Building on earlier coverage of anticipated March 2026 titles, the New York Times has highlighted 27 notable new releases spanning diverse genres and prominent authors. Key picks include new works by Ibram X. Kendi and Tayari Jones, alongside a Judy Blume biography. This comes amid publishing challenges, such as the postponement of a major diversity survey.
The New York Times' roundup, praised by Book Riot as a strong month for publishing, features high-profile selections like Ibram X. Kendi's latest on race and equity, and a biography of Judy Blume, influential in children's and YA literature. Standouts include Whidbey by T Kira Madden, a crime novel delving into sexual trauma through multiple perspectives centered on Birdie Chang's confrontation with her abuser, and Kin by Tayari Jones, exploring sisterhood and community among Black women in the American South via protagonists Vernice and Anne. Other notables: The Valley of Vengeful Ghosts by Kim Fu.
Women.com lauds Whidbey's lyrical prose on trauma's legacy. These complement broader March releases previously covered, emphasizing accessibility across mystery, romance, historical fiction, and more.
In industry news, Lee & Low Books—largest U.S. multicultural children's publisher—has indefinitely postponed its Diversity Baseline Survey (every four years since 2015). Publisher Jason Low told Publishers Weekly the priority is combating book bans via diverse publishing and Freedom to Read support, as bans target BIPOC and queer titles. This underscores a vibrant yet challenged month in books.