The three writers debut with works of disparate imagery but similar tonal crossroads, which open peaceful, calm and broad questions. In Children of the Future, Andrea Toribio brings something between autofiction and self-parody; the story of someone who grows as a reader, despite the precariousness that adult life offers her.

In Tenderness, by Paula Ducay, the title evokes the teacher Annie Ernaux, one of the authors who has most correctly chosen her name for her stories. In Bad Star, by Julia Viejo, the story he presents to us exposes us to many conflicts and the complexities of upbringing, which ensures a calm calm in contemporary novels. In Naima, by Naim Naim, the protagonist spends the hundred and a few pages of the book unraveling knots and making us understand that, before throwing everything overboard, we should wait to see all the shades that the sky can offer us. The Occupation, The Shame, The Event, and La ternura are the first novels by Andrea Torbio, Paula Ducay and Julia Viejo.