The 2026
Tournament of Books
Shortlist

The books, judges, and Zombie Poll for the 2026 Tournament of Books, presented by Field Notes.

DECEMBER 11, 2025

Coming March 6, 2026: the 22nd installment of the Tournament of Books.

Welcome to the shortlist for the 2026 Tournament of Books, aka the Rooster, aka contemporary literature’s most meaningful (and somewhat meaningless) award.

Before we get going, a brief moment to thank—big time—our presenting sponsor Field Notes. If the ToB means something to you, please know that Field Notes and their support mean a lot to the Rooster—we recommend becoming annual subscribers, just like us!

FROM OUR SPONSOR


We’d also like to thank our Sustaining Members, who keep the show going. The ToB is a month-long extravaganza, but it requires about at least six months of pre-production—so we need you to join the crew today and play your part. Think of it this way: How much would you spend on a ticket to see your favorite performer, your favorite play? Now imagine that event lasted an entire month, and you got to spend the hours conversing with a friendly group of new friends!

Sustaining Members also receive 50 percent off everything at the Tournament of Books store, soon to be stocked with fresh 2026 merch. (They also receive our deep affection.)

Here’s how the Tournament works. Each weekday, starting March 6, two books from the shortlist are read and evaluated by one of our judges. One book is picked to advance to the next round, and the judge explains how they came to their decision, and then the commentariat—i.e., you—expresses their feelings and thoughts about that decision and the books themselves. And the next day we do it all over again. This goes on through the month of March, until our championship match, when our judges convene to decide which of the finalists wins the Tournament, and with it our prize, the Rooster.

One more thing: We need your Zombie vote before midnight Eastern on Thursday, Dec. 18. Because from the play-in round to the eight opening round matches, to the four quarterfinal matches, through the two semifinal matches, the field is whittled down to two finalists. However, before those books can enter the championship, they must endure a “Zombie Round,” which restores two books that were eliminated previously during gameplay. As to which books return, that’s up to your votes, using the form below. 

We’ll have a ton more to announce as the Tournament approaches, so make sure you’re signed up for the Rooster newsletter. Thanks for reading, and we’ll see you very soon!

THIS YEAR’S COMPETITORS

The 2026 Tournament of Books shortlist

The below book descriptions are excerpted from publishers’ summaries and edited for length. We get a cut from purchases made through the book links. Here is a spreadsheet of the full list as well as a Bookshop list.

  • Blob

    by Maggie Su

    Outside a bar, Vi Liu discovers a strange blob—a small creature with beady black eyes. She takes it home. No ordinary pet, the blob begins to grow, shift shape, and obey Vi’s commands. Vi is struck with a daring idea: She’ll mold the creature into her ideal partner. Feeding it a stream of sweet breakfast cereals and American pop culture, the creature grows into a movie-star handsome white man. But when Vi’s desire to be loved unconditionally spirals out of control, she enters a journey of self-discovery that teaches her it’s impossible to control those you love.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • The Buffalo Hunter Hunter

    by Stephen Graham Jones

    A diary, written in 1912 by a Lutheran pastor, is discovered within a wall. What it unveils is a slow massacre, a chain of events that go back to 217 Blackfeet dead in the snow. Told in transcribed interviews by a Blackfeet named Good Stab, who shares the narrative of his peculiar life over a series of confessional visits.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • The Burning Heart of the World

    by Nancy Kricorian

    Returning to the fabular tone of Zabelle, her popular first novel, Kricorian conjures up the lost worlds and intergenerational traumas that haunt a family in permanent exile. Leavened with humor and imbued with the timelessness of a folktale, The Burning Heart of the World is a sweeping saga that takes readers on an epic journey from the mountains of Cilicia to contemporary New York City.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • The Catch

    by Yrsa Daley-Ward

    Twins Clara and Dempsey have always struggled to relate, their bond severed after their mother vanished into the Thames. As infants they were adopted into different families, Clara sent to live with an upper-class couple, and Dempsey with an unaffectionate city councilor. In adulthood, they are content to be all but estranged, until Clara sees a woman who looks exactly like their mother on the streets of London. The catch: This version of Serene, aged not a day, has enjoyed a childless life—the very life, it seems, she might have had if the girls had never been born.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • The Director

    by Daniel Kehlmann, translated by Ross Benjamin

    To escape the horrors of Nazi Germany, G.W. Pabst fled to Hollywood. But now, under the blinding California sun, the world-famous director suddenly looks like a nobody. Not even Greta Garbo, the Hollywood actress whom he made famous, can help him. When his elderly mother falls ill, he finds himself back in Austria. Pabst, his wife, and his young son are suddenly confronted with the barbaric nature of the regime. So, when Joseph Goebbels sees the potential for using the European film icon and makes big promises to Pabst and his family, Pabst must consider Goebbels’s thinly veiled order.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • Endling

    by Maria Reva

    Ukraine, 2022. Yeva is maverick scientist, trying to breed rare snails and funding her work by entertaining Westerners who come to Ukraine on guided romance tours believing they’ll find docile brides. Nastia and her sister, Solomiya, are also entangled in the booming marriage industry, posing as a hopeful bride and her translator while searching for their missing mother. Together they embark across hundreds of miles: three angry women, a truckful of kidnapped bachelors, and Lefty, a last-of-his-kind snail with one final shot at perpetuating his species. But their plans come to a screeching halt when Russia invades.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • Flesh

    by David Szalay

    Teenaged István lives with his mother in a quiet apartment complex in Hungary. Shy and new in town, he is a stranger to the social rituals practiced by his classmates and is soon isolated, drawn instead into a series of events that leave him forever a stranger to peers, his mother, and himself. In the years that follow, István is born along by the goodwill, or self-interest, of strangers, charting a rocky yet upward trajectory that lands him further from his childhood, and the defining events that abruptly ended it, than he could possibly have imagined.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • Katabasis

    by R. F. Kuang

    Alice has only ever had one goal: to become one of the brightest minds in the field of Magick. She has sacrificed everything to make that a reality, all to work with Professor Jacob Grimes, the greatest magician in the world. That is, until he dies in a magical accident that could possibly be her fault. Grimes is now in Hell, and she’s going in after him. Because his recommendation could hold her very future in his now incorporeal hands and even death is not going to stop the pursuit of her dreams.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • Metallic Realms

    by Lincoln Michel

    Written by Michael Lincoln’s best friend and his misfit science fiction writing group, the Orb 4, The Star Rot Chronicles follow Captain Baldwin and his crew on their adventures across the Metallic Realms. These masterpieces have gone tragically unpublished—until now. But behind the greatest universe ever created, there are the all-too-mortal people who wrote it. As Michael chronicles the personal melodramas of the Orb 4 as well as the fun house reflections in their fiction, the line between real and unreal becomes dangerously thin, and the true reasons for the group’s fallout begin to emerge.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • The Passenger Seat

    by Vijay Khurana

    Two teenagers leave their small town on a vaguely charted road trip through the northern wilderness, with little more than canned food, second-hand camping gear, and the rifle they buy for reasons neither can articulate. The more they handle the gun, and the farther they get from their parents and peers, girlfriends and online gaming, the less their actions—and the games, literal and metaphorical, they play—are bound by the usual constraints. When one decides to harass a young couple they meet on the highway, the encounter leads them down a road from which there’s no coming back.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • The Ten Year Affair

    by Erin Somers

    When Cora meets Sam at a baby group in their small town, the chemistry between them is undeniable. Both are happily married young parents with two kids, and neither sees themselves as the type to engage in an affair. Yet their connection grows stronger, and as their lives continue to intertwine, the romantic tension between them becomes all-consuming—until their worlds unravel into two parallel timelines. In one, they pursue their feelings. In the other, they resist.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • Too Soon

    by Betty Shamieh

    Thirty-five-year-old Arabella, a New York theatre director whose dating and career prospects are drying up, is offered an opportunity to direct a risqué cross-dressing interpretation of a Shakespeare classic—that might garner international attention—in the West Bank. Her mother, Naya, and grandmother, Zoya, hatch a plot to match her with Aziz, a Palestinian American doctor volunteering in Gaza. Arabella agrees to meet Aziz, since her growing feelings for Yoav, a celebrated Israeli American theatre designer, seem destined for disaster.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • The Unveiling

    by Quan Barry

    Striker isn’t entirely sure she should be on this luxury Antarctic cruise. A Black film scout, her mission is to photograph potential locations for a big-budget movie about Ernest Shackleton’s doomed expedition. But when a kayaking excursion goes horribly wrong, Striker and a group of survivors become stranded on a remote island along the Antarctic Peninsula. Soon the hostile environment will show each survivor their true face, and as the polar ice thaws in the unseasonable warmth, the group’s secrets, prejudices, and inner demons will also emerge, including revelations from Striker’s past that could irrevocably shatter her world.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • What We Can Know

    by Ian McEwan

    Just over 100 years in the future, much of the Western world has been submerged by rising seas following a catastrophic nuclear accident. Those who survive are haunted by the richness of the world that has been lost. In the waterlogged south of what used to be England, scholar and researcher Thomas Metcalfe longs for the early 21st century as he chases the ghost of one poem, “A Corona for Vivien.” When he stumbles across a clue that may lead to the elusive poem’s discovery, a story is revealed of entangled loves and a brutal crime.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • The Wilderness

    by Angela Flournoy

    Desiree, January, Monique, and Nakia are in their early twenties and at the beginning. Of their careers, of marriage, of motherhood, and of big-city lives in New York and Los Angeles. Together, they are finding their way through the wilderness, that period of life when the reality of contemporary adulthood swoops in and stays. As these friends move from the late 2000s into the late 2020s, from young adults to grown women, they must figure out what they mean to one another—amid political upheaval, economic and environmental instability, and the increasing volatility of modern American life.

    Buy at Bookshop

The play-in round

This year’s theme is “the Academy, 2025–2026 edition”

  • If You Love It, Let It Kill You

    by Hannah Pittard

    One day, Hana learns an unflattering version of herself will appear prominently in her ex-husband’s debut novel. For a week, her life continues largely unaffected by the news—she cooks, runs, teaches, entertains—but the morning after baking mac ’n’ cheese for her nephew’s sixth birthday, she wakes up changed. The contentment she’s long enjoyed is gone. A remarkably ridiculous midlife crisis ensues, featuring a talking cat, a visit to the dean’s office, a shadowy figure from the past, a Greek chorus of indignant students whose primary complaints concern Hana’s autofictional narrative, and a game called Dead Body.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • The Mind Reels

    by Fredrik deBoer

    In a dorm room at her safety school, surrounded by corn-fed boys and contemptuous girls, Alice is losing her mind. Her first semester is spent clinging to middling grades between drunken hookups and roommate fights. The next brings sleepless nights, extreme weight loss, and effortless, compulsive energy, paused only by an unexpected summoning from the RA for evaluation. Thus begins an endless march of lithium, antidepressants, and Klonopin; doctors and therapists—when health insurance allows—along with overwhelmed parents and well-intentioned friends; all helpless bystanders as Alice descends deeper into chaos.

    Buy at Bookshop

  • We Love You, Bunny

    by Mona Awad

    Sam has just published her first novel to critical acclaim. But at a New England stop on her book tour, her one-time frenemies, furious at the way they’ve been portrayed, kidnap her. Now a captive audience, it’s her (and our) turn to hear the Bunnies’ side of the story. One by one, they take turns holding the axe, and recount the birth throes of their unholy alliance, their discovery of their unusual creative powers—and the phantasmagoric adventure of conjuring their first creation.

    Buy at Bookshop

WIELDING THE GAVELS

Our 2026 Judges

  • ​​Danny Abel

    ​​Danny Abel is a documentary director and editor based in Echo Park, Los Angeles. His most recent film, The King of North Sudan, was produced by Rough House Pictures (Danny McBride, David Gordon Green, Jody Hill, Adam Bhala Lough) and was distributed in over a dozen countries. His recent editing work includes blur: To The End and Liam Gallagher: Knebworth ’22, which premiered in cinemas worldwide and on Sky Arts and Paramount+, respectively. His current film, Made for You, explores romantic relationships between humans and their AI companions.

    goodmotorist.com
    Instagram @deerayabel

  • Katya Apekina

    Katya Apekina is a novelist, screenwriter and translator. Her debut novel, The Deeper the Water the Uglier the Fish, was named a Best Book of 2018 by Kirkus, BuzzFeed, LitHub, and others and was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. Her second novel, Mother Doll, was named a Best Book of 2024 by Vogue. She translated poetry and prose for Night Wraps the Sky: Writings by and about Mayakovsky (FSG, 2008), shortlisted for the Best Translated Book Award. Born in Moscow, she grew up in Boston, and currently lives in Los Angeles with her husband, daughter, and dog.

    apekina.com

  • Neelanjana Banerjee

    Neelanjana Banerjee’s writing has appeared in Alta Journal, Harper’s Bazaar, Teen Vogue, the Texas Observer, and many other places. She is the Managing Editor of Kaya Press, where she just launched Kulhar Books—an imprint dedicated to South Asian diasporic literature.

    Instagram @neelanjanab

  • Sarah Anjum Bari

    Sarah Anjum Bari is a Bangladeshi writer, editor, and educator in her final year of the University of Iowa’s Nonfiction Writing MFA Program, where she has been teaching literary publishing and creative writing. She was Books & Literary Editor of The Daily Star newspaper. Sarah’s writing spans memoir, narrative journalism, and literary and cultural criticism. Her essay, “Strains,” was shortlisted for the UK's Queen Mary Wasafiri New Writing Prize 2024.

    Bluesky @wordsinteal.bsky.social
    Instagram @wordsinteal

  • Nicholas Bredie

    Nicholas Bredie is the author of the novel Not Constantinople (Dzanc) and with Joanna Howard the translator of Frederic Boyer's Vaches, published as Cows (Noemi Press). His work has been featured in the Kenyon Review, Ploughshares, Guernica, the Believer, and Public Books, among other publications. He is an Assistant Professor of English and Creative Writing at Utah Valley University.

  • Susannah Breslin

  • Alex Brown

    Alex Brown is a queer Black librarian, local historian, writer, and author. They are an Ignyte Award-winning and Hugo Award-nominated writer and critic who covers speculative fiction and young adult literature for Reactor magazine, Locus Magazine, NPR Books, Reader’s Digest, and elsewhere. They also write on topics such as queerness, Black history, librarianship, and pop culture.

    bookjockeyalex.com
    Bluesky @bookjockeyalex.bsky.social
    Instagram @bookjockeyalex

  • Leon Hendrix

    Leon Hendrix III is a writer, director, and producer who has developed TV projects, written films, and worked in TV writers’ rooms for Netflix, Warner Brothers, Apple, Paramount, Universal, Amazon, HBO, and Lionsgate for nearly a decade. Recently, he was a Producer on Kurt Sutter’s Netflix western series The Abandons, and he’s currently in post-production on his first feature film as a director. Whenever he’s not writing TV and film, he teaches all things film and TV for programs such as Columbia University Film, Hampton University, Northwestern National High School Institute, and Ghetto Film School and Inner City Arts; travels the world; hikes; hunts; and explores the outdoors.

  • Cassandra Lane

    Cassandra Lane is winner of the 2020 Louise Meriwether First Book Prize and author of We Are Bridges, an NPR Books pick. Her stories have appeared in the New York Times’s “Conception” series, the Los Angeles Times, MSNBC, LitHub, the Millions, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and various anthologies, including Writing the Golden State: The New Literary Terrain of California. A Louisiana native and former newspaper reporter, she is currently editor in chief of L.A. Parent magazine and lives in Los Angeles with her family.

    cassandralane.net
    Instagram @cassandra.lane71

  • Sam Macon

    Sam Macon is a filmmaker, writer, and photographer from Milwaukee, Wis., but he now lives in Los Angeles, Calif., for better or worse. Mostly better. He is the co-director of the documentary film Sign Painters and co-author of the companion book published by Princeton Architectural Press. In addition to directing countless commercials, music videos, and short films, he makes bootleg hats with book titles on them and tries to get better at tennis while raising a family.

    sammacon.com
    Instagram @sam_macon

  • Geoff Manaugh

    Geoff Manaugh is a Los Angeles-based freelance writer, author of the New York Times-bestselling book A Burglar's Guide to the City, and co-author, with Nicola Twilley, of Until Proven Safe: The History and Future of Quarantine, a Time magazine, NPR, Guardian, and Financial Times book of the year. Manaugh regularly writes for venues such as the New York Times Magazine, the Atlantic, MIT Technology Review, the New Yorker, and many others. His short story “Ernest” was adapted by Netflix into a feature film called We Have a Ghost. He is currently working on a new book, about archaeology in an age of electromagnetic sensing.

    bldgblog.com

  • Sarah McCarry

    Sarah McCarry is a writer. Her newest novel, Possession Island, is forthcoming in 2026.

    sarahmccarry.net
    Bluesky @sarahmccarry.bsky.social
    Instagram @sarahmccarry

  • Tomi Onabanjo

    Tomi Onabanjo is a doctoral candidate in the Dept. of History at New York University (NYU). He is also a Primary Editor at the Journal of the History of Ideas (JHI) Blog, a Burbank-Cooper Research Fellow, and a former National Book Critics Circle (NBCC) Emerging Critic. His writing has appeared in The European Review of Books, the Chicago Review of Books, and Electric Literature.

  • Deesha Philyaw

    Deesha Philyaw’s debut short story collection, The Secret Lives of Church Ladies, won the 2021 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction, the 2020/2021 Story Prize, and the 2020 Los Angeles Times Book Prize: The Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction, and was a finalist for the 2020 National Book Award for Fiction. Deesha’s debut novel, The True Confessions of First Lady Freeman, is forthcoming from Mariner Books, an imprint of HarperCollins, in September 2026.

    deeshaphilyaw.com

  • Lilliam Rivera

    Lilliam Rivera is an award-winning author of nine works of fiction: a dark thriller, four young adult novels, three middle-grade books, and a graphic novel for DC Comics. Her books have been awarded a Pura Belpré Honor, been featured on NPR, the New Yorker, the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, and multiple “best of” lists. Her latest novel is Tiny Threads by Del Rey Books. A Bronx, NY, native, Lilliam currently lives in Los Angeles.

    lilliamrivera.com

  • Natalie Shapero

    Natalie Shapero is the author, most recently, of the poetry collection Stay Dead, long-listed for the National Book Award and shortlisted for the TS Eliot Prize. She lives in LA and teaches writing at UC Irvine.

    natalieshapero.com
    Instagram @ok.natalie.shapero

  • Spencer Williams

    Spencer Williams is the author of TRANZ (Four Way Books, 2024) and the forthcoming poetry collection Dirt Talk (Four Way Books, 2027). She is currently a Ph.D. candidate in poetics at SUNY, Buffalo.

MOSTLY DEAD IS SLIGHTLY ALIVE

The Zombie poll

Which book should come back for a second chance at this year’s Rooster? Tell us before midnight Eastern on Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025.