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First Novel Friday: The Delicate Beast, Ibis, and The Persians

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Friday, 6:00 pm EDT March 7, 2025

The Center for Fiction
& Livestreamed

Members of The Center for Fiction receive early access to First Novel Friday tickets. Not a member yet? Join today!


On the first Friday of the month, join us as we celebrate and launch a selection of the best debut novels published today. Be among the first to discover boundary-pushing and world-expanding work from exciting new voices in fiction.

Kick off the weekend with a happy hour at our cash bar for ticket holders in our Members Lounge starting at 6pm. Then, at 7pm, we’ll move to our auditorium for readings from the featured debut novelists, followed by a short moderated conversation. The party continues with book signings and signature cocktails to round out the night. Go home with something new—a book, a friend, a favorite Friday night tradition. Purchase all three featured debuts with 15% off the bundle on the night of the event.

For this month’s First Novel Friday, we are thrilled to welcome author Melissa Broder (Death Valley) as the evening’s moderator. Space is limited, so reserve your spot today!

We offer two in-person ticket options: the $5 Community Ticket and the $15+ Supporter Ticket. Both provide the same access, but if you’re able, we kindly suggest registering for the Supporter Ticket to help sustain our programs for emerging writers.


March’s Featured Debuts:

The Delicate Beast by Roger Celestin
A story of exile following the escape from a violent fate, The Delicate Beast portrays the pernicious legacy of political violence. Set in the 1950s Tropical Republic, the reign of The Mortician brings an end to a boy’s childhood of opulence and privilege; narrowly escaping the terror inflicted on many of his fellow citizens, the boy and his family flee to the United States in search of a fresh start. As time passes, the boy fails to feel at home, and so he leaves for Europe, away from his family and away from the ghosts of his past.

Ibis by Justin Haynes
There is bad luck in New Felicity. The people of the small coastal village have taken in Milagros, an 11-year-old Venezuelan refugee, just as Trinidad’s government has begun cracking down on undocumented migrants—and now an American journalist has come to town asking questions. A meditation on mother-daughter dynamics amidst the world’s contemporary migrant crisis, Ibis explores the merging of where we come from with who we become.

The Persians by Sanam Mahloudji
The Persians is a story rooted in dichotomy; in Iran, the Valiats were somebodies, but in America, they’re nobodies. Centered around the family’s five women, The Persians is a profound, and at times satirical, portrait of a family whose status quo is cracked open after a stint in jail during a yearly vacation. Heartbreakingly sad with an acerbically witty edge, The Persians questions history’s grip on our lives, and whether we actually ever want to free ourselves from the past.

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Featuring

  • --CELESTIN

    Roger Celestin

    Roger Celestin

    Roger Celestin is an author, translator, editor, and professor emeritus at the University of Connecticut. He has published several academic books and numerous articles on subjects ranging from cannibals and detective fiction to feminist theory and movies. The Delicate Beast is his first novel. He lives in Hell’s Kitchen, Manhattan.

  • Justin Haynes (c) Vera Kutzinski

    Justin Haynes

    Justin Haynes

    Justin Haynes was born in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, and later moved to Brooklyn, New York. Having earned his MFA from Notre Dame, he continued his graduate studies at Vanderbilt University. He has been awarded various fiction residencies and fellowships, including from the Fine Arts Work Center, the Vermont Studio Center, the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing, the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts, and the Tin House Summer Workshop. His writing has been published in a variety of literary magazines and journals, including Caribbean Quarterly, SX Salon Small Axe Project, and PREE. Haynes lives in Atlanta and teaches English at Oglethorpe University.


    Photo Credit: Vera Kutzinski

  • Sanam Mahloudji credit Amaal Said

    Sanam Mahloudji

    Sanam Mahloudji

    Sanam Mahloudji was born in Tehran, which she left during the Islamic Revolution, and was raised in Los Angeles. She is the recipient of the Pushcart Prize and was nominated for a PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers. Her writing has appeared in McSweeney’s, the Idaho Review, the Kenyon Review, and elsewhere. She now lives in London with her husband and two children. The Persians is her debut novel.


    Photo Credit: Amaal Said