North Carolina Bookstores

April May June July by Alison B. Hart

I have never read a book quite like this. This close family of six is like any other family until tragedy strikes when their father disappears in the Middle East with no trace. So many times, tragedy can rip a family apart, and so this family comes apart. The CIA gets involved, and people are actively trying to find their beloved father, but time passes and he is not found. Years later one of the daughters is getting married and wants her family involved. Her mom tries to help out to no avail. Life has taken each of the four siblings on a ride, and they are caught up in their own drama. What will unravel the negativity they have for each other? Is their dad alive? How can they go on without knowing? This thriller is like no other I have ever read. You will love it.

April May June July by Alison B. Hart, (List Price: $28.99, Graydon House, 9781525804274, May 2024)

Reviewed by Suzanne Lucey, Page 158 Books in Wake Forest, North Carolina

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The Deep Dark by Molly Knox Ostertag

This is the best type of graphic novel, where it drives you to tears, but with it comes a kind of catharsis. Mags has a secret, one with sharp teeth and the potential to hurt. Nessa, her childhood best friend, was the only one who learned of it, and now she’s back, armed with questions about that secret and everything that happened all those years ago. Reading this and bearing witness to their solace found in vulnerability was a bit like communion – coming home and finding peace with someone who knows the scariest parts of you.

The Deep Dark by Molly Knox Ostertag, (List Price: $16.99, Graphix, 9781338839999, June 2024)

Reviewed by Jordan April, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

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I Heard by Jaha Nailah Avery

So many stories. It reminds me of The Undefeated by Kwame Alexander, and the rhymes and cadence of I Heard make it a wonderful pick for a read-aloud. One of our storyteller friends says some picture books are meant to be read with the people sitting right next to you, and others translate up from that to be told to a big crowd of listeners. This one, with its sonorous title, is meant to be proclaimed, and the detail in the illustrations by Walthall begs another go-through to see all the faces.

I Heard by Jaha Nailah Avery, (List Price: $17.99, Charlesbridge, 9781623543822, April 2024)

Reviewed by Lisa Yee Swope, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

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The Mother of All Things by Alexis Landau

A lovely book about a woman leaning to find herself after losing her moorings in motherhood and marriage. This book is good. The suggestions of Greek Myth woven into the story are interesting but the story is much more about the marriage and motherhood than it is about Goddess and Greek Myth. The selected sources in the back are of great interest to anyone interested in those subjects and the story stands strong on its own as one woman reckoning with her choices in the past and every day.

The Mother of All Things by Alexis Landau, (List Price: 29, Pantheon, 9780593700792, May 2024)

Reviewed by Kimberly Daniels, The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, North Carolina

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Built to Last by Minh Lê

A delightful story about friendship and the power of imagination! I love that even after their grand plans fail again and again, the two protagonists rely on each other and trust in their friendship. This book is so beautifully illustrated, like all books Dan Santat illustrates!

Built to Last by Minh Lê, (List Price: $18.99, Knopf Books for Young Readers, 9780593569177, April 2024)

Reviewed by Kate Storhoff, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

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The Band by Christine Ma-Kellams

Anyone who has an idol has dreamed of finding them, alone and down on their luck, and becoming the only person they can trust. In many books this is the start of a daydream romance. In The Band, it is the start of dizzying, darkly humorous nightmare. Ma-Kellams’ fiction debut is an incisive examination of stardom, fandom, and parasocial relationships, both in K-pop and in ways applicable to a wide array of cultural phenomena, and it goes deeper than the hand-wringing to be found on social media. This book lays bare what drives real people to adore, and ultimately strive to possess, the projected “selves” of celebrities: dissatisfaction with reality that stems from loneliness, unhappiness, and the desire to adore and be adored at a level impossible to truly achieve. Our elusive narrator does not step fully into the frame until chapter seven, but she relates the interlocking histories of two Kpop groups with intimate knowledge that suggests either that she is omniscient or practicing the stan’s art of investigating and projecting what goes on behind the scenes of fame. As brutally honest–or at least blunt–as she can be, the narrator hardly touches on the most emotionally charged moments of her life, the roots of her own discontent. She breezes past them with (feigned?) nonchalance or elides them with footnotes and hints about her “next novel.” She appears to bare all while dodging true vulnerability–and isn’t that the point? She, like so many, is standing on the precipice of relinquishing herself to fantasy. Ma-Kellams’ prose is arch and clever, studded with research and footnotes, but it never feels overdone or gimmicky. The style is true to the novel’s heart. Her turns of phrase alternately made me laugh out loud and marvel at the depth of insight in a handful of words. While white American celebrities get special treatment, Korean celebrities in LA do not: “If said talent hails from some other part of the world, on the other hand, everyone gets treated as an equal, meaning, a nobody. The opposite of a somebody is an egalitarian.” It is ultimately this book’s compassion that allows its cultural critique to land. We see real sadness and human need in our narrator and her wayward celebrity houseguest. We see the real human cost of the system that entices and entraps idols and their idolators. I devoured this book in a few sittings, but I will be thinking about it for much, much longer.

The Band by Christine Ma-Kellams, (List Price: $27, Atria Books, 9781668018378, April 2024)

Reviewed by Luca Rhatigan, Epilogue: Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

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The Ballad of Never After by Stephanie Garber

I loved Once Upon A Broken Heart and was very excited to receive a review copy of The Ballad of Never After. Stephanie Garber has done an amazing job of bringing fairy tales to life along with the curses intertwined within them. Garber didn’t just bring one story to life but a story within a story, within another story. Fairy tales are not all gold and glitter, and you see this more so in The Ballad of Never After. You fall in love with all the characters, whether they are “good” or “bad.” I really hope there is a third book in this series, and I am impatiently waiting for it.

The Ballad of Never After by Stephanie Garber, (List Price: $13.99, Flatiron Books, 9781250268433, March 2024)

Reviewed by Mandy Harris, Angel Wings Bookstore in Summerville, North Carolina

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Spider in the Well by Jess Hannigan

The story is already so creative with its twists and turns, but the illustrations are key to understanding this lively story. The weird little kid? The weird townspeople? The weird spider? Perfect combo. Jess Hannigan is definitely someone to keep an eye on!

Spider in the Well by Jess Hannigan, (List Price: $19.99, Katherine Tegen Books, 9780063289475, March 2024)

Reviewed by Jamie Kovacs, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

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The Secret Lives of Booksellers and Librarians by James Patterson

Well! I was so excited to be asked to be a part of this book! I wasn’t sure what to expect but it exceeded expectations! I am humbled to be in such great company. One of the best things about my job is the people. Book people are the actual best! This book proves it. Fierce, intelligent people across the country were interviewed about their jobs in the book world. We may live far apart, but the message is the same. We care about people reading. We will move heaven and earth to get children to read. We are compassionate and empathetic people who take the time to listen to customers’ stories. I love this world and am so excited to get people to understand how important books and their book pimps are.

The Secret Lives of Booksellers and LibrariansThe Secret Lives of Booksellers and Librarians by James Patterson, (List Price: $30, Little Brown and Company, 9780316567534, April 2024)

Reviewed by Suzanne Lucey, Page 158 Books in Wake Forest, North Carolina

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Where Sleeping Girls Lie by Faridah Àbíké-Íyímídé

To say I’m obsessed is an understatement. Sade arrives at a boarding school, escaping her past, when her new roommate disappears the next day. Layers of secrets and twists are uncovered as Sade tries to find her roommate. I couldn’t put this down and will immediately read anything she writes!

Where Sleeping Girls Lie by Faridah Àbíké-Íyímídé, (List Price: $19.99, Feiwel & Friends, 9781250800848, March 2024)

Reviewed by Kayla Matykunas, Bookmarks in , North Carolina

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Rewild the World at Bedtime by Emily Hawkins

With gorgeous illustrations, Rewild the World at Bedtime takes the reader on a global tour of rewilding animals. Educational and hopeful, this is the perfect bedtime read for curious and engaged little minds.

Rewild the World at Bedtime by Emily Hawkins, (List Price: $19.99, Wide Eyed Editions, 9780711286962, March 2024)

Reviewed by Jessica Nock, Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina

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Like Happiness by Ursula Villarreal-Moura

Like Happiness is an incisive and blistering coming of age novel that emanates a quiet and methodical rage. Through Tatum, Ursula Villarreal-Moura explores power imbalance, hero worship, and emotional exploitation in a way that keeps the pages turning, while also grappling deftly with sexuality and race. A searing portrait of a young woman trying to understand herself and the older man who irrefutably tangles her identity with his.

Like Happiness by Ursula Villarreal-Moura, (List Price: 28, Celadon Books, 9781250882837, March 2024)

Reviewed by Gaby Iori, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

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Wandering Stars by Tommy Orange

Tommy Orange delivers another masterpiece. His prose is striking and his characters are compassionately rendered. People are going to compare it to his debut, but Wandering Stars stands on its own as propulsive, unforgettable fiction. I remain in awe of Orange’s scope of vision and storytelling.

Wandering Stars by Tommy Orange, (List Price: $29, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 9780593318256, 2024-02-27)

Reviewed by James Harrod, Malaprops Bookstore/Cafe in Asheville, North Carolina

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Old Crimes by Jill McCorkle

Jill McCorkle has a heart the size of her beloved North Carolina and nowhere is that more evident than in the pages of her writing. Old Crimes is a story collection drenched with her perceptiveness of the human condition. Each story is as strong as the one before, telling of past mistakes shaping lives. These are absolutely fulfilling, engrossing, and brilliantly crafted.

Old Crimes by Jill McCorkle, (List Price: $27, Algonquin Books, 9781616209735, January 2024)

Reviewed by Damita Nocton, The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, North Carolina

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Say You’ll Be Mine by Naina Kumar

Say You’ll Be Mine is an adorable romance with 90s/00s rom-com vibes. It’s also the perfect example of why fake dating (in this case a fake engagement) is one of my favorite romance tropes. Karthik and Meghna are deeply relatable characters who will capture your heart.

Say You’ll Be Mine by Naina Kumar, (List Price: $18, Random House Publishing Group, 9780593723883, January 2024)

Reviewed by Kate Storhoff, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

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