NEW YORK (AP) — In the decade since she published her acclaimed debut novel, “The Turner House,” Angela Flournoy has confronted a few delays, welcome and otherwise, en route to completing her second book: her first child, a pandemic, speaking engagements, the occasional essay and, throughout, the challenges of creating a work of imagination.

“With nonfiction, you're usually doing it on a deadline, there's a constraint of time, and when it's over, it's over,” says Flournoy, whose novel “The Wilderness” is out this fall. “When you're working with facts, they're not really malleable. But with novels I create the reality. And the timing is up to me.”

The upcoming literary season will feature many books you might call long- or eagerly awaited: It will be in part a story of comebacks, comple

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