A curated selection of 13 book releases for March 2026 emphasizes women's lives, voices, and stories during Women's History Month. The list includes memoirs, novels, poetry, and nonfiction, with most adult prose titles exceeding 300 pages. Publications are scheduled on Tuesdays, avoiding competition with St. Patrick's Day.
March 2026 features a focused lineup of books highlighting women, as outlined in a recent curation for Women's History Month. The selection spans genres such as memoir, literary fiction, mystery, poetry, fantasy, and nonfiction, offering readers diverse perspectives on women's experiences.
Releases begin on March 3 with several titles: Christina Applegate's memoir "You with the Sad Eyes" (Little, Brown and Company, 308 pages) details her life in the public eye, including her role as Kelly Bundy in "Married... with Children" and her multiple sclerosis diagnosis. Alicia Jo Rabins' memoir "When We’re Born We Forget Everything" (Penguin Random House, 304 pages) explores her journey from musician to spiritual quester. Sujata Massey's historical mystery "The Star from Calcutta" (Soho Crime, 384 pages) centers on sleuth Perveen Mistry amid Bollywood-era glamour. Elizabeth Arnott's domestic noir "The Secret Lives of Murderers’ Wives" (Berkley, 320 pages) examines marriage and complicity. Tae Keller's young adult novel "When Tomorrow Burns" (Penguin Random House, 272 pages) addresses friendship amid destruction; Keller, a Newbery Medal winner, is based in Seattle.
On March 10, Alice Martin's debut speculative novel "Westward Women" (St. Martin’s Press) features a mysterious infection affecting women, praised by Joyce Carol Oates as "an audacious first novel to set beside Margaret Atwood." Allison Pataki's historical novel "It Girl" (Ballantine Books, 416 pages) traces the life of the first "It Girl," touching on glamour and ambition. Kiersten White's fantasy "The Fox and the Devil" (Del Rey, 368 pages) incorporates gothic, sapphic, and vampire elements.
March 24 brings Rachel Zoffness' nonfiction "Tell Me Where It Hurts" (Grand Central Publishing, 336 pages), a guide to pain science from the UCSF professor. Maggie Smith's poetry collection "A Suit or a Suitcase" (Washington Square Press, 128 pages) offers intimate observations. Kiran Millwood Hargrave's novel "Almost Life" (Summit Books, 384 pages) follows a romance sparked in 1978 Paris.
Closing the month on March 31 are Kory Stamper's nonfiction "True Color" (Knopf, 320 pages), exploring color definitions and language's role in power, and Kirsten King's literary novel "A Good Person" (Penguin Random House, 304 pages), blending magic and irony from the Boston-to-LA screenwriter.
This stack provides accessible reads across women's-centered themes, from personal struggles to escapist tales.