Skip to Content

First Novel Friday: Optional Practical Training, Good Girl, and Sky Daddy

April 4, 2025

On the first Friday of each month, we celebrate and launch a selection of the best debut novels published today. For our April First Novel Friday, we were thrilled to welcome Nicole Caplain Kelly, Writing Programs Manager at The Center for Fiction, as the evening’s moderator.


April’s Featured Debuts:

Good Girl by Aria Aber
In Berlin’s artistic underground, where techno and drugs fill warehouses still pockmarked from the wars of the twentieth century, nineteen-year-old Nila at last finds her tribe. Born in Germany to Afghan parents, raised in public housing graffitied with swastikas, drawn to philosophy, photography, and sex, Nila has spent her adolescence disappointing her family while searching for her voice as a young woman and artist. Then, in the haze of Berlin’s legendary nightlife, Nila meets Marlowe, an American writer whose fading literary celebrity opens her eyes to a life of personal and artistic freedom. But as Nila finds herself pulled further into Marlowe’s controlling orbit, ugly, barely submerged racial tensions begin to roil Germany—and Nila’s family and community. After a year of running from her future, Nila stops to ask herself the most important question: Who does she want to be?

Sky Daddy by Kate Folk
Linda knows that she can’t tell anyone she’s sexually obsessed with planes. Nor can she reveal her belief that it’s her destiny to “marry” one of her suitors by dying in a plane crash, a catastrophic event that would unite her with her soulmate plane for eternity. But when an opportunity arises to hasten her dream of eternal partnership, and the carefully balanced elements of her life begin to spin out of control, she must choose between maintaining the trappings of normalcy and launching herself headlong toward the love she’s always dreamed of. Both subversive and unexpectedly heartwarming, Sky Daddy hijacks the classic love story, exploring desire, fate, and the longing to be accepted for who we truly are.

Optional Practical Training by Shubha Sunder
An insightful exploration of one young woman’s post-graduate experience in America. Pavitra, who came to the US for college from Bangalore, India, is allowed an additional twelve months on her student visa to acquire work experience, a period known as Optional Practical Training. Despite taking a job as a private school math and physics teacher, Pavitra wants to begin building her life as a writer. As she navigates her first year as a working adult, she learns that everyone she encounters—her landlord, her friends, parents of her students—expects something from her. Her understanding of race, immigration, privilege, and herself, is shaped throughout the story, which is told as a series of conversations.

Featuring

  • Sunder, Shubha (Chris McIntosh) PUBLICITY

    Shubha Sunder

    Shubha Sunder

    Shubha Sunder is the author of Boomtown Girl, a story collection set in her hometown of Bangalore, India, that won the 2021 St. Lawrence Book Award. She lives in Boston, Massachusetts, with her family.


    Photo Credit: Chris McIntosh

  • Aria Aber (color) credit Natalie Aber

    Aria Aber

    Aria Aber

    Aria Aber was born and raised in Germany and now lives in the United States. Her debut poetry collection, Hard Damage, won the Prairie Schooner Book Prize and the Whiting Award. She is a former Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford and graduate student at USC, and her writing has appeared in the New Yorker, New Republic, the Yale Review, Granta, and elsewhere. Raised speaking Farsi and German, she writes in her third language, English. She recently joined the faculty of the University of Vermont as an assistant professor of Creative Writing and divides her time between Vermont and Brooklyn.


    Photo Credit: Natalie Aber

  • 068_KateFolk041524_photobyAndriaLo

    Kate Folk

    Kate Folk

    Kate Folk is the author of the short story collection Out There. Her work has appeared in the New Yorker, the New York Times, Granta, McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern, and Zyzzyva. A former Stegner Fellow at Stanford University, she’s also received support from the Headlands Center for the Arts, MacDowell, and Willapa Bay AiR. She lives in San Francisco.


    Photo Credit: Andria Lo

  • C9A42F6A-80BB-4908-BFAD-64866011089B

    Nicole Caplain Kelly

    Nicole Caplain Kelly

    Nicole Caplain Kelly is a recent Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University. She won the fellowship in her final semester of the graduate Writing program at Columbia University where she was nominated for the Henfield Prize and earned her MFA. Nicole studied English Literature as an undergraduate at the University of Oxford. Currently, while running the Writing Programs at The Center for Fiction, Nicole teaches for UC Berkeley’s Certificate Creative Writing Program and is at work on her first novel.