he’s me and you. He’s not perfect but he’s trying so hard to do the next right thing.

 

Q: How did you create the world in which the novel takes place?

 

A: I wanted to start off in the least likely of places so a coffin seemed liked it fit the bill and a post-apoc alien setting gave me the freedom to draw outside the lines.

 

Q: Did you know how the novel would end before you started writing it, or did you make many changes along the way?

 

A: I don’t do a lot of outlining at all so I have no idea how things are going to end. I just trust the process and God always shows me the way.

 

I think that’s why writing is still fun for me 14 years into this career. I just write and I’m right there in the action with the characters almost reporting on what I’m seeing in my mind more than making it up. It’s crazy I know. I’ve accepted that.

 

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the book?

 

A: I write to give a sense of escape. The world can be a heavy place. I want to provide a haven for rest. I was just emailing a nurse who said she reads my books to relax. That meant the world to me.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: The next installment of our popular Hunters for Hire series is dropping late this year. It’s been a blast to get back into that series monster hunting with the team of characters.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: I love connecting with readers. Instagram @author_jonathan_yanez or our Facebook group https://www.facebook.com/groups/jonathansreadingwolves is a great way to stay in touch. I hope you decide to reach out.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Melanie Florence

  


 

 

Melanie Florence is the author of the new children's picture book Sarabeth's Garage. Her other books include Stolen Words. She is based in Toronto. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write Sarabeth’s Garage, and how did you create your character Sarabeth?

 

A: I was inspired by my dad. My dad knew all about cars and he collected classic cars and restored them. I lost my father a few years ago very suddenly and I think I just wanted to honour him in some way. I never learned how to fix cars .. but I know a few things about them thanks to him.

 

Besides my dad, I think I had this memory of being told girls couldn’t do something. I know my daughter has had the same experience in her life. That she should behave a certain way or dress a certain way.

 

I think things are changing and definitely have changed. But there are still people, like Sarabeth’s grandmother, who are stuck in this idea of gender norms. I wanted to challenge that.

 

Q: How would you describe the dynamic between Sarabeth and her grandmother?

 

A: Sarabeth loves her grandmother and her grandmother loves her. But her grandmother has this very limited idea of who Sarabeth should be. Luckily, she’s got parents who don’t limit her in the same way. And the grandmother learns a lesson from her granddaughter later in the book, which I think was important.

 

I think it can be hard to admit when you’re wrong, but it was really important to the story to see the grandmother change and grow.

 

Q: What do you think Nadia Alam’s illustrations add to the story?

 

A: Nadia’s illustrations match the text so perfectly. The illustrations are playful in a way that I didn’t even imagine when I wrote it. I honestly couldn’t have imagined a better illustrator for the book.

 

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the book?

 

A: I think I’d really like readers to put the book down and feel like you can do anything. No matter what anyone tells you, no matter what your dreams are, follow them.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I’m always working on a few things. Nothing specific and definitely nothing to tell yet. But I’ve got a YA novel and a few picture books in the works.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Feb. 11

 


 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY
Feb. 11, 1968: Mo Willems born.

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Q&A with Janie Chang

  

Photo by Ayelet Tsabari

 

 

Janie Chang is the author of the new novel The Fourth Princess. Her other books include The Porcelain Moon. She lives in British Columbia.

 

Q: What inspired you to write The Fourth Princess, and how did you create your characters Lisan and Caroline?

 

A: I’ve always loved Gothic novels and toyed with the idea of writing one, but never thought of setting such a story in China until I came across a photograph of Dennartt, a Western-style house built in 1899 on the outskirts of Shanghai by a wealthy Englishman.

 

One of the classic tropes in a Gothic novel is the mysterious mansion that holds a dark secret, and Dennartt seemed like the right house – with a few embellishments.

 

I created Caroline first, after reading about the railway disaster of 1910 in Wellington, Washington state, and thought about how different life would be if you survived such a tragedy.

 

As for Lisan, the year 1911 was the key. By 1912, the Qing empire would be no more, and China would be a republic. But in the months and years leading up to 1912, there was bound to be political intrigues, not to mention social changes as China tried to modernize. I imagined a young woman unwittingly caught up in the struggle for China’s fate.

 

Q: How did you research the novel, and what did you learn that especially surprised you?

 

A: For this novel, I spent a lot of time looking at photographs and descriptions of the grand Western-style houses, some of which are still standing today. Some of these homes were originally on huge lots. One property was described as being 10 acres in size, with its own stables for polo ponies and carriage horses.

 

What was unexpected though, was learning that wealthy Chinese also built Western-style homes in Shanghai, not traditional Chinese courtyard homes. These were sometimes spread out over several buildings to house four generations and all the family’s household servants.

 

But then, why should I have been surprised? Shanghai was the most westernized of all the cities in China. It makes sense that rich Chinese would want to show off their status by hiring foreign architects to design lavish, modern mansions.


Q: In our previous Q&A, you said of this novel, “After two novels set during the World Wars and one set during an earthquake, I want to work on something fun to write and fun to read.” How did your work on this novel compare with your work on some of your previous books?

 

A: Less research! I already knew quite a bit about Old Shanghai, thanks to previous research for earlier novels. And by its very nature, Gothic demands that that house should be the big source of atmosphere, of danger and tension.

 

But being a historical novelist, I have a tendency to gravitate toward using historical events – outside influences – as drivers of plot. So about one-third of the way through the first draft, I realized that too much history was diluting the Gothic mood, so I rewrote those chapters to bring focus back on the danger coming from within the house.

 

Q: What are some of your favorite Gothic novels?

 

A: Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre, and Rebecca are the classics. Newer titles would be The Lost History of Dreams by Kris Waldherr and Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: At this moment, I’m doing homework, which means research on the next solo book. And these days I need to clarify “solo” book since Kate Quinn and I have plans to collaborate on another book together.


Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Just that I’m really looking forward to going on book tour in Canada with Kate; her next book, The Astral Library, releases a week after The Fourth Princess, so the timing is fortuitous. We’ll get to travel together again!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Janie Chang. 

Q&A with Virginia Pye

  

Photo by Margaret Lampert

 

 

 

Virginia Pye is the author of the new novel Marriage and Other Monuments. Her other books include The Literary Undoing of Victoria Swann. She lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

 

Q: What inspired you to write Marriage and Other Monuments, and how did you create your cast of characters?

 

A: Marriage and Other Monuments is set in Richmond, Virginia, where my husband and I raised our two children and lived for 17 years. We moved there as Northerners who had never before lived in the South, though my mother was from South Carolina and my extended family are all Southerners.

 

Over our years there, we put down deep roots in Richmond, and came to love it as a terrific smaller city, with unique qualities and people.

 

I wasn’t in Richmond in the summer of 2020. I was locked down in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where we had moved in 2015. But I was deeply concerned about Richmond and as involved as I could be from afar.

 

Our son was living on his own by then, across the street from the J.E.B. Stuart statue on Monument Avenue. His apartment building suffered damage from an alley dumpster fire, presumably set by counter-protestors. Helicopters flew overhead many nights, and tear gas wafted outside his windows.

 

I was fearful for him, but I also respected the many people of all ages and races who came out to take part in the protests in a positive way. It was a complicated, painful, vivid summer.

 

Many nights I stayed up until one, two, three in the morning watching videos posted on Instagram by student journalists from VCU and others as they documented the marches, protests, and riots.

 

I followed the removal of the Confederate monuments closely, even alerting Richmond friends one morning when I saw online that a crew was on its way toward the Stonewall Jackson statue so they could witness the removal.

 

My long-distance interest prompted my imagination, resulting in this novel, entirely a work of fiction. None of my characters are based on real people and the precise details of the protests and marches that summer have been shaped by the story I invented in the novel.

 

Q: As you noted, the novel is set in Richmond in 2020--how important is setting to you in your writing?

 

A: Setting is everything. I’ve published two novels set in historic China and one novel in Gilded Age Boston—settings and time periods that I loved exploring. Those books required research to build a believable sense of those places.

 

Marriage and Other Monuments is set somewhere I know well from having lived there and visited over several decades. Way back in 2017, I wrote a novel that tried to capture the specialness of Richmond. My agent at the time tried to sell it without success. I kept hoping I could still place a story there.

 

When the events of the summer of 2020 took place, I knew it was time to return to Richmond in my imagination. I wanted to create a story that respects the city’s many complex qualities. 

 

Q: How was the book’s title chosen, and what does it signify for you?

 

A: While working on this novel, I called it Monuments and Marriages. Actually, early on in the process, I called it Of Monuments and Marriages, until an agent said that title sounded like a 19th century treatise. Too highbrow and old fashioned.

 

I sold the book as Monuments and Marriages but as I spoke with my editor, she helped me see that the title wasn’t dynamic enough. It was too static. In a phone call, we tossed around ideas for ways to riff on Monuments and Marriages.

 

I think I blurted out Marriage and Other Monuments and we both instantly knew that was the right title. It has the charge I’d hoped for. It asks unspoken questions: what does a marriage memorialize? What does a marriage stand for? What does a marriage signify?

 

People I know who’ve been married a long time immediately respond when they hear this title. They get it that a marriage is a construction—much like a literal monument—that has many meanings, some of which can feel set in stone.

 

Q: The writer Joanna Rakoff said of the book, “An engrossing, timely family saga, Virginia Pye’s Marriage and Other Monuments explores complicated truths about race and class—and love and desire—in the contemporary south, shining a brilliant light on the turmoil of 2020 through the lens of history.” What do you think of that description?

 

A: I’m flattered and pleased. It was my goal to tell a compelling, page-turning story that also touches on important contemporary themes, such as race and class in a Southern city.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: Crazily enough, I’ve gone back to a novel that I first wrote in the early 1990s. It was the second novel I ever wrote, and I put it aside when my first child was born.

 

Set in the 1980s, Making Love tells the story of a group of friends who move to New York City after college. It focuses on their entangled relationships, in particular a clandestine love affair between Amber—newly married to Richard, her college sweetheart—and her former lover, Don, who is bisexual and who, early in the novel, is diagnosed with AIDS.

 

When Amber learns this news, she becomes afraid that she, too, might be infected, which, at that time, could mean an early death. Out of fear for her own life, and guilt over her secret romance, she becomes caught up with a cult-like group that pushes participants to uncover past sexual traumas through group pressure, encouraging participants to break with their perceived abusers, often identified as their families.

 

As some readers will recall, in the ‘90s there was a wave of incest revelations and then counter positions that introduced the term “false memories.” I’m looking into all that business, as well as telling a story about a new marriage, and a young woman afraid to choose who to love.  

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: I hope that readers enjoy Marriage and Other Monuments and find it entertaining and thought-provoking. If you do enjoy it, I hope you’ll consider inviting me to in person or virtual book groups, bookstore visits, or other events. And drop a review on Amazon or Goodreads! And please feel free to reach out via my website: www.virginiapye.com. Happy reading!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Virginia Pye. 

Q&A with Seema Yasmin

  

Photo by Lucas Passmore

 

 

 

Seema Yasmin is the author of the new middle grade book Maysoon Zayid, The Girl Who Can Can. It's the first in her Muslim Mavericks series. Yasmin's other books include Unbecoming. She is also a physician and a journalist, and she lives in Las Vegas.

 

Q: What inspired you to write Maysoon Zayid, The Girl Who Can Can, which focuses on the comedian Maysoon Zayid?

 

A: I’ve long being a fan of Maysoon Zayid’s voice, her comedy, writing and activism. I am constantly inspired by her humor and refusal to be defined by other people’s expectations.

 

As soon as I had conceived the idea for the Muslim Mavericks middle grade series, it made sense for Maysoon to launch the entire series! I wanted kids to meet a disabled Palestinian comedian whose story is joyful, ambitious, and unapologetically her own; someone who expands what kids believe is possible.

 

Q: How did you research Maysoon Zayid’s life, and did you learn anything that especially surprised you?

 

A: I interviewed Maysoon, watched her stand-up comedy sets live and online, read her books, and researched cerebral palsy.

 

What surprised me most was how intentional she was as a child about imagining futures that went beyond imposed limitations. Her dreams were expansive in a way that kids will love reading about.

 

Q: What do you think Noha Habaieb’s illustrations add to the book?

 

A: Noha’s illustrations bring warmth, movement, and joy to Maysoon’s story. They capture her confidence and humor while also making disability visible in a way that feels natural and empowering rather than symbolic or instructional.

 

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the book?

 

A: I hope readers come away understanding that there is no single way to dream, succeed, or belong. Maysoon’s story shows that creativity, persistence, and joy can take many forms. Ultimately, I hope every person who engages with this book and other books in the Muslim Mavericks series is inspired to dream bigger.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: My own stand-up comedy shows! I’m also continuing to work on the Muslim Mavericks series while developing additional fiction and nonfiction projects for young readers which center curiosity, representation, and bold imagination.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Volume I of the Muslim Mavericks series is part of a larger commitment to telling Muslim stories that reflect real diversity, across disability, culture, personality, and ambition.

 

Maysoon Zayid, The Girl Who Can Can isn’t meant to stand alone as “the” Muslim story, but as one vibrant example among many. I hope it helps make space for even more voices to be heard. Inshallah!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb