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The Southern Bookseller Review 1/21/25

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of January 21, 2025

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The Southern Bookseller Review: A Book for Every Reader

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The week of January 21, 2025

From book club to bookstore: Meet Underbrush Books.

Underbrush Books

In just the past few years, Northwest Arkansas has seen at least four new indie bookstores open their doors – Pearl’s Books in Fayetteville, Más Libritos in Springdale, Two Friends Books in Bentonville, and Underbrush Books in Rogers, Arkansas. Underbrush Books began as a book club in March 2020 to help folks create comfort and connections during the height of COVID-19. Since then, they dreamed of opening a community-oriented gathering space and were finally able to do so in the Fall of 2023.

Underbrush Books photo courtesy of Courtney Ulrich SmithCo-owner Courtney Ulrich Smith said the best part about being a bookseller is curating books that help everyone feel seen, supported, and valid. And of course, helping folks find books they love and that spark their love in reading again, or for the first time.

In May 2024, just a few months after opening their new location, Rogers was hit by an EF-2 tornado, which caused immense damage to the downtown area and widespread power outages and displacement. In the aftermath, Underbrush Books temporarily turned the store into a food pantry and relief station, providing close to 1000 meals for free. They also partner with Canopy NWA (Northwest Arkansas) to provide books to children in their refugee-settlement program as part of a summer reading initiative.

Underbrush Books is passionate about LGBTQIA+ rights and overall access to books, and Smith said the best part about being an indie bookstore in the South is the regional aspect. “Bookselling in smaller/more rural areas in the South is a uniquely different experience than most folks have in other areas.”

You can follow Underbrush Books at @underbrushbooks and visit their website at https://underbrushbooks.com.

Reviews from Underbrush Books

Underbrush Books Staff Favorites

Underbrush Books on Bookshop


Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory


Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

Millie Fleur's Poison Garden by Christy  Mandin

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Millie Fleur’s Poison Garden by Christy Mandin
Cartwheel Books / July 2024


More Reviews from The Country Bookshop

Southern Book Prize Finalist

2025 Southern Book Prize Finalist
See all | Vote Now!

Perfect lawns with their manicured grass and neat hedges are SO 2020. Wilding is IN and every neighborhood needs a weird wild little garden like Millie Fleur’s. Share this delightful little gem with the weirdest and wildest kid in your world.

Reviewed by Angie Tally, The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, North Carolina

We Could Be Rats by  Emily Austin

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We Could Be Rats by Emily Austin
Atria Books / January 2025


More Reviews from Oxford Exchange

Read This Next!

A January Read This Next! Title

In her latest novel, Austin captures the bittersweet heart of growing up and growing apart. Told over the course of Sigrid’s attempts at a suicide note, Austin’s charm and tact never waver, guiding the reader through Sigrid’s disenchantment with equal parts humor and heartbreak

Reviewed by Laura Taylor, Oxford Exchange in Tampa, Florida

Blob by Maggie Su

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Blob by Maggie Su
Harper / January 2025


More Reviews from Carmichael’s Bookstore

Read This Next!

A Janaury Read This Next! Title

The most surprisingly accurate description of being at loose ends in your early twenties that I’ve read. Vi is in the midst of an epic tailspin—a breakup, a failed class, an abandoned education—when she decides to take care of an apparently sentient blob she finds late one night behind a bar. Vi feels like the antihero of her own life, with disappointment all around her, but she, like the alien blob she nurtures, has to find a way to live in the world, too. This is the funny, thoughtful, antithetical romance novel you never knew you needed—but now you do.

Reviewed by Emma Aprile, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky



Bookseller Buzz

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The Three Lives of Cate Kay by Kate Fagan

Kate Fagan, photo by Kristen LeQuire

I think that was the scariest thing for me going into fiction was, I have relied my entire career on conversations, on reporting, to understand what made a person tick and what made them do the things they had done. And also to be able to collect the details that made a book. I think, because I had done That for 15 or 20 years, I was really worried that I would not have the skill set, or the muscles would have atrophied to be able to build a character out of whole cloth, rather than relying on observing someone else. So that was really scary for me.

But I realized that a lot of the observations one makes as a journalist, that skill set of being able to observe things and knowing which details are most interesting and relevant, serves you really well in fiction as well, because that is the same muscles. If I’m going to write a profile on somebody my job as a journalist is noticing the details and conveying the things that separate that person from the one next to them. And that is very similar to what you’re trying to do when you’re building a character. So in the end, I feel like this thing, I was really scared about because I "don’t build characters in non fiction," it is a similar skill set that you are using, which is noticing the details that make a place and a person differentiated from just any place or person.

― Kate Fagan, Interview, Friendly City Books

What booksellers are saying about The Three Lives of Cate Kay

The Three Lives of Cate Kay by Kate Fagan
  • This is the perfect plane read. Cate flees a traumatic incident as a teen and runs away from her past for more than a decade. She finally comes into her own after years of hiding her identity, during which she has written a trilogy that becomes a worldwide phenomena. Along the way she falls in love, comes to terms with her past and discovers how she wants to live her future. A wholly entertaining and romantic romp, I dove right in and loved it! Cate is great, you’ll love her too.
      ― Maggie Robe, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina | BUY

  • The Three Lives of Cate Kay is everything I’ve been wanting! The tagline "Seven Husbands" meets "First Lie Wins" is absolutely perfect but with all the depth and queer messiness that catapult this book forward. This is the book that I’ve passed to all of my other booksellers, just so that I can have someone to talk to about this. Fingers crossed on getting an event, because I need everyone to read this book!
      ― Kristin Kehl, Midtown Reader in Tallahassee, Florida | BUY

  • The Three Lives of Cate Kay is an adrenaline rush of a story that doesn’t compromise on sincerity. Whether she is exploring first love, queer identity, female friendship, or self-forgiveness, Fagan leaves everything on the page and delivers a novel that demands to be deeply felt by its readers.
      ― Courtney Ulrich Smith, Underbrush Books in Rogers, Arkansas | BUY

  • This was such a wonderful surprise! The jacket said "Not Pete’s usual cup of tea" but the plot description intrigued me enough to bring a copy home. And I’m glad I did. I was hooked from page one. It’s just a wonderful novel of love and friendship, lost and found over and over again, that really resounded with me. Thank you, Ms. Fagan!
      ― Pete Mock, McIntyre’s Books in Pittsboro, North Carolina | BUY

Kate Fagan is an Emmy Award–winning journalist and the #1 New York Times bestselling author of What Made Maddy Run, which was a semi-finalist for the PEN/ESPN Award for literary sports writing. She is also the author of three additional nonfiction titles, a former professional basketball player, and spent seven years as a journalist at ESPN. Kate currently lives in Charleston with her wife, Kathryn Budig, and their dog, Ragnar.

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Earl Crush by  Alexandra Vasti

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Earl Crush by Alexandra Vasti
St. Martin’s Griffin / January 2025


More Reviews from Blue Cypress Books

Alexandra Vasti does it again with Earl Crush! This one starts with some Regency-era catfish-ing when sweet, anxiety-riddled Lydia Hope-Wallace runs off to Scotland to propose a marriage of convenience with an Earl she believes she’s been corresponding with, which turns out to be a huge surprise for him…because he doesn’t know her. When they realize it’s the Earl’s estranged brother who has been posing as him through these letters, the two team up to get to the bottom of it. This book has everything! Pining! Political intrigue! Yearning! Espionage! Longing! Zebras!

Reviewed by LeeAnna Callon, Blue Cypress Books in New Orleans, Louisiana



The Flitting by Ben Masters

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The Flitting by Ben Masters
Tin House Books / October 2024


More Reviews from Square Books

The Flitting is a work of pure magic. After his father receives a terminal cancer diagnosis during the early days of the pandemic, Masters spends the summer chasing butterflies as a way to connect with his ailing parent while he still can. Blending memoir and literary commentary with stories of Masters’ own encounters with butterflies, The Flitting is a beautifully written reminder of the importance of accepting others as they are, and of the wonders of nature. You may never look at a butterfly the same way after reading this.

Reviewed by Jude Burke-Lewis, Square Books in Oxford, Mississippi

Darkly by Marisha Pessl

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Darkly by Marisha Pessl
Delacorte Press / November 2024

PsychologicalThrillers & SuspenseYoung Adult Fiction
More Reviews from Underground Books

5 STARS!! This YA mystery thriller is an unforgettable adventure with a fast-paced plot, buried secrets, hidden symbols, and intriguing puzzles. After winning a chance to intern at Darkly, a game-making empire, Dia and six other teens from all across America land in England and are taken to an abandoned island where they are thrown into a twisted game called Valkyrie that has never before been released to find the game’s presumed first victim, a teen boy. There were so many unexpected twists, and the shocking ending leaves you wanting more.

Reviewed by Sandra Pinkney, Underground Books in Carrollton, Georgia

Toto by Hyewon Yum

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Toto by Hyewon Yum
Neal Porter Books / January 2025


More Reviews from Main Street Books

Read This Next!

A January/February Read This Next! Kids Title

Toto is a story about a little girl with a birthmark on her forehead that she has named Toto. She has mixed feelings about her appearance, but she is brave and kind. She decides to hide Toto when she starts school, and immediately meets a best friend. What happens when her new friend sees Toto? A sweet, endearing story that teaches children to celebrate what makes them unique, and also to show compassion to others who look different than us. An important message for readers of all ages!

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

Compound Fracture by Andrew Joseph White

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Compound Fracture by Andrew Joseph White
Peachtree Teen / September 2024


More Reviews from Flyleaf Books

Southern Book Prize Finalist

2025 Southern Book Prize Finalist
See all | Vote Now!

A vicious, roaring, and incisive tale of power, capitalism, coal mines, and gender in Appalachia. The Abernathy line is "cursed" – ostracized and maligned after their ancestor, Saint, was brutally executed during a protracted union battle in the coal mines. Miles, a socialist just like their great-great-grandfather, is aching to fight back against the corrupt sheriff and the legacy he embodies – it was his ancestor that hammered the railroad spike down Saint’s throat. This book is an aching scream and a powerful demand for justice; a paradigm shift highlighting the radical political history of the long-marginalized Appalachian region.

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


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

I'm Glad My Mom Died by  Jennette McCurdy

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I’m Glad My Mom Died by Jennette McCurdy
Simon & Schuster / August 2022


More Reviews from Blinking Owl Books

McCurdy’s story is bold and heartbreaking and beautiful. Her journey is deeply distressing in the way that only true stories can be, and told in a voice that is raw, wry, and incredibly honest. Through this memoir, McCurdy tells us that we can find our way through the darkness, even if we stumble and fall and think we never ever can find a place of peace and wellness – and I am so thankful to her for it.

Reviewed by Lucile Perkins-Wagel, Blinking Owl Books in Fort Myers, Florida


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

Water Moon The Creative Act: A Way of Being Dylan Goes Electric
Your Brain on Art Little Love Bug Finger Puppet Book

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“What I love most about reading: It gives you the ability to reach higher ground. And keep climbing.”
— Oprah

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

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The Southern Bookseller Review 1/21/25 Read More »

The Southern Bookseller Review 1/14/25

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of January 14, 2025

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The week of January 14, 2025

Loved by booksellers, now in paperback.

Loved by booksellers, now in paperback

What were you reading a year ago today?

It is a quirk of the book industry that books are often released twice. First with a lot of fanfare in a hardcover edition, and about a year later in a less expensive paperback that is more useful for book clubs and people who like to stuff a couple of books to travel with into their backpacks and tote bags. The Southern Bookseller Review tends to focus on the new releases, but here are some of the books indie booksellers loved that were new releases a year ago. They are now all available in paperback.

Your Utopia: Stories by Bora Chung, Anton Hur (trans.)
Bora Chung has mastered the art of crafting these absurd, graphic stories that strip you down to your most basic emotions and you come back for more each time.
–Grace Sullivan, Fountain Books in Richmond, Virginia

Prima Facie by Suzie Miller
Fiercely important, Prima Facie is a poignant, thought-provoking exploration of the deeply rooted flaws within our legal system surrounding rape and sexual abuse.
–Beth Seuder Buss, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

The Storm We Made by Vanessa Chan
The Storm We Made is perfect for readers of literary historical fiction. Vanessa Chan writes about survival, the terror of war and colonization in a way that captivated me from the beginning to end of this story.
–Jessica Nock Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina

Emily Wilde’s Map of the Otherlands by Heather Fawcett
Brace yourself for a glorious return to the enchanting world of Emily Wilde. Fawcett’s intricately crafted twists and turns will keep you frantically flipping pages to find out what happens next, and her decadent prose is a delight to read.
–Sydney Mason, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

Family Family by Laurie Frankel
Frankel has an amazing ability to tell a compelling story while at the same time using her characters and story to take a complex issue and show the humanity of . I fell in love with this story and with every character. I wanted to be a part of the family.
–Kandi West, Wordsworth Books in Little Rock, Arkansas

Womb City by Tlotlo Tsamaase
A cyberpunk, Afrofuturist explosion of a novel with a fierce protagonist & relentless story. With tinges of the supernatural & feminist ideals bleeding through its pages, this book carves out its own space in the echelon of great dystopian fiction.
–Nath Mayes, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky

Heartsong by TJ Klune
Bobby had his memories erased, even that of his mate, Kelly. This book is him slowly finding his way back and it was so well written. I also adored the Ace representation in this book and how it was woven in so easily.
–Katlin Kerrison, Story on the Square in McDonough, Georgia

Goldenseal by Maria Hummel
I loved this story of female friendship, and I love a story where the writing is so nuanced that you can relate to both parties in a fractured friendship.
–Jessica Nock Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina

Holiday Country by Inci Atrek
The coast of Turkey was the perfect backdrop for this tragic coming of age story. It was refreshing to see the older man/young woman trope from the young woman’s perspective as well as the complexities of growing up, finding one’s place, and cultivating relationships with the people around you.
–Sara Putman, Bookish: An Indie Shop for Folks Who Read in Fort Smith, Arkansas


Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory


Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

Sharks Don't Sink by Jasmin Graham

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Sharks Don’t Sink by Jasmin Graham
Pantheon / July 2024

Biography & AutobiographyScience & TechnologySouthern Book Prize FinalistSouthern Book Prize Finalist 2025
More Reviews from Flyleaf Books

Southern Book Prize Finalist

2025 Southern Book Prize Finalist
See all | Vote Now!

Jasmin Graham’s story is one of hardship, struggle, triumph, and most importantly, power. Each chapter introduced a new notion. A new understanding. A new feeling. And after finishing this book, I was left with such hope that I couldn’t help but smile. The energy Graham brings to her field of shark science is something that traditional academia has been sorely lacking. And they will continue to miss out on this Rogue Scientist as she stands in defiance of the status quo.

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

Season of the Swamp by Yuri Herrera

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Season of the Swamp by Yuri Herrera
Graywolf Press / October 2024


More Reviews from Avid Bookshop

This deliciously disorienting historical novel throws readers right into the pungent, prismatic streets of mid-1800’s New Orleans, in which Herrera posits a turning point in Benito Juárez’s political life. Rife with subtle humor and indignation at the horrors of slavery, Season of the Swamp is smart and sharp and resonant beyond its scope. Perfect for readers who enjoyed Rivka Galchen’s I Know Your Mother is a Witch and Debra Magpie Earling’s The Lost Journals of Sacajewea.

Reviewed by Hannah DeCamp, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia

Witchcraft for Wayward Girls by Grady Hendrix

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Witchcraft for Wayward Girls by Grady Hendrix
Berkley / January 2025


More Reviews from Midtown Reader

Read This Next!

A January Read This Next! Title

Wow. If there’s one thing Grady Hendrix is going to do, it’s researching a topic thoroughly. This is a beautifully haunting, thought-provoking story about societal views and motherhood while also dabbling with witchcraft. There are moments where you laugh, feel scared, and even cry. That’s the beauty of this book, everything comes with a price.

Reviewed by Caylee Wilson, Midtown Reader in Tallahassee, Florida



Bookseller Buzz

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Victor, the Wolf with Worries by Catherine Rayner

Catherine Rayner, author image credit the author

I love making up stories, reading to children, designing characters, helping children learn to read, helping children develop a love of books that will help them throughout their lives. I love that I get to visit children in schools and at events. I love the letters and pictures I get from children from all over the world. I love the people that I work with on the books. I love the challenges that come with creating something new. . . I tend to develop a character and a story at the same time. But this does change a little with each book I make as every single one has a pattern of its own. People often ask me what the magic formula for creating a good picture book is. I wish I knew! It’s a new challenge every time as books are a bit like living things; each is individual with its own problems to overcome. Each one takes a different amount of time to create, too. Some are quicker than others, some have been bubbling away in the back of my mind for years, and others appear in a “light bulb moment.” I never find making a book easy—but it’s always worth it in the end.

― Catherine Rayner, Interview, Peachtree Books

What booksellers are saying about Victor, the Wolf with Worries

Victor, the Wolf with Worries by Catherine Rayner
  • Victor, The Wolf With Worries, immediately stole my anxious heart. A beautifully illustrated book with an important message. Having the courage to share our worries can make us feel braver, and bigger, and fiercer. With a few great tools to help keep worries away, and the bigger message of realizing that everyone worries, this book is sure to help some littles, and their parents, feel much more wolfish.
      ― Mary Salazar, The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, North Carolina | BUY

  • Sweet Victor! This little wolf worries that he’s not big enough, fierce enough, wolf-ish enough. Thankfully, he has a friend who helps take his mind off his worries. A great lesson for worries and thinkers of anxious thoughts (of all ages!).
      ― Jessica Nock, Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina | BUY

  • Victor, The Wolf With Worries is a picture book about a young wolf with plenty to worry about. Is he big enough? Is he "wolfish" enough? Is he brave enough? Through talking to his friend Pablo, play, and imagination Victor is able to lessen his worries. This book normalizes anxiety and teaches small and simple coping strategies, as well as building empathy for those living with anxiety. The muted watercolor illustrations fit the story well. Overall a lovely book with a lovely message.
      ― Stacey Riggins, Book No Further in Roanoke, Virginia | BUY

Catherine Rayner was born in Harrogate in 1982, and grew up in Boston Spa, later studying at Leeds College of Art and Edinburgh College of Art. She won the Kate Greenaway Medal in 2009 for Harris Finds His Feet, and she was shortlisted in 2007, 2011, 2012, and 2015. In 2014, Norris: The Bear Who Shared was named by the Sunday Times as one of the 100 Children’s Modern Classics of the past ten years. Previous titles by Rayner published by Boxer Books include the award-winning Five Bears. Rayner is based in Edinburgh, Scotland.

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Old Soul by Susan Barker

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Old Soul by Susan Barker
G.P. Putnam’s Sons / January 2025


More Reviews from Cavalier House Books

I am not the most familiar with the conventions of horror novels, so they always seem to startle and surprise me when I make my way to one! Old Soul is everything you could desire from the genre: spooky and thrilling, gory and macabre, the mystery at its core kept me reading into the night even as I burrowed under the covers (for protection, ya know). I need you to read this one so we can talk about it!

Reviewed by Michelle Cavalier, Cavalier House Books in Denham Springs, Louisiana



Realm of Ice and Sky by Buddy Levy

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Realm of Ice and Sky by Buddy Levy
St. Martin’s Press / January 2025


More Reviews from Book No Further

In a day of alpha, beta, and hundreds of testing protocols, would you take off across the Arctic Ocean in a cloth balloon that had never been flown? What seems crazy now was standard procedure for the heroes in Realm of Ice and Sky. Much like his previous book, Labyrinth of Ice, Buddy Levy’s new history/adventure/science offering will have you on the edge of your seat as explorers such as Walter Wellman, Roald Amundsen, and Umberto Nobile plunge full-hearted into the frozen north in hopes of being the first to the top of the world. Who actually got there first – and there is still some debate – pales next to what these explorers accomplished with little more than wood, steel, and cloth.

Reviewed by Doloris Vest, Book No Further in Roanoke, Virginia

Among Serpents by  Marc J Gregson

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Among Serpents by Marc J. Gregson
Peachtree Teen / January 2025


More Reviews from Bookmiser

Among Serpents brings nonstop action as Conrad leads his crew in one difficult task after another in order to save the Skylands. Conrad is working his way through his first year of captaincy, trying to earn enough to buy his ship. But his uncle, the king, has different ideas. One day he’s being rewarded, and the next it’s punishment, but Conrad doesn’t care as long as he can save his sister Ella. But does Ella want to be saved? Book two in the Above the Black series will leave you on the edge of your seat.

Reviewed by Jennifer Jones, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

When Alexander Graced the Table by Alexander Smalls

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When Alexander Graced the Table by Alexander Smalls
Denene Millner Books/Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers / January 2025


More Reviews from Bookmarks

When Alexander Graced the Table captures the love and joy behind Sunday dinner, co-authored by renowned chef Alexander Smalls. A celebration of ingredients, the time and energy to create such a beloved meal, and the memories of family supper set against Frank Morrison’s stunning illustration creates a beautiful, must-share picture book!

Reviewed by Beth Seufer Buss, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Detective Beans by Li Chen

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Detective Beans by Li Chen
Andrews McMeel Publishing / October 2024


More Reviews from E. Shaver Bookseller

This might actually be the cutest thing I have ever read. I\’m not lying when I say that I shed a tear because my body could not handle how cute it was (and from how hard I was laughing).Bonus points – I have a cat named Beans so it was so sweet thinking about her playing detective kitty.

Reviewed by Stephanie St. John, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood

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The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
Vintage / March 1998


More Reviews from E. Shaver bookseller

I was unsure whether I would truly enjoy this book or have to pretend that I enjoyed it due to its significance and popularity. I am pleased to say that I absolutely loved it – and although quite dark and bleak, this dystopian world does not seem so far away. While I don’t think that it’s something everyone would enjoy, I do think that it’s something everyone should at least try.

Reviewed by Niamh Kenny, E. Shaver bookseller in Savannah, Georgia


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

The Heart of Winter Beyond Anxiety The Frozen River
Devotions Frozen

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“My library is an archive of longings.”
— Susan Sontag

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

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The Southern Bookseller Review 1/7/25

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of January 7, 2024

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The week of January 7, 2024

Reading goals and resolutions.

Bookstack

Happy New Reading Year!

This is this time of year readers usually start comparing notes about how many books they read in the past year and whether they met their reading goals.

If SBR was a person, then 2024 was a great reading year. But SBR is really a lot of different people, and 2024 was a really great reading year for the bookstores that share their book reviews and recommendations with us. Booksellers from 110 bookstores sent in 2517 reviews to SBR in 2024. Reviews came from every state in the Southeast. 660 of those reviews were published on SBR’s website and in the newsletter, about 55 per week.

Here are some other fun review facts:

  • The most-reviewed book was The Bride by Ali Hazelwood. Mekhala Villegas-Rogers of Tombolo Books in St. Petersburg, Florida says that "The “couldn’t put down”-ness with this book was unreal."

  • The most popular genres for reviews are Romance and Fantasy. And about 25% of the reviews are for Children’s and YA literature.

  • Since 2024 was the Year of the Dragon, it may be worth knowing that 21 of the reviewed books featured dragons.

  • 55 of the reviews published were for books found on PEN America’s Banned Books Index.

  • The bookstore that posted the most reviews was Carmichael’s Bookstore in Lexington, Kentucky (277). Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina is a close second (240). But the person who sent in the most reviews was Jennifer Jones of Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia. She posted 93 book reviews last year.

Now is the time to decide on our reading goals for 2025. The first goal for SBR’s booksellers and readers is usually read more books! Get a head start below.


You can help! The Book Industry Charitable Foundation

Independent bookstores in the South are still struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and now Hurricane Milton. You can help: Donate to Binc; a relief organization for booksellers and comic book sellers. Visit the SIBA Hurricane Relief Resources page to donate directly to store fundraisers. And shop online at a store that has been impacted.

Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory


Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

When the Jessamine Grows by Donna Everhart

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When the Jessamine Grows by Donna Everhart
Kensington / January 2024


More Reviews from The Little Bookshop

Southern Book Prize Finalist

2025 Southern Book Prize Finalist
See all | Vote Now!

Lovers of historical fiction will devour this Civil War-era story that takes place in North Carolina. When everyone is taking sides in the war, Joetta McBride and her husband choose to stay neutral, but when their oldest son leaves against their wishes to join the Confederacy, they are forced to get involved. Joetta is left to run their farm and house while Ennis goes off to hopefully find and bring back their 15-year-old son. Readers will love Joetta’s strong convictions and determination to keep things afloat in the midst of war and upheaval. A great read!

Reviewed by Mary Patterson, The Little Bookshop in Midlothian, Virginia

Love, Leda by  Mark Hyatt

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Love, Leda by Mark Hyatt
Nightboat Books / October 2024


More Reviews from McIntyre’s Books

I think Love, Leda is a delightful and emotional read that is perfect for anyone interested in 20th-century gay literature, a la John Rechy or David Wojnarowicz. You can tell that Hyatt was a poet, and some parts of this book are beautifully lyrical and etch their way into your brain. Absolutely gorgeous and heartfelt.

Reviewed by Tyler de Bose, McIntyre’s Books in Pittsboro, North Carolina

Good Dirt by Charmaine Wilkerson

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Good Dirt by Charmaine Wilkerson
Ballantine Books / January 2025


More Reviews from Baldwin & Co.

Read This Next!

A January Read This Next! Title

I loved the way this book explored the ideas of trauma, PTSD, and loss, as well as how resilience and strength can grow out of them. The changing timelines and character points of view kept me engaged and wanting to learn more about each new storyline and person that was introduced. The ending brought together the past and the present in a beautiful way and showed the power we all have to preserve and learn from our past traumas, whether they be our own or those of our ancestors.

Reviewed by Baldwin Bookseller, Baldwin & Co. in New Orleans, Louisiana



Bookseller Buzz

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Under Loch and Key by Lana Ferguson

Lana Ferguson, author image credit the author

I love having a space to dump all the silly things running through my brain. I feel like living in my head is like sharing an apartment with five other personalities at any given time, and being a writer means not having to ignore them aggressively (and possibly vent about them to my therapist), but instead write them down, free them into the world, so to speak. Writing means the stories running through my head and the ideas that wake me up in excitement in the middle of the night aren’t just for me, but something I can share with everyone, in a sense, and that is just very cool to me.

― Lana Ferguson, Interview, Nerd Daily

What booksellers are saying about Under Loch and Key

Under Loch and Key by Lana Ferguson
  • Lana Ferguson is an A grade writer of smart smut. She has quickly become a favorite author of mine. I never know what genre she’s going to write in, but I know I’m guaranteed an unforgettable story. Under Loch and Key takes the premise of the Loch Ness monster and gives it a twist that is unique and then does it so well. The story is about so much more than Nessie- the themes of finding family are so well woven into Keyanna and Lachlan’s individual character arcs . Finding who you are is as important as finding the one for you. Under Loch and Key has the steam and spice I’ve come to see as Lana Ferguson’s hallmark, but with a depth of emotion and mystery that will leave you turning the pages as fast you can read them!
      ― Preet Singh, Eagle Eye Book Shop in Decatur, Georgia | BUY

  • Okay, so, I didn’t know going in that this was a shape-shifter cryptid romance. It is, for the record. It happens to be my first not-vampire-or-werewolf shape-shifter rom I’ve ever read, and I have to say…………I kinda really enjoyed it! It’s a hundred percent ridiculous, but it’s also hot and charming and fun with a lil mysterious element that (spoiler) gets worked out. How? I’ll never tell! Give me a story about an American gal falling in love with (and getting taken to poundtown by) a hot Scottish stud any day. Mix in a lil shapeyshifty and a quest to break a family curse, and you have me ten toes down for it all day every day.
      ― Thomas Wallace, Reading Rock Books in Dickson, Tennessee | BUY

  • A cute and thoughtful reimagining of the Loch Ness monster! I think this book could’ve easily been 300 pages and not closer to 500, but I enjoyed it nonetheless! Lana’s creative way of tying in with the OG tale was truly fun to read! and who doesn’t love a bit of a monster romance!?
      ― Fiona McPherson, Givens Books Little Dickens in Lynchburg, Virginia | BUY

  • My auto buy author does it again. A splash of paranormal with enemies to lovers made this a wonderful book to read. The banter and tension between Loch and Key were top notch and I believed them when they believed that they didn’t like each other. But as always Lana Ferguson writes, sexy , heartwarming and hilarious books that make it to the top of my lists every time.
      ― Mekhala Villegas-Rogers, Tombolo Books in St. Petersburg, Florida | BUY

Lana Ferguson is a USA Today bestselling author and sex-positive nerd whose works never shy from spice or sass. A faded Fabio cover found its way into her hands at fifteen, and she’s never been the same since. When she isn’t writing, you can find her randomly singing show tunes, arguing over which Batman is superior, and subjecting her friends to the extended editions of The Lord of the Rings. Lana lives mostly in her own head but can sometimes be found chasing her corgi through the coppice of the great American outdoors.

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Suggested in the Stars by Yoko Tawada

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Suggested in the Stars by Yoko Tawada
New Directions / October 2024


More Reviews from Avid Bookshop

The characters that populate Yoko Tawada’s Suggested in the Stars are out of step with one another but cross paths, time, and space, all with what can only be described through Hamlet’s words, words, words. Tawada returns to the characters from Scattered All Over the Earth and their search for Hiruko’s homeland, Susanoo’s language, and the connection between them born of globalization and climate change. Full of light climate dystopia, this book turns your brain around through Tawada’s (and her translator Margaret Mitsutani’s) deft use of language. I am already greatly anticipating the third installment in this trilogy in 2025. I need more of this weird little series, but also don’t want it to end!

Reviewed by Mikey LaFave, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia



1000 Words by Jami Attenberg

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1000 Words by Jami Attenberg
S&S/Simon Element / January 2025


More Reviews from Blue Cypress Books

1000 Words is a compulsively readable and truly inspiring book filled with encouragement from Jami and 50 other amazing authors. This book will make you want to write.

Reviewed by LeeAnna Callon, Blue Cypress Books in New Orleans, Louisiana

Nothing Like the Movies by Lynn Painter

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Nothing Like the Movies by Lynn Painter
Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers / October 2024


More Reviews from Main Street Reads

This was a stunning sequel to arguably the best YA romcom, Better Than the Movies. After facing the sudden death of his dad during his first year of college, Wes breaks up with Liz, believing he is holding her back. Now, two years later, Wes is more determined than ever to win her back. Lynn Painter always manages to build real characters and relationship dynamics and this book is no exception. This is a must-read!

Reviewed by Makayla Summers, Main Street Reads in Summerville, South Carolina

Go Tell It by Quartez Harris

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Go Tell It by Quartez Harris
Little, Brown Books for Young Readers / January 2025


More Reviews from Main Street Books

Stunning, poetic, honest, and celebratory – what an incredible picture book for school-age kids and their families and classrooms. Gordon James captures Baldwin’s dynamic passion for books and words in beautiful, high-energy paintings. Quartez Harris writes about Baldwin’s life with care, lyricism, and honesty.

Reviewed by Adah Fitzgerald, Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina

All Princesses Die Before Dawn by Quentin Zuttion

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All Princesses Die Before Dawn by Quentin Zuttion
Abrams ComicArts / November 2024


More Reviews from E. Shaver Bookseller

If you know me, you know this got downloaded the SECOND I saw Princess Diana’s name. Such cute, almost Studio Ghibli-type illustrations, a beautiful (and sometimes very emotional) story following one family in the day after Diana’s death. This graphic novel touches on many deep subjects which left me tearing up while reading it. Easy and enjoyable read.

Reviewed by Stephanie St. John, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

The Grace Year by  Kim Liggett

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The Grace Year by Kim Liggett
Wednesday Books / October 2020


More Reviews from Story on the Square

The Grace Year is the year that all girls in the county must take before they are married off in order to burn off their magic. Tierney isn’t looking forward to this year, especially when she finds out she’s going to be married when she comes back. This book is advertised as a mixture of Lord of the Flies and The Handmaid’s Tale. That is a fairly accurate description, but it also made it hard for me to see it as anything else. I enjoyed the story and was kept on the edge of my seat. I enjoyed how things that you thought at the beginning were carefully planted to reveal an overarching truth in a beautiful and meaningful way. I feel like The Grace Year has the potential to be just as impactful as The Handmaid’s Tale.

Reviewed by Kaitlin Kerrison, Story on the Square in McDonough, Georgia


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

James The Message Orbital
The Best American Essays 2024 Nothing Like the Movies

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“So please, oh please, we beg, we pray, go throw your TV set away, and in its place you can install a lovely bookshelf on the wall.”
— Roald Dahl

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

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The Southern Bookseller Review 1/7/25 Read More »

The Southern Bookseller Review 12/31/24

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of December 31, 2024

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The week of December 31, 2024

Take your reading to the next level in 2025. Read these next!

Read This Next!

"Read more books!" That should be everybody’s New Years Resolution. The books on the January Read This Next! list are described by their bookseller fans as haunting, joyful, scrappy, unexpected, and tough. Read This Next! books will bring your reading to the next level.

Witchcraft for Wayward Girls by Grady Hendrix A beautifully haunting thought-provoking story about societal views and motherhood while also dabbling with witchcraft. There are moments where you laugh, feel scared, and even cry. That’s the beauty of this book, everything comes with a price. – Caylee Wilson, Midtown Reader in Tallahassee, Florida

The Harder I Fight the More I Love You by Neko Case Electric, angry, joyful, scrappy, and full of life – I could not get enough of Neko Case’s memoir. A celebration of the power of art and the power that comes from being our true selves in the world – an unforgettable read! – Caleb Masters, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Good Dirt by Charmaine Wilkerson I loved the way this book explored the ideas of trauma, PTSD, and loss as well as how resilience and strength can grow out of them. The ending brought together the past and the present in a beautiful way, and showed the power we all have to preserver and learn from our past traumas. – Baldwin & Co. in New Orleans, Louisiana

Blob: A Love Story by Maggie Su Built on the premise of Build-a-Bear gone funhouse mirror build-a-boyfriend, Blob really is a love story, but maybe not in the way that you expect. At the core Blob is about falling back in love with the parts of yourself that you’ve thought you lost forever. – Mikey LaFave, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia

We Could Be Rats by Emily Austin Emily Austin has the ability to make those of us that think differently feel seen. She tackles tough subjects –complex family dynamics, being an outsider in your community and battling mental illness — with care, humor and wit! – Kelley Barnes, Page 158 Books in Wake Forest, North Carolina

Read This Next! books and what SIBA booksellers have to say about them can always be found at The Southern Bookseller Review.


You can help! The Book Industry Charitable Foundation

Independent bookstores in the South are still struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and now Hurricane Milton. You can help: Donate to Binc; a relief organization for booksellers and comic book sellers. Visit the SIBA Hurricane Relief Resources page to donate directly to store fundraisers. And shop online at a store that has been impacted.

Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory


Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

In Praise of Mystery by Ada Limón

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In Praise of Mystery by Ada Limón
Norton Young Readers / October 2024


More Reviews from Fountain Bookstore

Southern Book Prize Finalist

2025 Southern Book Prize Finalist
See all | Vote Now!

U.S. Poet Laureate Ada Limón and acclaimed illustrator Peter Sís have joined forces to craft one of the most impactful children’s books I’ve read all year. In Praise of Mystery started as a poem from Limón that will be inscribed onto NASA’s newest spacecraft, planning to orbit Jupiter and its moons in the Fall of 2024. Translated onto the page, the poem becomes a story of hope and guidance, teaching the reader to accept and invite the unknown rather than fear it. At times prayer-esque, the love and comfort surrounding this story, paired with gorgeous sketches, will make this a bedtime staple. Timeless and transcendent, Limón’s venture into children’s literature, paired with Sís’ illustrations will be cherished for generations to come.

Reviewed by Grace Sullivan, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia

The Champagne Letters by Kate MacIntosh

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The Champagne Letters by Kate MacIntosh
Gallery Books / December 2024


More Reviews from Fiction Addiction

Natalie is trying to pick up the pieces after she is blindsided by a divorce, and Barbe-Nicole is trying to keep her family’s wine-making business afloat after her husband’s untimely death. Both women face challenges as they navigate new lives, but each one’s story takes place in a different time. Natalie takes off for Paris to heal and explore in today’s time, while Barbe-Nicole is the famed Madame Clicquot struggling to produce and sell champagne during the 1800s. Told in alternating time periods, this story will appeal to anyone who believes in second chances, the timeless power of choice, and the healing properties of a lovely glass of wine.

Reviewed by Mary Jane Michels, Fiction Addiction in Greenville, South Carolina



Bookseller Buzz

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The Bog Wife by Kay Chronister

Kay Chronister, photo credit the author

The mythology of the bog wife began with other stories about nonhuman women who marry into human families, like selkies. There is Welsh folklore of a woman made out of flowers who is brought to life. Thinking about those stories, what I find fun is that there is a certain amount of ambiguity as to how human this woman appears and how human she really is, and how much the husband in question is willfully deluding himself about having some kind of quasi-human marriage partner. I went back and forth about how much to physically describe the bog wife and how much to describe the logistics of this dirt and plant woman who had raised five children and lived in a house and seemed to exist like a human for a while. I ultimately decided, which is pretty habitual for me, that I don’t care very much about the logistics. I wanted her to be in a state of flux. She is more human for a period of time and then less.

― Kay Chronister, Interview, Electric Literature

What booksellers are saying about The Bog Wife

The Bog Wife by Kay Chronister
  • This book is incredibly atmospheric and full of gothic vibes! The Bog Wife is part family story, part environmental story and one I will be thinking about it for a long time. I love the questions it asks about ownership and land, about inheritance and duty.
      ― Jamie Southern, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina | BUY

  • This book has changed my brain chemistry. Chronister has created this devastating, beautiful, and just plain weird story and group of characters to dissect generational poverty and trauma in a very tangible, jarring way. I was on the edge of my seat the entire time, as I wasn’t ever sure what was real or just imagined. Just an absolute masterpiece.
      ― Tori Finklea, Union Ave Books in Knoxville, Tennessee | BUY

  • This book is so, so weird—in a really good way. The Haddesley family has an ancient pact with the Appalachian bog they live in. With each generation, the patriarch succumbs to death, and the bog provides a new bride for the eldest son. The family line mustn’t branch off. The bog belonged to them and they to it. This is Southern gothic perfection and would make for a fantastic October read.
      ― Sydney Bozeman, Parnassus Books in Nashville, Tennessee | BUY

  • This is an eccentric, vivid, and devastating Appalachian folk/gothic horror. The Haddesley’s have always believed it was their family’s duty to take care of the bog on their land. Every time a patriarch dies, the siblings must feed the body to the bog, who, in return, will give them a wife for the eldest son to carry on tradition. Except this time, the bog doesn’t give Haddesley’s eldest son Charlie a wife. What happens now? The house is falling apart as the siblings fall apart, trying to figure out the next step. This novel is so beautifully weird. I became emotionally attached to the Haddesley siblings as they try to navigate a new way of life and as they figure out that their whole family history might be a lie.
      ― Megan Bell, Underground Books in Carrollton, Georgia | BUY

Kay Chronister is the author of Thin Places and Desert Creatures. Her short fiction has appeared in Strange Horizons, Clarkesworld, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, The Dark, and elsewhere, and has been nominated for the Shirley Jackson and World Fantasy awards. She lives outside of Philadelphia.

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Blue Light Hours by Bruna Dantas Lobato

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Blue Light Hours by Bruna Dantas Lobato
Grove Press, Black Cat / October 2024


More Reviews from E. Shaver Bookseller

A sparse novel about the desire to be independent and the struggle to remain connected that we all experience when we leave home. The switch in narration in the second and third sections pulled me out of the story a bit but served to highlight the growing distance between mother and daughter.

Reviewed by Melissa Taylor, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia



Ingrained by Callum Robinson

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Ingrained by Callum Robinson
Ecco / December 2024


More Reviews from The Country Bookshop

A beautiful memoir about the importance of making things with your hands and how a point of crisis can bring what is important back into focus.

Reviewed by Holly Wunsch, The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, North Carolina

What the Woods Took by Courtney Gould

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What the Woods Took by Courtney Gould
Wednesday Books / December 2024


More Reviews from Story on the Square

What the Woods Took follows five teens forced into a wilderness trek masqueraded as a cure to them being "troubled teens", but when their guides, who are barely older than them, disappear in the night they begin to suspect there’s something wrong in this forest, more so than the bogus promise the "camp" made to their parents. Mind-blowingly timely and terrifying at the same time. I couldn’t stop reading this deliciously dark and queer story. This is one that will have readers up late and checking over their shoulders deep into the night.

Reviewed by Katlin Kerrison, Story on the Square in McDonough, Georgia

On Our Way! What a Day! by  JaNay Brown-Wood

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On Our Way! What a Day! by JaNay Brown-Wood
Nancy Paulsen Books / January 2025


More Reviews from The Country Bookshop

A birthday! A gift? Hmmm… A delightful journey ends with a celebration of found things, group effort and a very happy Gran. A perfect read-together for those families who delight in the joys of nature, music, and time together.

Reviewed by Angie Tally, The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, North Carolina

Sunday by Olivier Schrauwen

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Sunday by Olivier Schrauwen
Fantagraphics / October 2024


More Reviews from Carmichael’s Bookstore

Olivier Schrauwen’s Sunday is an epic of interiority, emerging like a psychological hologram out of one fragile, mundane, ridiculous, precious human mind to commune with a world of love, sex, art, work, time, and experience at the nexus of the goofy and the transcendent: imagine James Joyce’s Ulysses as a comic book.

Reviewed by Jonathan Hawpe, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

Hani and Ishu's Guide to Fake Dating by Adiba Jaigirdar

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Hani and Ishu’s Guide to Fake Dating by Adiba Jaigirdar
Page Street YA / May 2023


More Reviews from Fountain Bookstore

Even before To All The Boys I Loved Before, I’m a sucker for a fake dating story – add in two young, queer brown women and I was hooked from the outset! Hani’s popular and happy, but her two best (white Irish) friends don’t really understand any part of her – not her obligations to the local Bengali community, her Muslim faith, and, most recently, her bisexuality, telling her she can’t be bi if they’ve never seen her with a girl. Ishu, the only other Bengali student at the school, is closeted, doesn’t have many friends, and worries people find her unapproachable. Even though they barely know each other, they hatch a fake relationship plot to convince people around them that they’re really bi and possibly likable, respectively – but find out that being with somebody who makes an effort to understand you is pretty wonderful! I adored this book: its Irish charm, its Bengali cultural specificity without falling into a single character type, its tackling of toxic friendship and racial gaslighting, and a satisfying ending on several different fronts make this an easy rec for lovers of fluffy YA!


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

The Grey Wolf The Life Impossible Berry Pickers
World Travel Where the Wild Things Are

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“Reading is an active, imaginative act; it takes work.”
— Khaled Hosseini

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

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The Southern Bookseller Review 12/24/24

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of December 24, 2024

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The week of December 24, 2024

New Year, great new books to read with your kids.

Read This Next! The best thing to do when you are stuffed full of holiday cheer is to curl up in a comfy chair with a good book. In fact, "curl up in a comfy chair with a good book" is pretty much the best thing to be done in most situations! This week and next SBR gives reader a sneak peek at some of the best books for curling up with coming out in the New Year. Below is the January/February Read This Next! Young Readers List, which celebrates our differences and honors our ability to face life’s challenges.

To See an Owl by Matthew Cordell
I love a story about a young girl’s perseverance. Young Janie is singularly minded and deeply passionate about owls, all she wants is to see one, to witness "magic" that is real and here and accessible. – Morgan DePerno, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Victor, the Wolf with Worries by Catherine Rayner
Victor, The Wolf With Worries
, immediately stole my anxious heart. A beautifully illustrated book with an important message. Having the courage to share our worries can make us feel braver, and bigger, and fiercer. – Mary Salazar, The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, North Carolina

Toto by Hyewon Yum
It’s lovely to encounter a story that focuses on learning to embrace what makes you different without hitting you over the head in case you’d otherwise miss the moral of the story. Yum’s evocative, warm illustrations and gentle prose deserve a place on your shelf. – Janet Geddis, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia

All the Blues in the Sky by Renée Watson
Turning thirteen is a milestone filled with exciting possibilities: movies, treats, all-night giggles, and the promise of teenage adventures. For Sage, however, this time is overshadowed by the profound loss of her best friend…grief is not about forgetting the loved one but learning to live with the loss in a way that honors their memory while moving forward with life. – VaLinda Payne-Miller, Turning Page Bookshop in Goose Creek, South Carolina

The Otherwhere Post by Emily J. Taylor
You’ll want to get your little ink-stained hands on this one as soon as possible! Maeve’s father was a known murderer and everyone thinks Maeve is dead. But when she received a letter from seven years ago from an anonymous "friend" claiming that her father is innocent, she must find out the truth. – Jennifer Jones, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

The Kiss Bet Volume One by Ingrid Ochoa Just how far are you willing to go for a bet? Would you kiss a cute stranger on the subway? I have followed this comic for so so long and I’m elated to see it in print! Team subway boy all the way! – Lana Repic, E. Shaver, Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia


You can help! The Book Industry Charitable Foundation

Independent bookstores in the South are still struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and now Hurricane Milton. You can help: Donate to Binc; a relief organization for booksellers and comic book sellers. Visit the SIBA Hurricane Relief Resources page to donate directly to store fundraisers. And shop online at a store that has been impacted.

Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory



Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

The Mango Tree by Annabelle Tometich

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The Mango Tree by Annabelle Tometich
Little, Brown and Company / April 2024


More Reviews from Blue Cypress Books

Southern Book Prize Finalist

2025 Southern Book Prize Finalist
See all | Vote Now!

The Mango Tree was a book I didn’t know I needed. Annabelle Tometich is from my hometown of Fort Myers, Florida, and she perfectly puts our little town on the map in an honest and lyrical way. All while telling the story of her unique, flawed, and loving family. It starts with a bang and ends with a hug. If you are a memoir reader this is for you.

Reviewed by Rayna Nielsen, Blue Cypress Books in New Orleans, Louisiana

The Ancients by John Larison

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The Ancients by John Larison
Viking / October 2024


More Reviews from Flyleaf Books

A detailed and unswerving fable about the impossible choices ahead of us—both as individual people and as a collective species. John Larison’s particular concern is the way that stories of the past can function either as cautionary tales, informing our commitment to a wiser trajectory, or, in the wrong hands, as convenient and exploitative mythology to waylay any doubts that our bright and bountiful future is somehow guaranteed. This book is a testament to the importance of stories that remind us to watch our footing while we climb, and always extend a hand behind us.

Reviewed by Charlie Monroe, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina



Bookseller Buzz

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The City in Glass by Nghi Vo

Nghi Vo, photo credit CJ Foeckler

I’ve been describing The City In Glass as three hundred years of grief and city planning.

It’s about a demon named Vitrine who loves a city called Azril, and what happens when angels from across the sea destroy that city. Vitrine has to decide what she does after the end of the world and what revenge she can possibly take on one of the angels responsible.

If The City In Glass was inspired by anything, it’s the end of the world and how often in your life you might be confronted with such a terrible thing. It’s inspired by what comes after the end of the world, because so far as I know, there’s always been a time after the end of the world, whether or not we’re around to see it.

― Nghi Vo, Interview, Paul Semel

What booksellers are saying about The City in Glass

The City in Glass by Nghi Vo
  • If something or someone is lucky enough, in their life they will love and be loved. The demon of Azril, Vitrine, knows what is like to love, to love her city and each person in it, to know their story as intimately as she does her own. She also knows what it is to grieve, when angels come to rain fire on her city, destroying every carefully laid stone and extinguishing every last soul. As Vitrine rebuilds her city over the centuries, accompanied by the angel who she cursed to stay with her, she learns what it is like to be loved: by the new inhabitants, and by her angel, try as she might to get rid of him. Vo’s prose sings in her latest novel, a gorgeous explosion of color and life that blooms and decays as Vitrine’s narration alternates between the Azril of old and new. At once a history, a love story, and voyage into the fantastic, The City in Glass is a genre-defying triumph.
      ― Sydney Mason, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina | BUY

  • While a demon rebuilds her beloved city brick-by-brick after its utter devastation, the angel responsible looks on, cursed to witness the destruction he caused. The years that pass between them are raw with grief and rage, but also soft with hope and new beginnings, and by the end of the book our hearts are just as wrapped up in this magical, improbable city as the demon and the angel. Every book Nghi Vo writes is a revelation, and The City in Glass is an exceptional example of her unparalleled imagination. It is diamond-sharp, sumptuous, and heady, full of luscious prose and a healthy dose of erotically-charged angel-humbling, and will stay with you long after you’ve finished it.
      ― Rebecca Speas, Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh, North Carolina | BUY

  • This is a novel of feminine rage, grief, and loss. Nghi Vo masterfully asks, "Who do we become in the face of loss?" "How much of ourselves die with those we’ve lost?" and "What happens when we finally accept that loss and realize that grief is a symbol of love (a love that never fades), not loss?
      ― Hezekiah Olorode, Old Town Books in Alexandria, Virginia | BUY

Nghi Vo is the author of the novels Siren Queen and The Chosen and the Beautiful, as well as the acclaimed novellas of the Singing Hills Cycle, which began with The Empress of Salt and Fortune. The series entries have been finalists for the Nebula Award, the Locus Award, and the Lambda Literary Award, and have won the Crawford Award, the Ignyte Award, and the Hugo Award. Born in Illinois, she now lives on the shores of Lake Michigan. She believes in the ritual of lipstick, the power of stories, and the right to change your mind.

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The City and Its Uncertain Walls by Haruki Murakami

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The City and Its Uncertain Walls by Haruki Murakami
Knopf / November 2024


More Reviews from Octavia Books

This novel is uber-Murakami, the author back to the magical best of his earlier novels such as Hardboiled Wonderland and the End of the World (note: this makes sense, as the author writes in an afterword that this novel was a second attempt at reworking a novella, the first attempt being Hardboiled Wonderland). You don’t read a Murakami novel; you live it, holding on for dear life until it lets you off at the end, slightly confused but highly entertained. A magical world slowly unravels through an unnamed girl, while everyday life interweaves with it, featuring all the traditional Murakami Bingo tropes (loneliness, high school, jazz, pasta recipes, The Beatles, wells, libraries, cats…all the greatest hits!) There were a few minor logical bugbears, but plot logic was never Murakami’s strong suit. The simplicity of his language has long been a feature, but lately has felt more like a bug at times, with the repetition of banal thoughts (‘it was just my conjecture, but I was sure of it’; I nodded vaguely’ etc.) – perhaps as one of my all-time favourite authors I have come to expect more, but it was still great to be back in Murakami world.

Reviewed by Doron Klemer, Octavia Books in New Orleans, Louisiana



The Message by Ta-Nehisi Coates

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The Message by Ta-Nehisi Coates
One World / October 2024


More Reviews from Bookmarks

In these essays, Ta-Nehisi Coates demonstrates a concept we should all practice; that is, the ability to unlearn what we’ve always believed to be true when presented with new facts. He accomplishes this through the lens of storytelling and its power to change people. The most profound example is when he travels to Palestine and realizes the narrative accepted by the Western world (a narrative he himself used in a previously published piece on reparations) is far removed from reality. These extremely powerful essays will be recommended reading for years to come.

Reviewed by Becca Naylor, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

The Glass Girl by Kathleen Glasgow

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The Glass Girl by Kathleen Glasgow
Delacorte Press / October 2024


More Reviews from Underground Books

Everyone deals with problems differently. Fifteen-year-old Bella chooses alcohol to solve hers. Her home life sucks, she gets dumped by her boyfriend, and she is spiraling. After a terrifying blackout and a trip to rehab, she slowly takes the steps of rebuilding her shattered life. This is a heartbreaking story of a girl who has hit rock bottom and must make the choice of life or death.

Reviewed by Suzanne Carnes, Underground Books in Carrollton, Georgia

Tiana's Perfect Plan by Anika Noni Rose

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Tiana’s Perfect Plan by Anika Noni Rose
Disney Hyperion / October 2024


More Reviews from The Bottom

So fantastic to be back with Prince Naveen and Tiana after so long! I was expecting to have a book about the restaurant or Tiana and Naveen on their own, but I was so pleasantly surprised with the idea of Tiana having to impress her in-laws. It’s the perfect storytime book for any parents looking for one that can entertain them as well as their children.

Reviewed by Anna Trevathan, The Bottom in Knoxville, Tennessee

The Guy She Was Interested In Wasn't a Guy at All, Vol. 2 by  Sumiko Arai

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The Guy She Was Interested In Wasn’t a Guy at All, Vol. 2 by Sumiko Arai
Yen Press / February 2025


More Reviews from E. Shaver Bookseller

This series is utter perfection, NO NOTES. I’ve been keeping up with this one since it was unofficially translated, and I love that it has an intersection of two of my favorite things– rock music and gay stuff 🙂 The pops of bright green with the art style are so eye-catching and fun, so glad more people get to experience this story!!

Reviewed by Sam Conners, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood

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Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood
Anchor / March 2004


More Reviews from E. Shaver bookseller

Atwood is the queen of dystopian fiction. Be prepared to read the full trilogy if you start Oryx and Crake. Alone, this was a great read, but completing the circle ties it all together nicely. Fans of Station Eleven who haven’t read the MaddAddam trilogy from Atwood definitely need to add this to their list!

Reviewed by Krista Roach, E. Shaver bookseller in Savannah, Georgia


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

Tell Me Everything The Comfort of Crows The Best American Short Stories 2024
The Book of Delights: Essays Pax

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“Keep reading. It’s one of the most marvellous adventures that anyone can have.”
— Lloyd Alexander

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

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The Southern Bookseller Review 12/24/24 Read More »

The Southern Bookseller Review 12/17/24

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of December 17, 2024

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The week of December 17, 2024

Why indie? Giving something back to your local indie bookstore.

In the mad rush to finish your holiday shopping there is something simple and heartfelt you can give to your own local indie bookstore: you can cast your vote for the Southern Book Prize. You not only have a chance to weigh in on the vital question of what are the "best Southern books of the year," but you can also let your local bookshop know why they are so important to you.

Why indie?
Readers have many reasons for why they love their local bookstores. Here are some of the most common ones readers said when they placed their vote for the Southern Book Prize:

Because indie booksellers know exactly what books to suggest.

  • Bookmiser is amazing! They always recommend books I would have never picked up and they are always spot on!
  • Eagle Eye Books‘ Doug and co. are attuned to something true about literature in the South. The store takes me back to a time before "prime" time.
  • Main Street Books keeps me up to date on new releases and my TBR stack has never been longer.
  • The Little Bookshop is a community treasure! Mary Patterson, the owner, is an expert at finding the “just right” book for her customers.
  • Octavia Books is bright, cheerful, and never doesn’t have the books I want.

Because indie booksellers are good people.

Because indie bookstores are the heart of their community.

  • Hello Again Books has built an amazing community that I love being a part of!
  • Scuppernong Books is a one-stop shop for culture, engaging events and soul-nurturing literary finds.
  • In a state banning more books than any other, Midtown Reader is a refuge.
  • A Cappella Books is the center of literary life in Atlanta. It is indispensable.
  • All Good Books in Columbia, SC has brought local reading back to town.

Because indie bookstores feel like home.

  • Bear’s Books in Macon, Georgia is such a warm and welcoming place. The owner has a heart of gold. It’s my little relaxation spot.
  • Jen never forgets her patrons. Her store, Book Exchange in Marietta Georgia, feels like home, like my childhood bedroom, like the dogwood tree I would climb to hide out and read.
  • Portkey Books is a warm hug for this reader’s mind!
  • Quail Ridge Books is my favorite place to visit when life gets me down.

Nothing makes booksellers happier than hearing how much they have helped the people who come into their stores. Take a few moments to tell them how much you appreciate them. Vote for the Southern Book Prize and say something nice about your local bookstore!


You can help! The Book Industry Charitable Foundation

Independent bookstores in the South are still struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton. You can help: Donate to Binc; a relief organization for booksellers and comic book sellers. Visit the SIBA Hurricane Relief Resources page to donate directly to store fundraisers. And shop online at a store that has been impacted.

Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory



Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

Brightly Shining by Ingvild Rishøi

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Brightly Shining by Ingvild Rishøi
Grove Press / November 2024


More Reviews from Quail Ridge Books

[Editor’s note: we inadvertently included the wrong bookseller review for Brightly Shining in last week’s newsletter. Here is the correct one.]

This is a winter novel for those of us who name Hans Christian Anderson’s stories among our favorite fairy tales. Ronja’s voice is perfect – poignant and descriptive but still true to a ten-year-old. I felt for her and for Melissa, her older sister, dealing with a parent whose good intentions were never going to see the family through to the happy Christmas Ronja envisioned. The moment I finished the book, I immediately flipped back to the first page to reassess the beginning in light of how it ends… and nearly got sucked back into re-reading the entire novel.

Reviewed by Ginger Kautz, Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh, North Carolina

Tell It to Me Singing by Tita Ramirez

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Tell It to Me Singing by Tita Ramirez
S&S/ Marysue Rucci Books / July 2024


More Reviews from Pearl’s Books

Southern Book Prize Finalist

2025 Southern Book Prize Finalist
See all | Vote Now!

A family drama that centers on a mother’s secret, this novel is honeyed with warmth, truth, and the secrets that–once revealed–eventually bring us closer together. Author Tita Ramirez weaves back and forth between a mother’s and daughter’s voices, illustrating each of the characters’ deep hunger for a meaningful life. This book flew by for me, my heart racing along with Monica’s as she figured out what it meant to choose herself, even if it made the people around her uncomfortable or unhappy. A beautiful book about finding happiness, no matter our paths.

Reviewed by Julia Paganelli Marin, Pearl’s Books in Fayetteville, Arkansas

Havoc by Christopher Bollen

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Havoc by Christopher Bollen
Harper / December 2024


More Reviews from Fiction Addiction

Oh, my! I have no idea what I have just read. Definitely dark, often crazy, sometimes funny, and impossible to put down. A psychological thriller unlike anything I have ever read. A meddlesome 81-year-old woman who has an unstoppable urge to “help” people she thinks are troubled meets her match with an eight-year-old little boy who could be compared to Patty McCormick in The Bad Seed. Together, they wreak havoc upon each other and the guests and staff at the once opulent hotel in Luxor Egypt where they have gathered to escape Covid lockdowns in their home countries. You will not soon forget Maggie Burkhardt, or the ending!

Reviewed by Nancy McFarlane, Fiction Addiction in Greenville, South Carolina



Bookseller Buzz

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Time of the Child by Niall Williams

Niall Williams, photo credit John Kelly

It seems to me that all novelists are explorers of unknown worlds. They map them as they go, the white pages showing the tracks of their discoveries, making actual the imagined or unknown. Sometime during the writing of the early pages of This is Happiness, I knew that I had found a world in the west Clare village of Faha. For some time, I had subscribed to the belief in the enormity of small places, the idea that wherever human beings are living the possibilities of story are not bound by the limits of space or number but are in fact endless.

With that novel, something occurred to me that hadn’t happened before. The longer I continued writing about Faha, the more I wanted to stay inside those pages.

― Niall Williams, Dubray Book Blog

What booksellers are saying about Time of the Child

Time of the Child by Niall Williams
  • Such a decadent delicious tale set in Ireland. I devoured it in a day. Could not put this book down. Left me with a raw hangover in a world I didn’t want to leave. Many people will put their nose up at small-town life, but this book shows the power of belonging, accepting, and loving. A doctor who has been serving the community for years and his steady daughter Ronnie were brought a baby during Advent and they hide her without the townspeople suspecting. What rolls out is remarkable and so heartfelt. I can’t wait for others to chat about it. Going back to reading more of this genius’s books.
      ― Suzanne Lucey, Page 158 Books in Wake Forest, North Carolina | BUY

  • With a return to Faha, Niall Williams writes a charming Christmas story in a town turned upside down by an abandoned baby–which brings out the best in humanity.
      ― Cheryl Lindstrom, Fonts Books in McLean, Virginia | BUY

  • I so loved the small Irish town of Faha in Williams This is Happiness — all the characters and their messy, honest humanness and humor! It was great returning to this town full of heart and a perfect read for the holidays. You’ll laugh a lot; you’ll feel a lot of love.
      ― Morgan DePerno, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina | BUY

  • Absolutely fabulous story! William’s writing is a literary art form that is astounding! Loved it! A must read!
      ― Stephanie Crowe, Page & Palette in Fairhope, Alabama | BUY

  • Like Niall Williams’ earlier novel This is Happiness, Time of the Child is populated with real people we feel we know—fully developed characters for whom Williams’ empathy never wavers. There’s an animated plot that’s equal parts strange, warm, funny, and poignant, played out with sentences that beg to be underlined for their elegance, their humor, and their profound honesty. The story is set during Christmas, and I expect that I’ll be giving this jewel of a novel as a gift to everyone I know this year, as I did Small Things Like These, by Williams’ compatriot Claire Keegan in 2023.
      ― Clara Boza, Malaprop’s Bookstore/Cafe in Asheville, North Carolina | BUY

Niall Williams was born in Dublin. He is the author of nine novels, including History of the Rain, which was long listed for the Booker Prize and Four Letters of Love, which will soon be a major motion picture starring Pierce Brosnan, Helena Bonham Carter, and Gabriel Byrne. His most recent novel, This Is Happiness was nominated for The Irish Books Award, The Walter Scott Prize, and was one of the Washington Post’s Books of the Year. He lives in Kiltumper in County Clare, Ireland.

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Sweet Vidalia by Lisa Sandlin

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Sweet Vidalia by Lisa Sandlin
Little, Brown and Company / December 2024

Fiction,Women
More Reviews from Page 158 Books

I can only hope that I’d be as strong as Eliza Kratke (not Kracky!) should everything I ever knew to be true suddenly turned out to be built on a web of lies. Lisa Sandlin’s Sweet Vidalia will have you cheering for Eliza as she picks up the pieces of her life and figures out how to be successful going forward. A thought-provoking novel on how to dig deep to find one’s inner strength no matter the obstacles.

Reviewed by Barb Rascon, Page 158 Books in Wake Forest, North Carolina



Ottolenghi Comfort by  Yotam Ottolenghi

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Ottolenghi Comfort by Yotam Ottolenghi
Ten Speed Press / October 2024


More Reviews from Flyleaf Books

Ottolenghi was once my family’s favorite local cafe. I’ve collected the signed cookbooks for many years, and cooking from them reminds me of my London days. This latest book is a winner, and I’ll recommend it for cozy recipes that feature bold flavors and international influences that reflect the delicious London food scene.

Reviewed by Maggie Robe, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

Ditching Saskia by  John Moore

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Ditching Saskia by John Moore
Flying Eye Books / October 2024


More Reviews from Bookmarks

What we all wouldn’t give to resurrect a lost one, even to spend just a few days with them? In Damian’s world you can, but one small hiccup is he ends up bringing back not his mom but a young dead girl. This story is all about the unexpected ways life gives us the answers we need. Themes of belonging, loss, guilt and abandonment and yet so much hope in the messiness. Perfect for fall and Studio Ghibli fans!

Reviewed by Morgan DePerno, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

The Hotel Balzaar by Kate DiCamillo

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The Hotel Balzaar by Kate DiCamillo
Candlewick / October 2024


More Reviews from Square Books

Deep in the land of Norendy is the Hotel Balzaar where Marta and her mother live, waiting for Marta’s father to return from the war. Marta’s life is quiet and dull until the day that a mysterious Countess and her parrot arrive. The Countess says she has come to tell Marta seven tales. The tales teach Marta about hope and light, and take her on a fabulous journey of the imagination. A delightful read for anyone who enjoys being swept away by a dreamlike story!

Reviewed by Monie Henderson, Square Books in Oxford, Mississippi

Audrey Hepburn by Dorilys Giachetto

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Audrey Hepburn by Dorilys Giachetto
NBM Publishing / November 2024


More Reviews from E. Shaver bookseller

I’m not a huge reader of graphic novels, but when I saw this, I knew I had to open it up. I already had a lot of knowledge of her lifetime as she was a big idol of mine growing up, and she always reminded me of my dad. The content of this novel really spans her entire lifetime, summing it up perfectly, and I was also obsessed with the illustrative style used. I think it made it so much more special that her son, Luca, was part of the foreword as well.

Reviewed by Kenzie Karoly, E. Shaver bookseller in Savannah, Georgia


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy 25th Anniversary Edition by  Douglas Adams

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The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy 25th Anniversary Edition by Douglas Adams
Crown / August 2004


More Reviews from Carmichael’s Bookstore

The perfect compendium for a beloved sci-fi classic, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy 25th Anniversary Edition holds five novels that follow the adventures of a British man (Arthur Dent) as he’s whisked away through the galaxy with a strange set of comrades to save the Earth, the Galaxy and themselves. Adams balances humor, wit, and some scientific insight in this series; be amazed to read about sentient dolphins who have their own language and singing abilities, a supercomputer who finally figures out the meaning of life, and many other zany characters.

Reviewed by Hilton Airall, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

Intermezzo The Serviceberry Wicked
Best American Essays 2024 The Cajun Night Before Christmas

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“I read; I travel; I become.”
— Derek Walcott

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

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The Southern Bookseller Review 12/10/24

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of December 10, 2024

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The week of December 10, 2024

Our favorite holiday stories you probably haven’t heard yet.

Holiday Stories

Okay, the holidays are a time for giving. For coming together with family. For cookies. And for indulging in guilty pleasures, like, say, a couple of steamy holiday romances!

The Mistletoe Mystery by Nita Prose A sweet novella about Molly the maid, filled with lots of her Gran’s wonderful sayings. There are lots of Christmas festivities as Molly and Juan celebrate the days before Christmas.— Nancy McFarlane, Fiction Addiction in Greenville, South Carolina

Everyone This Christmas Has a Secret by Benjamin Stevenson It’s short, it’s quirky, and absolutely a holiday treat of a read. Fewer pages doesn’t mean fewer complications or changes of missed clues. — Jan Blodgett, Main Street Books in Davidson, Georgia

Make the Season Bright by Ashley Herring Blake A Sapphic Christmas second-chance romance — what more do you need to know? The dynamic between Charlotte and Brighton is excellent, and I loved how important music was to the story. — Amber Brown, Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh, North Carolina

The Most Wonderful Crime of the Year by Ally Carter If Knives Out and Hallmark Christmas movies had a baby and Agatha Christie was the nanny, it would be this book. Seriously Maggie and Ethan are everything, and I want to spend all my holidays with them. — Michelle Whittaker, Fonts Books in McLean, Virginia

Only for the Holidays by Abiola Bello City girl Tia Solanke is NOT looking forward to the holidays. She and her boyfriend, Mike, are on a break, and her mother’s solution is to take a Christmas getaway to the picturesque Saiyan Hedge Farms.  — Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

The Holiday Honeymoon Switch by Julia Mckay If you’re looking for a little spicier Hallmark Christmas movie-type story, then look no further! Best friends Holly and Ivy actually aren’t fond of Christmas, thank you very much. But they both find a little more than they were looking for. — Jennifer Jones, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

We Celebrate the Light  by Jane Yolen An astonishingly gorgeous rendering of the significance of light in the cultural lives of communities around the world. It is a celebration of the natural rhythms that unite us all and the cultural practices that make us unique. — Damarius Johnson, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Santa’s First Christmas by Mac Barnett I never thought about how Santa celebrated Christmas Day. This is my new favorite book. So funny and creative. — Suzanne Lucey, Page 158 in Wake Forest, North Carolina

Brightly Shining by Ingvild Rishøi This is a winter novel for those of us who name Hans Christian Anderson’s stories among our favorite fairy tales. Ronja’s voice is perfect – poignant and descriptive, but still true to a ten year old. — Ginger Kautz, Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh, North Carolina

A Stickler Christmas by Lane Smith There’s always that one book that’s so weird it’s wonderful. If that’s your holiday jam, Stickler will definitely stick with you. And yeah, we all know that one kid who really might just love a really cool stick for Christmas. — Angie Tally, The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, North Carolina

At Our Table by Patrick Hulse At Our Table deserves a permanent spot on your bookshelves. A story about family, home as a safe space to be yourself, and gathering around a table that has room for everyone — Jessica Nock, Main Street Books  in Davidson, North Carolina

More Holiday Stories

Find more holiday stories recommended by booksellers at SBR.


You can help! The Book Industry Charitable Foundation

Independent bookstores in the South are still struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and now Hurricane Milton. You can help: Donate to Binc; a relief organization for booksellers and comic book sellers. Visit the SIBA Hurricane Relief Resources page to donate directly to store fundraisers. And shop online at a store that has been impacted.

Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory



Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

Make Me Rain by Nikki Giovanni

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Make Me Rain by Nikki Giovanni
William Morrow / September 2021


More Reviews from Bookmarks

”If now isn’t a good time for the truth I don’t see when we’ll get to it.”― Nikki Giovanni (June 7, 1943 – December 9, 2024)

I would not call myself a poetry reader, but there is something about Nikki Giovanni’s poetry that speaks to me so deeply. Sentimental and comforting, Make Me Rain covers a wide range of topics from quilts and rising bread to the social change we so desperately need in our world. Giovanni’s wisdom and understanding once again prove why she is such a poetic powerhouse – and leave the reader wanting to explore her past work again, too.

Reviewed by Beth Seufer Buss, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

The Secret Dead Club by Karen Strong

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The Secret Dead Club by Karen Strong
Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers / August 2024


More Reviews from Avid Bookshop

Southern Book Prize Finalist

2025 Southern Book Prize Finalist
See all | Vote Now!

While Karen Strong’s previous two middle-grade books have had ghosty elements, The Secret Dead Club is a full-fledged haunted ghost story. After Wednesday, Thomas moves back to her mom’s hometown in Georgia, where she realizes she’s not the only middle school girl who sees ghosts. This exciting mystery uses themes of friendship and grief to help the reader know themselves better. This story masterfully includes (what can be seen as) delicate topics such as getting your period or how emotions can manifest physically in your body to create an extremely relatable and readable book.?

Reviewed by Rachel Watkins, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia

The Rest Is Memory by Lily Tuck

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The Rest Is Memory by Lily Tuck
Liveright / December 2024


More Reviews from Thank You Books

It’s hard to think about Holocaust literature without the words of Adorno in my head–"to write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric"–but the discussion is too important, and the correctives too far-ranging. I physically ached while reading this book and did, finally, cry–while reading Tuck’s acknowledgments. The care she has taken here to give voice to a young Catholic girl who would otherwise remain a number is evident both from the considerable research and the unflinching tone. The story that emerges feels piercingly, viscerally true, and alive. I won’t soon forget Czeslawa and her very real, youthful humanity, a girl in full bloom, afraid of her father, curious about boys, comforted by stories and prayer and the vastness of her imagination before it was starved to death. The insights into Poland’s history before and during the war, as well as the glimpses into the lives of various (real) notorious figures, create a haunting scaffolding for Czeslawa’s story. A heartbreaking novel whose integrity can’t be impugned.

Reviewed by Kristen Iskandrian, Thank You Books in Birmingham, Alabama



Bookseller Buzz

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The Nightmare Before Kissmas by Sara Raasch

Sara Raasch, photo courtesy the author

Show of hands—who’s had a rough couple of years? It’s a mark of just how brutal life’s been that I know your hand went up. Life’s been hard. It’s been cruel. And in the summer of 2022, I’d had it. I was tired of being sad and feeling crushed by the continued crap life heaped on us all. So, I set out to recapture joy by writing a rom-com. A silly, irreverent, whimsical rom-com about how you spend your life chasing nostalgia even when you know those moments will never be quite the same; about not just surviving, but living, and doing that while being unapologetically queer.

― Sara Raasch, Letter to indie booksellers

What booksellers are saying about The Nightmare Before Kissmas

The Nightmare Before Kissmas by Sara Raasch
  • This novel was a charming tale about a marriage competition between the princes of Halloween and Christmas over the princess of Easter. The twist — they fall for each other instead of the princess. Filled with themes of family, the meaning of joy, and how love can heal The Nightmare Before Kissmas was an adorably sweet story that is perfect for the upcoming season.
      ― Ashton Ahart, Page 158 Books in Wake Forest, North Carolina | BUY

  • I came for the silly, lighthearted gay romance, and I stayed for the political coup/anti-capitalist take down of holiday consumerism. Not at all what I expected, I had a jolly time reading this book with all its Christmas shenanigans, delightful flirting, and unique take on the commodification of joy during the holidays.
      ― Gray Koesters, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky | BUY

  • I am obsessed! This is entirely too delightful and it slayed me (sleighed me?)! I need only tell you that the prince of Christmas and the prince of Halloween fall in love. This is a world of holidays with lands and lore, ruling families and political intrigue. Sara Raasch has got me in her pocket and I have never felt more giddy while reading a novel. The holiday high jinks are high key and the foundational friendships had my whole heart.
      ― Michelle Cavalier, Cavalier House Books in Denham Springs, Louisiana | BUY

  • Anyone who knows me knows I LOVE a holiday romance. Put together Christmas AND Halloween??? Bliss! Prince Nicolas "Coal" Claus used to love Christmas. But since his dad turned it into a soulless, predatory corporation, he is jaded. He is set up for a fake marriage to the Princess of Easter (his best friend) to seal a business arrangement. After drowning his sorrows, he has a super sexy brief encounter with a mysterious man behind the bar. Later he finds out that that man is the ultra-hot Prince Hex of Halloween. Light and dark magic combine to create super fiery scenes and a deeply satisfying ending!
      ― Kelly Justice, Fountain Books in Richmond, Virginia | BUY

Sara Raasch grew up among the cornfields of Ohio and currently lives in the historical corridor of southeastern Virginia. She is the New York Times bestselling author of seven books for young adults. In her debut adult novel, Raasch offers readers all the joy, irreverent wit, and crackling sexiness of your favorite sweet-as-a candy-cane holiday romp.

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The Voyage Home by  Pat Barker

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The Voyage Home by Pat Barker
Doubleday / December 2024


More Reviews from Union Ave Books

The next installment of Pat Barker’s Women of Troy series maintains her streak of incredibly nuanced and winning retellings of classical myth. This time she’s telling the story of Cassandra and Clytemnestra mostly through the point of view of Ritsa, an enslaved Troy survivor. As always, Barker’s writing is spectacular and her portrayal of women of mythology is fully-faceted. A surefire hit for Madeline Miller fans!

Reviewed by Chelsea Bauer, Union Ave Books in Knoxville, Tennessee



Opus by Gareth Gore

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Opus by Gareth Gore
Simon & Schuster / October 2024


More Reviews from Old Town Books

If you’re looking for a good true crime book, this one is for you! A thrilling expose recounting how members of Opus Dei, a secretive, ultra-conservative Catholic sect, pushed its radical agenda within the Church and around the globe, using billions of dollars siphoned from one of the world’s largest banks. The author goes into a lot of detail of his investigation on this case. Literally had my jaw on the floor.

Reviewed by Sophia Dean, Old Town Books in Alexandria, Virginia

The Dividing Sky by Jill Tew

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The Dividing Sky by Jill Tew
Joy Revolution / October 2024


More Reviews from Brave + Kind

This is a rare gem in the YA dystopian genre. Not only have readers been waiting for the return of the genre but this will be a standout with its swoony romance, thrilling plot, and elements that feel too close to current events.

Reviewed by Vania Stoyanova, Brave + Kind in Decatur, Georgia

Bye Forever, I Guess by Jodi Meadows

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Bye Forever, I Guess by Jodi Meadows
Holiday House / October 2024


More Reviews from E. Shaver bookseller

Read This Next!

A November / December Read This Next! Kids Title

Being invisible and lonely is better than being seen and ridiculed, right? Warmth, caring, and cozy were all knit together to make this book. Middle school relationships are hard and are often made that much worse with miscommunication. Meadows handles it in a way that I think anyone can relate to and appreciate. Not to mention me giggling and kicking my feet at how sweet this romance is.

Reviewed by Lana Repic, E. Shaver bookseller in Savannah, Georgia

Final Cut by Charles Burns

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Final Cut by Charles Burns
Pantheon / September 2024


More Reviews from Octavia Books

The latest graphic novel from Charles Burns is as visually stunning as ever, in his inimitable style. In this tale, we are presented with a melancholy, teenage angst story that verges on horror by the end. as a group of friends attempt to make a home movie. The autobiographical aspects may not be subtle, as one of the protagonists struggles with the difficulties of turning the images in his head into reality, but as we flit from the tortured artist to the girl he has become fixated on, taking in their mutual friends and his situation at home, Final Cut presents us with a moving, layered tale of creation and destruction.

Reviewed by Doron Klemer, Octavia Books in New Orleans, Louisiana


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

With the Fire on High by  Elizabeth Acevedo

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With the Fire on High by Elizabeth Acevedo
Quill Tree Books / March 2021


More Reviews from Avid Bookshop

You don’t see teen mothers in YA much, and I am so grateful Acevedo has introduced us to Emoni, a seventeen-year-old who is a loving mother, a devoted granddaughter, and an amazing cook. Readers will warm immediately to her story of juggling school, family, romance, and her culinary passion. Sprinkled with magical realism and brimming with heart, With the Fire on High is a dish everyone should dig into!

Reviewed by Hannah DeCamp, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

The Women Every Valley Wicked
All About Love How the Grinch Stole Christmas

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“Poetry and music are very good friends. Like mommies and daddies and strawberries and cream – they go together.”
— Nikki Giovanni

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

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The Southern Bookseller Review 12/3/24

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of December 3, 2024

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The week of December 3, 2024

The comfort of good food.

Cooking

Raise your hand if the holidays make you hungry! Even people who don’t usually cook find themselves adding the ingredients for sugar cookies and red velvet cake to their shopping carts. Here are some recent cookbooks Southern booksellers are drooling over:

Baking in the American South by Anne Byrn A well-researched history of recipes tied to Southern towns and regions. Many of the recipes are not new. The value is in the breadth of communities represented in the biographies and histories. This is a broad and inclusive South with plenty of tempting recipes presented with clear instructions. — Jan Blodgett, Main Street Books in Davidson, Georgia

Bodega Bakes by Paola Velez An exciting and creative cookbook filled with classic American treats. These recipes add some uniquely Caribbean flavors to quintessential desserts. I can’t wait to make the Sorrel Snickerdoodles and the OG Chocolate Chip Thick’ems. — Michelle Whittaker, Fonts Books in McLean, Virginia

Ottolenghi Comfort by Yotam Ottolenghi Ottolenghi was once my family’s favorite local cafe. I’ve collected the signed cookbooks for many years, and cooking from them reminds me of my London days. This latest book is a winner, and I’ll recommend it for cozy recipes that feature bold flavors and international influences that reflect the delicious London food scene. — Maggie Robe, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

Bake Club by Christina Tosi Another social media cookbook crossover, many of the recipes debuted online. Now gathered in a useful collection that focuses on minimal ingredients and basic techniques. The tone is all about having fun and improvising. Recipes are truly accessible, and Bloom knows how to cheerlead cooking. A great gift for new and old cooks.— Jan Blodgett, Main Street Books in Davidson, Georgia

Pass the Plate by Carolina Gelen One of the things that Gelen gets absolutely right with this book is textural contrast in the recipes. If you love yogurt sauces, crispy rice and potatoes and fresh herbs, this cookbook should live in your kitchen, as it will in mine!  — Julia Paganelli Marin, Pearl’s Books in Fayetteville, Arkansas

The Trigger Kitchen by Emma Myles You may remember Emma Myles from her three-time Screen Actor’s Guild award-winning role as Leanne Taylor on Orange is the New Black. Turns out she’s not just a great actor but also an activist, fantastic food writer, and recipe developer. What makes this cookbook pop for me is the sincere and sharp writing in the preface and introductions to each yummy offering. It’s food for the heart and the soul. — Kelly Justice, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia

Find more cookbooks recommended by booksellers at SBR.


You can help! The Book Industry Charitable Foundation

Independent bookstores in the South are still struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and now Hurricane Milton. You can help: Donate to Binc; a relief organization for booksellers and comic book sellers. Visit the SIBA Hurricane Relief Resources page to donate directly to store fundraisers. And shop online at a store that has been impacted.

Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory



Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

The Barn by Wright Thompson

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The Barn by Wright Thompson
Penguin Press / September 2024


More Reviews from Pearl’s Books

Southern Book Prize Finalist

2025 Southern Book Prize Finalist
See all | Vote Now!

This incredible book connects hundreds of dots, centering the murder of Emmett Till in a stream of events, characters and circumstances going all the way back into prehistory. Wright Thompson grew up in the same Mississippi township as Till’s relatives and Till’s murderers, and he is quick to point out how all the local families, white and black alike, have been connected throughout history. Thompson approaches his topic with the eye of an insider while bringing in all the research one would expect of a journalist. One of his central themes is that the tragedy didn’t have to go down like it did—there were inflection points throughout history that could have sent events in a different direction altogether. Thompson does a masterful job of showing how, one social and economic event at a time, the Mississippi Delta came to be ruled by an insular bunch of poor, desperate, white terrorists, who by their actions destroyed the very place and way of life that they were trying so hard to cling to. The tragedy and the irony that are the hallmarks of the Delta’s history drip from every page. Till’s murder, in Thompson’s you-are-there retelling, wasn’t the result of an incident in a store, but rather a product of a cascade of events and circumstances that left Mississippi with a powerless but violence-prone white population who were desperate to subjugate their Black neighbors as a means of making sure they themselves weren’t at the bottom of the social order. I’m in awe of this book. Vivid storytelling, thorough research and interviews, beautiful prose, insights and turns of phrase that I wanted to share with whoever was nearby—a must-read.

Reviewed by Amanda Grell, Pearl’s Books in Fayetteville, Arkansas

This Motherless Land by  Nikki May

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This Motherless Land by Nikki May
Mariner Books / October 2024


More Reviews from E. Shaver Bookseller

First, let me say that I will read anything that Nikki May writes. I enjoy her storytelling immensely. I also admire her for taking on a Mansfield Park retelling, as it is often one of Austen’s least-appreciated novels. Mansfield Park has always intrigued me, and is a novel that reveals more with each re-reading. With that said, I would call This Motherless Land more of a Mansfield Park-inspired story. It is not an exact parallel. In fact, it seems to me to be inspired by a combination of Mansfield Park and the life of Dido Elizabeth Belle. Though, it does examine many of the same themes in Mansfield Park, such as family, greed, love, retribution, and forgiveness. One does not need to have read Mansfield Park to enjoy this novel. May creates empathetic characters, an engaging plot, and just the right amount of suspense.

Reviewed by Krista Roach, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia



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The Rivals by Jane Pek

Jane Pek, photo courtesy Angela Yuang

I’ve always been really interested in the idea of the detective as a character. That there is some unknown, some mystery, some secret, and the detective can put together the clues and uncover the truth. For me, the character of Claudia came first. I had always wanted to write a gay female because growing up, I had never come across these types of characters. I wanted a gay female character who is out there, having adventures, doing these things which are unexpected for someone like her. To be honest, I was hesitant about also making her Asian. When you write a minority character, you worry that everyone will think, “Oh, that’s you.” Those sorts of concerns about being pigeonholed. But ultimately, I had a clear sense about who this character was, and it was that she is a Chinese American, second-generation immigrant, and because of that, she viewed the world in a particular way. Setting it up that way, the way she moves and thinks is necessarily informed by who she is. This isn’t a novel about Asian or lesbian identity, but about someone who possesses these traits, and you therefore see the world from their perspective.

― Jane Pek, Interview, Diasporic Vietnamese Artists Network

What booksellers are saying about The Rivals

The Rivals by Jane Pek
  • Pek returns to the world hidden behind online matchmaking with a vengeance, Plot twists and ethical conundrums abound. Family and work relationships keep shifting making Claudia’s story one you can’t quit.
      ― Jan Blodgett, Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina | BUY

  • Claudia Lin is back solving mysteries, fighting with her siblings, and getting some action in Jane Pek’s The Rivals! This sequel to The Verifiers was everything I needed and more. Pek writes super-smart fun prose and the twists and turns in this mystery involving AI and matchmaking services kept me guessing. Wondering if there will be a third installment? They has to be, given the ending. Pick this up for a delightful read, perfect to escape into during a holiday or your weekend reading.
      ― Rachel Watkins, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia | BUY

  • An homage to mysteries, films, spy novels, and all things noir, and a cautionary tale of love, artificial intelligence, and the big business of matchmaking, this intelligence op is narrated by a not-quite hard-boiled detective who loves a good story as much as finding out the answers to her clients’ concerns. Well-plotted, well-written, and loaded with references for those who love classic mysteries, this is a book to savor, even as it keeps you turning its pages.
      ― Emma Aprile, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky | BUY

  • Tangled in the complex world of online dating platforms, this follow up to The Verifies is a meaty book, full of literary references and a slowly unfolding mystery. You can’t help but love Claudia, a quirky cyclist who is equal parts stubborn and brilliant. More of a literary mystery than I was expecting and I was delighted by every page.
      ― Jamie Southern, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina | BUY

Jane Pek was born and grew up in Singapore. She holds a BA from Yale University, a JD from the New York University School of Law, and an MFA in Fiction from Brooklyn College. She is the author of a novel, The Verifiers, and her short fiction has appeared in The Brooklyn Review, Witness, Conjunctions, Literary Hub, and twice in The Best American Short Stories. She currently lives in New York, where she works as a lawyer at a global investment company.

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I Made It Out of Clay by Beth Kander

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I Made It Out of Clay by Beth Kander
MIRA / December 2024


More Reviews from Friendly City Books

When you’re single and turning 40 on your younger sister’s wedding weekend, what would happen if you could take your love life into your own hands … literally? In her adult debut I Made It Out of Clay, award-winning playwright Beth Kander dreams up a charming romantic dramedy that even hearts made out of stone — er, clay — won’t be able to resist, served with a healthy dose of pathos and a twist inspired by Jewish folklore.

Reviewed by Emily Liner, Friendly City Books in Columbus, Mississippi



A Living Remedy by  Nicole Chung

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A Living Remedy by Nicole Chung
Ecco / April 2024


More Reviews from Main Street Books

I loved Nichol Chung’s debut memoir, All You Can Ever Know, Know, so I couldn’t wait to read her latest, A Living Remedy. Continuing to explore themes of identity and race, A Living Remedy also delves into themes of grief, class, and our fractured healthcare system up through the days of the COVID-19 pandemic. I want to spare the reader spoilers because I was riveted by Nicole’s experience of growing up, moving across the country from her adoptive parents, and raising a family of her own. Her exquisite writing and tender vulnerability make this a stand-out memoir for me. Highly recommend!

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

Divine Mortals by  Amanda Helander

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Divine Mortals by Amanda Helander
Disney Hyperion / October 2024


More Reviews from The Haunted Book Shop

The divining magic system really got my attention, and the plot twists kept me reading. Mona is the favored mortal of the crow god of love, and has the ability to divine soulmates. She’s also an agoraphobe because she accidentally killed her older brother as a child. (This isn’t a spoiler because it’s in the very first line.) She’s one of the most unlikable characters I’ve read in a while, but I kinda had to keep reading to see how far she would go–lying, cheating, scheming, teasing poor Master Whitman–to hold onto her truths.

Reviewed by Candice Conner, The Haunted Book Shop in Mobile, Alabama

Bert, the Bowerbird by  Julia Donaldson

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Bert, the Bowerbird by Julia Donaldson
Boxer Books / December 2024


More Reviews from Fountain Bookstore

Read This Next!

A November/December Read This Next! Kids Title

Bert the Bowerbird is just the sweetest little guy. All he wants is a wife to share his bower with. But Annette, the bird he’s set his sights on, is demanding, and never satisfied with Bert’s efforts to win her affection. He journeys far and wide to find more offerings for Annette, but always ends up hurt by her lack of interest. Can Bert find a bird who loves him for who he is? With adorable rhymes from Julia Donaldson (author of The Gruffalo and Room on the Broom) and gorgeous illustrations by Catherine Rayner, Bert, the Bowerbird is a wonderful tale of bird-based romance and self-acceptance. Don’t settle, Bert!!!

Reviewed by Charlie Marks, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia

Witchcraft: A Graphic History by  Lindsay Squire

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Witchcraft: A Graphic History by Lindsay Squire
Leaping Hare Press / October 2024


More Reviews from E. Shaver Bookseller

Love love love this book! I absolutely adore the illustrations done by Salsi- they add to the whimsical vibes. This graphic novel was super educational among witchcraft, along with the story of Biddy Early. I would definitely recommend this to all readers.

Reviewed by Kenzie Karoly, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

Monster by Walter Dean Myers

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Monster by Walter Dean Myers
Amistad Books for Young Readers / March 2019


More Reviews from The Bookshelf

I like to imagine a world where this is required reading for high schoolers. Where kids know what is like for their life to be left in the hands of someone who doesn’t understand you and doesn’t try to. This is a hard read, I put it down several times just to breathe, but it is one that will stick me just as Hate U Give and Dear Martin did.

Reviewed by Olivia Schaffer, The Bookshelf in Thomasville, Georgia


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

Small Things Like These The Serviceberry Berry Pickers
Anatomy of a Purple State The Millicent Quibb School of Etiquette for Young Ladies of Mad Science

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“Let’s be reasonable and add an eighth day to the week that is devoted exclusively to reading.”
— Lena Dunham

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

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The Southern Bookseller Review 11/26/24

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of November 26, 2024

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The week of November 26, 2024

A picture is worth a thousand memories.

Fall Children's Picture Books

November is Picture Book Month! The books we read as children stay with us forever. Just as the books we give to our children not will always stay with them.

This coming weekend, when you are doing some of your holiday shopping at your local bookstore on Small Business Saturday, spend some time with the picture books in the Children’s section and let yourself remember the magic.

Some recent picture books Southern booksellers have loved:

When You Find the Right Rock by Mary Lyn Ray, Felicita Sala Somewhere, sometime, you may come across a rock. When you do, remember that it’s not just a rock. It holds memories. And like memories, rocks come in all shapes and sizes. Some happy, some blue, some too big to understand. So, if you see a cool rock, take it, I won’t tell. — Jamie Kovacs, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

The Bakery Dragon by Devin Elle Kurtz I want to crawl inside this book, eat LOTS of bread, curl up with a dragon next to a cheerful fireplace, and take a long nap. Devin Elle Kurtz’s glowing illustrations and cozy, atmospheric storytelling make The Bakery Dragon an instant cold-weather classic.. — Talia Smart, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

The Hotel Balzaar by Kate DiCamillo, Júlia Sardà (Illus.) Deep in the land of Norendy is the Hotel Balzaar where Marta and her mother live, waiting for Marta’s father to return from the war. Marta’s life is quiet and dull until the day that a mysterious Countess and her parrot arrive. A delightful read for anyone who enjoys being swept away by a dreamlike story! — Monie Henderson, Square Books in Oxford, Mississippi

The Café at the Edge of the Woods by Mikey Please, Mikey Please (Illus.) Rene and Glumfoot have a fine dining establishment in an enchanted wooded area. An ogre comes for a meal, and they get more than they bargained for. Teamwork saves the day! If you like books about ogres, this book has it all! — Sheri Bancroft, Novel in Memphis, Tennessee

Drawn Onward by Daniel Nayeri, Matt Rockefeller (Illus.) This book left me speechless. It is heartbreaking and brilliant and so incredibly powerful. Congrats to Daniel Nayeri and Matt Rockefeller on a perfect collaboration. — DM Capriola, Little Shop of Stories in Decatur, Georgia

Beanie the Bansheenie by Eoin Colfer, Steve McCarthy (Illus.) Well that was one of the most whimsical things I’ve read in a bit, which is saying something. Absolutely stunning art with a heartwarming story to match of a wee Bansheenie who, through happenstance, doesn’t truly bond with her human and so shenanigans ensue. — Lauren Brown The Story Shop, in Monroe, Georgia

My Friend LeVar by Ezra Edmond, Jenna Nahyun Chung (Illus.) As a 90s kid who LOVED Reading Rainbow, this book sparked a lot of nostalgia for me. LeVar Burton is a true inspiration and the story behind the book is very cute. — Annastasia Williams, The Bottom in Knoxville, Tennessee

Frostfire by Elly MacKay Those etchings you see on frozen windows, that’s frostfire- snow dragon breath you know. Of course they live in snowbanks and happily dine on pinecones, and if you’re quiet and if you believe, maybe you’ll see one. I am absolutely in LOVE with this magical snowy title. — Angie Tally, The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, North Carolina

Lefty by Mo Willems, Dan Santat (Illus.) As a lefty in a world that wasn’t made for me, I love this. It’s so cute, fun, and perfect for kids trying to embrace their “left-handedness”. — Niamh Kenny, E. Shaver, Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia

Umami by Jacob Grant Super cute picture book that introduces the five tastes — salty, sour, bitter, sweet, and umami! Umami the Penguin loves food and wants to liven up her continent’s diet of cold fish (ew)! — Kate Storhoff, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

All the Books by Hayley Rocco, John Rocco (Illus.) Piper Waterstone loves her books! She loves them so much, she wants to keep them with her forever. When she discovers the library, she learns the art of sharing and friendship in this beautiful picture book — Rae Ann Parker, Parnassus Books in Nashville, Tennessee

Open Me…I’m a Dog  by Art Spiegelman Is this really a book or is it actually a dog? Find out what happens when a dog chases a rabbit, gets lost in the woods, and is cursed by a witch. For kids who love dog stories and adventure and for parents who love adult humor in children’s books. — Jenny Gilroy, E. Shaver, Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia

Fall Children's Picture Books

Find more picture books recommended by booksellers at SBR.

 


You can help! The Book Industry Charitable Foundation

Independent bookstores in the South are still struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and now Hurricane Milton. You can help: Donate to Binc; a relief organization for booksellers and comic book sellers. Visit the SIBA Hurricane Relief Resources page to donate directly to store fundraisers. And shop online at a store that has been impacted.

Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory



Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

Haunted Ever After by Jen DeLuca

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Haunted Ever After by Jen DeLuca
Berkley / August 2024


More Reviews from Underground Books

Southern Book Prize Finalist

2025 Southern Book Prize Finalist
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I enjoyed my first Jen DeLuca novel, and I can’t wait to read my next one. This romance/mystery was spooky, funny, and so much fun to read. Cassie moves to start over in a small town in Florida with a reputation for being haunted. She’s skeptical about all the ghost stories until she meets Nick, a local coffee shop owner and his roommate—a ghost named Elmer who I loved and is quite funny. A perfectly charming romance too! This is an awesome way to start Autumn, 5 stars!

Reviewed by Sandra Pinkney, Underground Books in Carrollton, Georgia

Lost and Lassoed by Lyla Sage

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Lost and Lassoed by Lyla Sage
Dial Press Trade Paperback / December 2024


More Reviews from Auburn Oil Co. Booksellers

Not to cause alarm but this is the best installment in the Rebel Blue Ranch yet. The enemies to lovers was PERFECTION. BEAUTIFULLY DONE. I thought it was going to feel weird because it has a bit of a “nanny” trope, but it was so perfectly executed that it didn’t bother me (I ended up absolutely adoring Riley). I will be raving about this book for the foreseeable future and forcing everyone to read it!!! Nov 5th can’t come fast enough!

Reviewed by Aubrey Miles, Auburn Oil Co. Booksellers in Auburn, Alabama



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On the Calculation of Volume (Book I) by Solvej Balle

Solvej Balle, photo courtesy the Fredrik Sandberg

The idea for the book came up a long time ago—in 1987 actually. And that was just the first bits of it, just the idea of a woman stuck in time repeating one day again and again. It took a long time for the idea to actually develop and all the philosophical material to kind of fall into place, because there’s a lot of questions about how this universe is working. So it took a long time and also the person had to develop, the person who ended up being Tara Selter, and also to find out when would it happen and all these little bits and pieces. So, there’s a lot of elements that prolonged the process. Also, there was a film coming out called Groundhog Day, which I didn’t see in the beginning because I thought it was too close. But when I finally saw it, I realized, ah, that’s a lot of nice research for my idea, because I realized it was so different.

― Solvej Balle, National Book Award Interview, Words Without Borders

What booksellers are saying about On the Calculation of Volume (Book I)

On the Calculation of Volume (Book I) by Solvej Balle
  • The first book in Solvej Balle’s brilliant (and forthcoming in English) septology On the Calculation of Volume is, in a word, stunning. Following the day-to-day minutia of a woman continually reliving the 18th of November, Balle finds the beauty and torment in repetition and recursion and revision. In all honesty, nothing actually happens in this book. But that doesn’t matter. Balle’s writing turns the reader into a balloon hitting a powerline—bright, weightless, fluorescent, until the shock comes. An absolutely stunning piece of fiction.
      ― Charlie Marks, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia | BUY

  • I’m hooked on this Scandinavian saga that takes a time loop plot and engages with it in a hyper-realistic style. Tara finds the most logical ways to test the boundaries of her new world and ruminates on repetitions and endings in a fresh way that no comparable story has. It’s hard to overstate how precious time is as a resource, and this is made salient as time goes rogue.
      ― Michael Allen, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky | BUY

  • Though the stuck-in-the-eternally-repeating-day scenario hasn’t (yet) been run into the ground, it has fared well-to-fair within a fair share of well thought out, hacky, and well-out hacked renditions. And the one stipulation they communally serve up is [dun dun duhhn] Rules. OtCoV, as a member of the Well Thought Out camp, includes the unique discombobulation of Evolving Rules, as some remnants of our protagonist’s previous November 18 sneak surreptitiously or outright grace her bedside presence come current November 18. Isolation and a lack of consistent input makes the learning mind a veritable playground and we’re sitting playground-benchside feeding the pigeons. This is the first year and volume of a novella septology which’ll leave you feeling concurrently satiated and craving more.
      ― Ian McCord, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia | BUY

Solvej Balle was born in 1962, made her debut in 1986 with Lyrefugl, and she went on to write one of the 1990s’ most acclaimed works of Danish literature, According to the Law: Four Accounts of Mankind (praised by Publishers Weekly for its blend of “sly humor, bleak vision, and terrified sense of the absurd with a tacit intuition that the world has a meaning not yet fathomed”). Since then, she’s published a book on art theory, Det umuliges kunst, 2005, a political memoir Frydendal og andre gidsler, 2008, and two books of short prose Hvis and , published simultaneously in 2013. On the Calculation of Volume is Solvej Balle’s major comeback, not just to Danish or Nordic fiction, but—expanding the possibilities of the novel—to all of world literature.

Barbara J. Haveland (born 1951) is a Scottish literary translator, resident in Copenhagen. She translates fiction, poetry and drama from Danish and Norwegian to English. She has translated works by many leading Danish and Norwegian writers, both classic and contemporary, including Henrik Ibsen, Peter Høeg, Linn Ullmann and Carl Frode Tiller.

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Canoes by Maylis De Kerangal

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Canoes by Maylis De Kerangal
Archipelago / October 2024


More Reviews from The Country Bookshop

I love dragons and good historical fiction as much as anyone, but lately, I find myself seeking good old realistic fiction, and there’s no one better for that than Maylis DeKerangal. Following her English language publication of Eastbound, comes Canoes, a delicious, delightful collection of stories of women living life. Strange, funny, sad, curious, beautiful. The stories of Canoes offer pinhole insights into lives lived and will absolutely leave readers changed for the good.

Reviewed by Angie Tally, The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, North Carolina

Every Valley by Charles King

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Every Valley by Charles King
Doubleday / October 2024


More Reviews from Bards Alley

As told by Charles King, the story of the Messiah’s creation has everything: war, a royal succession crisis, forbidden love, disgrace and reinvention, all of it funded by the horrors of slavery. It’s thrilling stuff, regardless of your religious beliefs or familiarity with classical music, and supported by rigorous research. Can’t wait to get this into people’s hands for the holidays.

Reviewed by Amy Woolsey, Bards Alley in Vienna, Virginia



Make My Wish Come True by Rachael Lippincott

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Make My Wish Come True by Rachael Lippincott
Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers / October 2024


More Reviews from Bookmiser

Take note Hallmark, this is the sapphic Christmas movie we want! Caroline is making her way through her senior year of high school and it’s almost time for the holidays. She’s started talking to a new girl, but she’s not really been into anyone since her best friend/crush left years ago. Arden, the best friend, left her small town when she was 14 to become an actor. She’s made it big in the past four years, but her real behavior has started to echo the party girl image her agent developed for her. Now she’s up for a serious role that she really wants. She kills the audition, but the director doesn’t want the flighty party girl. So she and her agent come up with a lie on the spot. They say she’s been dating her hometown best friend for years and is headed back for Christmas to be with her. Now she just has to convince Caroline.

Reviewed by Jennifer Jones, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

A Map for Falasteen by Maysa Odeh

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A Map for Falasteen by Maysa Odeh
Henry Holt and Co. (BYR) / October 2024


More Reviews from Page 158 Books

A stunning, heartbreaking, story that was well-performed by the voice actor on the audiobook. Every line seemed to tug my heartstrings, and yet this story felt grounded. Beautiful.

Reviewed by Nyawira Nyota, Page 158 Books in Wake Forest, North Carolina

Halfway There by Christine Mari

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Halfway There by Christine Mari
Little, Brown Ink / October 2024


More Reviews from E. Shaver Bookseller

This had me SOBBING. For someone who is not mixed race, this was really eye-opening about the struggles that mixed-race children and adults face in their daily lives. I’m assuming this book would be very comforting for someone who also understands what the MC goes through. This really highlights the microaggressions that are often spoken. Really eye-opening and a very emotional ride. Beautiful story. 10/10!

Reviewed by Stephanie St. John, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

11/22/63 by Stephen King

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11/22/63 by Stephen King
Scribner / July 2012


More Reviews from Flyleaf Books

A high school English teacher discovers a portal to the past – specifically to September 9, 1958 – and decides that he’s going to prevent the assassination of John F. Kennedy. But here’s the thing – the past is stubborn. It’s obdurate. It doesn’t want to be changed and will fight back any effort to rewrite history. In typical King fashion, 11/22/63 is a brilliant and affecting novel full of heart and terror in near-equal parts.

Reviewed by Colin Sneed, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

Water, Water Cher Berry Pickers
Of Time and Turtles Santa's First Christmas

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“If one reads enough books one has a fighting chance. Or better, one’s chances of survival increase with each book one reads.”
— Sherman Alexie

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

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The Southern Bookseller Review 11/26/24 Read More »

The Southern Bookseller Review 11/19/24

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of November 19, 2024

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The Southern Bookseller Review: A Book for Every Reader

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The week of November 19, 2024

The story behind the story: Southern Book Prize Nonfiction finalists.

The 2025 Southern Book Prize

Visit The Southern Book Prize and vote for the books they think deserve to be called "The best Southern book of the year." Everyone has a chance to win a collection of some of the finalists, as well as a $100 gift card to their favorite indie bookstore. Also, give a shout out to your favorite bookstore, and it will be shared by SBR. Vote here.

A Well-Trained Wife by Tia Levings  [St. Martin’s Press]

A Well-Trained Wife requires readers to go deep and summon the strength to continue reading through the darkest of parts, which is a luxury the author didn’t have. ― Beth Seufer Buss, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

The Barn by Wright Thompson  [Penguin Press]

This incredible book connects hundreds of dots, centering the murder of Emmett Till in a stream of events, characters and circumstances going all the way back into prehistory. Wright Thompson grew up in the same Mississippi township as Till’s relatives and Till’s murderers, and he is quick to point out how all the local families, white and black alike, have been connected throughout history. ― Amanda Grell, Pearl’s Books, Fayetteville, Arkansas

The Mango Tree by Annabelle Tometich  [Little, Brown and Company]

Parts of Annabelle Tometich’s story of growing up in Fort Myers, FL, the daughter of a Filipino mom and white dad, are so unbelievable they must be true. This family saga is told with unflinching candor. Bravo! ― Rachel Watkins, Avid Bookshop, Athens, Georgia

Sharks Don’t Sink by Jasmin Graham  [Pantheon]

A cautionary tale with a sense of hope, Graham’s memoir details her struggles with academia and her successes as a mentor to a new generation of scientists. Told with humor and clarity, this is a good addition to women in science shelves. ― Jan Blodgett Main Street Books, Davidson, North Carolina

A Really Strange and Wonderful Time by Tom Maxwell  [Hachette Books]

While this is THE Chapel Hill scene it will still be enjoyable to anyone who cares about music and it’s magic within a community, especially a supportive community which is what Chapel Hill was and still is. Two thumbs, and two big toes, up! ― Pete Mock, McIntyre’s Books Pittsboro, North Carolina

The Witch’s Daughter by Orenda Fink  [Gallery Books]

I haven’t stopped talking about The Witch’s Daughter since page one. (Seriously, ask anyone.) This memoir is as enthralling as it is brutal. ― LeeAnna Callon, Blue Cypress Books, New Orleans, Louisiana

Visit The Southern Book Prize Ballot and cast your vote for your favorite Southern books.

 


You can help! The Book Industry Charitable Foundation

Independent bookstores in the South are still struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and now Hurricane Milton. You can help: Donate to Binc; a relief organization for booksellers and comic book sellers. Visit the SIBA Hurricane Relief Resources page to donate directly to store fundraisers. And shop online at a store that has been impacted.

Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory



Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

A Tempest of Tea by Hafsah Faizal

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A Tempest of Tea by Hafsah Faizal
Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR) / February 2024


More Reviews from Parnassus Books

Southern Book Prize Finalist

2025 Southern Book Prize Finalist
See all | Vote Now!

An orphan with her own agenda of revenge, Arthie is forced to steal from vampire society in order to keep her teahouse and her found family safe. The worldbuilding, the vibes, and the cast of characters are all perfection. Faizal has delivered a twisty page-turner that I haven’t stopped thinking about.

Reviewed by Chelsea Stringfield, Parnassus Books in Nashville, Tennessee

Masquerade by Mike Fu

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Masquerade by Mike Fu
Tin House Books / October 2024


More Reviews from Avid Bookshop

Beginning in New York City in a tangled web of post-academia adulthood, in the late-20s, early-30s haze, Masquerade follows Meadow through a life in New York City, a childhood left behind in Shanghai, a friendship with his mysterious artist friend, and an ever-increasingly odd set of coincidences of mirrors and doubles, wrapped up in an odd book of 1930s Shanghai. Past the layers of mirrors and doubles, peeling away history and memory, Masquerade is about resisting the inertia of remaining in life when and where it’s comfortable and instead (re)-writing the story as you would like to see it.

Reviewed by Mikey LaFave, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia



Bookseller Buzz

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The Serviceberry by Robin Wall Kimmerer

Robin Wall Kimmerer, photo courtesy the Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

I suppose that one important aspect of the economy of nature that has shaped my thinking is its circularity, in which materials flow in cycles and there is no such thing as waste. Everything gets regenerated so that life continues to flourish. Just about all the miraculous production by plants is redistributed in some way, passed among food webs, feeding other lives and eventually building the soil so it can all start again.

I continue to marvel every day at the reciprocity in something as basic as the two foundations of life on the planet–the inverse processes of photosynthesis and respiration. I mean, think of it…every breath we take is oxygen exhaled by plants, a so-called waste product. And no sooner does it enliven our bloodstream than we exhale carbon dioxide in return, which the plants take in in order to return the favor. It’s the ultimate biological poetry, my breath is your breath, and life is magnified by the exchange. Shouldn’t human economies emulate this?

― Robin Wall Kimmerer, Interview, Orion Magazine

What booksellers are saying about The Serviceberry

The Serviceberry by Robin Wall Kimmerer
  • I want everyone to read The Serviceberry This is now well-known, but Robin Wall Kimmerer has a beautiful way of looking at the natural world, and extrapolating meaning that applies to so many facets of life. Reading it made me want to participate more in the “gift economy” and helped me understand how gifts create community. It’s the kind of book I’ll be talking about for a while.
      ― Daniel Jordan, Pearl’s Books in Fayetteville, Arkansas | BUY

  • This book came to me the week Hurricane Helene devastated Western North Carolina and my heart. While witnessing the earth’s rage and strength of mutual aid in real time, reading of nature’s interdependence was my buoy among flooding of rivers, loss, and grief. In these times of greed-driven, scarcity-fueled climate change, this writing is a balm. In sweet and inviting prose, Robin Wall Kimmerer gifts us yet another powerful lesson from our ecosystem teachers. For emergent strategists, those weary of late-stage capitalism, and all earthlings who read.
      ― RC Collman, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina | BUY

  • Can a book be cozy, loving, encouraging, compassionate AND a threat to the brutal and cutthroat consumer capitalism of our era? I present to you Robin Wall Kimmerer’s first book since her surprise mega bestselling sleeper hit Braiding Sweetgrass. The serviceberry is a bushy, under-appreciated fruit tree native to Eastern North America that Kimmerer uses as inspiration to muse broadly on “abundance and reciprocity in the natural world.” The tree embodies the values of gratitude, interconnectedness, and mutual aid. Strikingly, the serviceberry’s broad and generous distribution of its wealth ensures its own flourishing! Let’s all read this small, beautiful, and powerful little book and talk about how we can reimagine modern economic life to be a little more sane and humane!
      ― Josh Niesse, Underground Books in Carrollton, Georgia | BUY

  • Kimmerer succinctly and beautifully articulates the need for a more harmonious, sustainable way of living. In a world that seems to prioritize personal enrichment, Kimmerer emphasizes the need for one built on mutual aid, gift economies, and reciprocity all inspired by the wisdom of nature.
      ― Hezekiah Olorode, Old Town Books in Alexandria, Virginia | BUY

  • Robin Wall Kimmerer’s most recent work is a poignant and timely foray into the ways that we view "earthly gifts", in her opinion a far more appropriate name for what we call natural resources. In vignettes, she traces how abundance has been warped into scarcity, paralleling discussions of capitalist economics with detailed observations of the gift economy centered around her beloved serviceberry. Weaving together indigenous knowledge, modern economic thought, and her keen naturalist’s eye, Kimmerer’s latest work is yet another triumph. But more importantly, in a world where climate anxiety is all consuming, The Serviceberry articulates hope for a future built on compassion and reciprocity rather than fear and exploitation, holding a space for light in the midst of darkness.
      ― Sydney Mason, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina | BUY

Robin Wall Kimmerer is a mother, scientist, professor, and enrolled member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation. She is the author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants as well as Gathering Moss: A Natural and Cultural History of Mosses. Kimmerer is a 2022 MacArthur Fellow. She lives in Syracuse, New York, where she is a SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor of Environmental Biology, and the founder of the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment.

John Burgoyne is a member of the New York Society of Illustrators and an alumni of Massachusetts College of Art. John has won over 100 awards in the United States and Europe including Society of Illustrators, Communication Arts, Hatch Awards, Graphis, Print, One Show, New York Art Directors Club and Clio. His work can be found at JohnTBurgoyneIllustration.com.

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The Burrow by Melanie Cheng

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The Burrow by Melanie Cheng
Tin House Books / November 2024


More Reviews from Bookmiser

Read This Next!

A November Read This Next! Title

Melanie Cheng’s novel The Burrow is a compact, moving story of a family tragedy. Beautifully written, it shows all believable family members as they deal with the death of the infant Ruby in a tragic accident. Each member of the family becomes intimately known to the reader as each relates their private feelings about each other and the trauma and grief. Relief is brought by the rabbit, Fiver, as Grandma Pauline and ten-year-old daughter Lucie bond with the new pet. The father, Jin, and Mother Amy show their weaknesses, guilts, and imperfections in this realistic telling of a family’s pain, love, and hope.

Reviewed by Nancy Pierce, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

The Black Utopians by Aaron Robertson

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The Black Utopians by Aaron Robertson
Farrar, Straus and Giroux / October 2024


More Reviews from Carmichael’s Bookstore

A book that feels groundbreaking: ambitious in scope and deeply felt. The Black Utopians is a necessary book, redefining the very Euro-centric image many of us hold of intentional communities that are rooted in the American experience. This is my favorite kind of history book- a re-visioning of not just of place and ideas but also a reframing of how we look forward. Robertson offers an elegant book of hope and expansiveness.

Reviewed by Johanna Hynes, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky



The Wild Huntress by Emily Lloyd-Jones

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The Wild Huntress by Emily Lloyd-Jones
Little, Brown Books for Young Readers / October 2024


More Reviews from The Stacks Bookstore

A huntress accidentally enchanted as a baby to see hidden magic and the Other Folk embarks on a deadly hunt with a trickster and a reluctant prince to save her Mam. Emily Lloyd-Jones strikes again with the gorgeously-written, unique Welsh fantasy that will utterly captivate readers with each page.

Reviewed by Cindy Otis, The Stacks Bookstore in Savannah, Georgia

Brown Girl, Brown Girl by  Leslé Honoré

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Brown Girl, Brown Girl by Leslé Honoré
Little, Brown Books for Young Readers / November 2024


More Reviews from McIntyre’s Books

Read This Next!

A November/December Read This Next! Kids Title

Cozbi Cabrera’s beautiful illustrations really make this poem by Leslé Honoré sing! This will be a book that all ages can enjoy; as a read-aloud for littlest listeners, as a shared read for older kids who can also enjoy the details in the artwork, and as a lovely gift for adults.

Reviewed by Johanna Hynes, McIntyre’s Books in Pittsboro, North Carolina

Please Be My Star: A Graphic Novel by Victoria Grace Elliott

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Please Be My Star: A Graphic Novel by Victoria Grace Elliott
Graphix / October 2024


More Reviews from Fiction Addiction

High school stands out in my mind as such a time for being awkward, self-critical, and overly romantic. This is the case for Erika, a new student who has a voice in her head that often makes her question herself and if she’s capable of making friends. Surely, something has to give! When her school opens up submissions for one-act plays, she writes one for her crush.. But she never expects him to agree to be her lead! Full of angst and obsession that only comes with a new crush.

Reviewed by Arthur Acton, Fiction Addiction in Greenville, South Carolina


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

Debating Darcy by Sayantani DasGupta

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Debating Darcy by Sayantani DasGupta
Scholastic Press / March 2023


More Reviews from Bookmarks

I’m always a fan of a good Pride and Prejudice retelling, and this one does not disappoint. I love the setting of competing high school debate teams and the issues of racism and sexism that are addressed.

Reviewed by Jamie Southern, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

The Blue Hour Heartbreak is the National Anthem Orbital
Anatomy of a Purple State Nothing Like the Movies

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“The unread story is not a story; it is little black marks on wood pulp. The reader, reading it, makes it live: a live thing, a story.”
— Ursula K. Le Guin

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

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The Southern Bookseller Review 11/12/24

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of November 12, 2024

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The week of November 12, 2024

More great reads: the Southern Book Prize Fiction finalists.

The 2025 Southern Book Prize

Visit The Southern Book Prize and vote for the books they think deserve to be called "The best Southern book of the year." Everyone has a chance to win a collection of some of the finalists, as well as a $100 gift card to their favorite indie bookstore. Also, give a shout out to your favorite bookstore, and it will be shared by SBR. Vote here.

James by Percival Everett  [Doubleday]

A necessary look into the life of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn’s Jim, or James, told with Percival Everett’s unflinching, poetic, and entertaining prose. The pages fly by, leading to a triumphant finale that is as impactful as anything I’ve read in years. ― James Harrod, Malaprop’s in Asheville, North Carolina

Haunted Ever After by Jen DeLuca  [Berkley]

If you’ve ever found yourself longing for a spooky beach read, this is it! Brings all of the deliciously warm ambiance that comes from a seaside setting and also meddling ghosts. ― Tara Leimkuehler, Parnassus Books in Nashville, Tennessee

Tell It to Me Singing by Tita Ramirez  [Simon and Schuster / Mary Sue Ricci Books]

A family drama that centers on a mother’s secret, this novel is honeyed with warmth, truth, and the secrets that―once revealed―eventually bring us closer together. ― Julia Paganelli Marin, Pearl’s Books in Fayetteville, Arkansas

When the Jessamine Grows by Donna Everhart  [Kensington Books]

Historical fiction at its absolute best! Everhart’s carefully crafted female protagonist shows strength, courage and resolve in the face of the many cruelties of the Civil War. ― Sharon Davis, Book Bound Bookstore in Blairsville, Georgia

Rednecks by Taylor Brown  [St. Martins Press]

Rednecks is the dark and moving story of big coal, broken lives, love, and loyalty. I felt like I was in the cold, muddy camps along with the families. ― Susan Williams, M Judson, Booksellers in Greenville, South Carolina

Shae by Mesha Maren  [Algonquin Books]

Maren masterfully balances hope and despair on both community and personal levels, examining how identity—especially as someone who is young and queer—is shaped by place and its people as much as by the choices we make (and the ones we don’t). ― Miranda Sanchez, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

For the next couple months the SBR newsletter will include features and bookseller reviews of the finalists. Winners will be announced on February 14th. Visit The Southern Book Prize Ballot on Friday and cast your vote for your favorite Southern books.

 


You can help! The Book Industry Charitable Foundation

Independent bookstores in the South are still struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and now Hurricane Milton. You can help: Donate to Binc; a relief organization for booksellers and comic book sellers. Visit the SIBA Hurricane Relief Resources page to donate directly to store fundraisers. And shop online at a store that has been impacted.

Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory



Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

A Well-Trained Wife by Tia Levings

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A Well-Trained Wife by Tia Levings
St. Martin’s Press / August 2024

Adult NonfictionBiography & AutobiographyWomen
More Reviews from Copperfish Books

Southern Book Prize Finalist

2025 Southern Book Prize Finalist
See all | Vote Now!

This book shows the hidden world of fundamentalism so well. How easy it is to get involved in it and how hard it is to get out. As someone who grew up in the Baptist culture and had to reframe their mind as they got older this book hit home in a lot of spots. The way that her parents were not involved in the fundamentalist movement, but because of the church that they choose and how they taught the children, it ended up brainwashing them into being extremely fearful, thinking that there is only one way to be redeemed and one specific job for women to do. The author had plans for her life and goals, but the church told her that she was to work on finding a husband and being a wife and refused to give her help to further her education. In the end, this leads her to her abusive husband, who leads them into the life of a fundamentalist. The books that the author had read and the way that the church taught her was that it was her fault that her husband treated her the way they did, and thus started a spiral of her trying to do more and be better and feel like the abuse was deserved. Reading her suffering and seeing how close I could have come to this lifestyle myself made this book an emotional one for sure and one I will not forget anytime soon.

Reviewed by Kelli Dynia, Copperfish Books in Punta Gorda, Florida

The Scholar and the Last Faerie Door by H. G. Parry

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The Scholar and the Last Faerie Door by H. G. Parry
Redhook / October 2024


More Reviews from The Little Bookshop

Are you on the H. G. Parry train? If not, get on! Her books are amazing! To read one of her books is a gift to yourself as you fall into her wonderfully crafted places and worlds where humans, fairies, and magical creatures and objects overlap and collide. In The Scholar and the Last Faerie Door, Clover enters a school of magic, hoping to learn enough magic to heal her brother, who was cursed on a WWI battlefield when a fairie door was opened, and the fairie that came through killed and cursed hundreds of men. Afterwards, the magical community destroyed all the fairie doors. Clover feels out of place at the school until she joins a group of friends led by wealthy student Alden. Her friends change her life and she loves the school. But there’s more than one secret in this group and at the school, and one of them could destroy the world. Because it’s possible that not every fairie door was destroyed.

Reviewed by Mary Patterson, The Little Bookshop in Midlothian, Virginia



Bookseller Buzz

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Where the Library Hides by Isabel Ibañez

Isabel Ibañez, photo courtesy the author

I grew up reading Agatha Christie. Her mysteries are classic and even amidst the dead bodies, oddly nostalgic and comforting for me. I have always wanted to write a mystery with lots of plot twists but do it in a way that feels true to me and my interests. When I was a kid, I wanted to be an Egyptologist, and so when I grew up and writing became my career, I knew I’d one day write a story set in Egypt. The Secrets of the Nile duology has all of my favorite things: a main character who isn’t a warrior but a dreamer, wanting to belong somewhere and yearning to make sense of the world around her. She’s bright and curious and impulsive, a teenager of her time and perhaps with an eye to the future, too. The love interest is morally gray and constantly questioning people and their motives and intentions. He’s cynical and sensitive and probably a little sad all the time. Together, I think they learn to heal and grow up, making mistakes along the way because no one gets it right the first time, or even the second.
― Isabel Ibañez, Interview, She Reads

What booksellers are saying about Where the Library Hides

Where the Library Hides by Isabel Ibañez
  • This was a wonderful conclusion to What the River Knows! It’s a mix of Indiana Jones and Atlantis. This story involves rivals turned lovers and also features a touch of grumpy x persistently-will-give-up-no-matter-what dynamic! It also makes you yearn to see the sights and monuments described! The epilogue was also a nice touch!
      ― Sarah Dimaria, Cavalier House Books in Denham Springs, Louisiana | BUY

  • A fantastic read! This is full of adventure, history, mystery, and romance. There are so many great twists and turns, heartbreaks and swoony scenes! Though it helps if you read book 1 first, I think it works on its own, too. Jump in here and then circle back to the first in the Secrets of the Nile series. You won’t regret it!
      ― Jamie Southern, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina | BUY

  • Get ready to head back to Egypt as you get swept into the final book in this series. Ibañez does it again with beautiful imagery and wonderful banter between the two main characters. As Inez tries to unlock the secrets behind her mothers betrayal she has to overcome the fact that her new husband Whit also used her for her money. Despite the fact he stole from her Whit desperately wants to stay with Inez and help her, so he makes her a deal that if they work together he will let her have a quiet devoice, even if that is not what he wants. Enjoy being swept away into this world that Ibañez has built as this beautiful adventure and love story unfold.
      ― Kelli Dynia, Copperfish Books in Punta Gorda, Florida | BUY

  • Loved these books!!! Ready to hear more about the other characters and their adventures!
      ― Sandra Huff, Virginia Highland Books in Atlanta, Georgia | BUY

  • This story is overflowing with an abundance of betrayal that can only be described as luscious! I found myself gasping at reveals, only for the next twist to shock me further. My heart was pulled in all directions, and ultimately ended with me in love Egypt as much as the characters.
      ― Halli Heinmets, Underbrush Books in Rogers, Arkansas | BUY

Isabel Ibañez is the author of the Secrets of the Nile duology (Wednesday Books), and Woven in Moonlight (Page Street), a finalist for the William C. Morris Award, and listed among Time Magazine’s 100 Best Fantasy Books Of All Time. She is the proud daughter of Bolivian immigrants and has a profound appreciation for history and traveling. She currently lives in Asheville, North Carolina, with her husband, twin sons, their adorable dog, and a serious collection of books. Say hi on social media at @IsabelWriter09.

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Blood Over Bright Haven by M. L. Wang

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Blood Over Bright Haven by M. L. Wang
Del Rey / October 2024


More Reviews from Bookmarks

Read This Next!

A November Read This Next! Title

Well damn, I going to be thinking about it for awhile. Blood Over Bright Haven is the perfect story for the person who wants to rage at the system of oppression against women and also the way in which religion and history are often used to tell a story that continues to make a person or people group be regarded as less than. Just add a technical magic system called “siphoning” and a group of mages who use their skills to learn where to siphon magic in order to power their city. Sciona is fueled by her desire to be the first woman accepted into this society of mages. She cares about nothing and no one else other than her work and her ability to be the best and make a name for herself when the majority believe as a woman, her delicate disposition will be her downfall. Nothing could be further from the truth because truth and magic are her focus, and nothing will stop her from seeking it. But what if the truth reveals something that completely changes the lens and paradigm of how you view the world? What then? Perfect for fall, perfect for the reader who wants to RAGE at the impacts of colonialism, racism, sexism.

Reviewed by Morgan DePerno, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

The Universe in Verse by Maria Popova

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The Universe in Verse by Maria Popova
Storey Publishing, LLC / October 2024


More Reviews from Underground Books

Fifteen short essays on science and nature, intended to inspire a sense of awe and wonder, are each paired with the work of a brilliant poet and a beautiful illustration. Popova’s extraordinary collection is a poignant, beautiful little gift book perfect for reminding us of how strange and wild it is that we get to exist and perceive this most mysterious universe at all!"

Reviewed by Josh Niesse, Underground Books in Carrollton, Georgia



Not for the Faint of Heart by Lex Croucher

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Not for the Faint of Heart by Lex Croucher
Wednesday Books / November 2024


More Reviews from Little Shop of Stories

Read This Next!

A November Read This Next! Kids Title

I’ve been a big fan of Lex Croucher’s work for a while now, so I didn’t need much convincing to enjoy this book, but I’m so glad it still exceeded all my expectations. With top-notch character banter, a ragtag found family, silly woodsy shenanigans, and a tender slow burn romance between the granddaughter of Robin Hood and the healer she accidentally kidnaps, it was so easy to fall in love with this book!

Reviewed by Matilda McNeely, Little Shop of Stories in Decatur, Georgia

Dive, Dive into the Night Sea  by Thea Lu

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Dive, Dive into the Night Sea by Thea Lu
Candlewick Studio / October 2024


More Reviews from Carmichael’s Bookstore

Dive, Dive into the Night Sea opens vertically. I mean, physically, the book’s orientation is 90 degrees from typical; which was delightful to discover! A lone diver, cloaked in darkness, plunges into the night sea. Together we descend, down, down, to where hidden creatures and their dwellings are revealed. Cleverly illustrated pages buoy the children’s story along with flaps that open to offer the science behind the scenes. Thea Lu’s beautiful, monochromatic book shines light into the inky depths, a blend of picture-book storytelling and engaging non-fiction. Great for children with an interest in the ocean and its creatures or science in general. Or anyone with a strong sense of curiosity!

Reviewed by Tracy Billing, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky

Off Menu by Oliver Gerlach

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Off Menu by Oliver Gerlach
little bee books / October 2024


More Reviews from Cavalier House Books

I love a good cooking duel and this was great! The artwork was adorable and I loved the found family aspect of this!

Reviewed by sarah dimaria, Cavalier House Books in Denham Springs, Louisiana


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

Molly's Tuxedo by Vicki Johnson

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Molly’s Tuxedo by Vicki Johnson
little bee books / June 2023


More Reviews from Bookmarks

It’s picture day at school, and Molly doesn’t want to wear the dress her Mom picked out; it doesn’t even have pockets! I loved this picture book that celebrates personal expression and the importance of being your true self. Bright, playful art with a wonderful message, Molly’s Tuxedo is a picture book winner!

Reviewed by Caleb Masters, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

The Mighty Red War The Vegetarian
The Handmaid's Tale All About Love

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“We don’t need a list of rights and wrongs, tables of dos and don’ts: we need books, time, and silence. Thou shalt not is soon forgotten, but Once upon a time lasts forever.”
— Philip Pullman

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

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The Southern Bookseller Review 11/5/24

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of November 5, 2024

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The week of November 5, 2024

Southern Book Prize: The Young Readers Finalists

The 2025 Southern Book Prize

There are eighteen finalists for the Southern Book Prize. Here are the six finalists for the Young Readers category, along with a brief comment from a Southern bookseller who loved the book.

Readers are invited to visit The Southern Book Prize and vote for the books they think deserve to be called "The best Southern book of the year." Everyone has a chance to win a collection of some of the finalists, as well as a $100 gift card to their favorite indie bookstore.

Readers can also give a shout out to their bookstore, and it will be shared by SBR. Say something nice about your local bookshop! Vote here.

Not Like Other Girls by Meredith Adamo  [Bloomsbury YA]

A mystery full of heart and at times deeply unsettling. Teenagers are messy, but they are wholly human with all the pain that often includes. ― Rayna Nielsen, Blue Cypress Books in New Orleans, Louisiana

A Tempest of Tea by Hafsah Faizal  [Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR)]

The world building is intricate and vivid and the characters are wonderful. I’m already ready for the sequel. ― Winter Goldsmith, E. Shaver, Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia

In Praise of Mystery by Ada Limón, Peter Sís (illus.)  [Norton Young Readers]

One of the most impactful children’s books I’ve read all year. The poem becomes a story of hope and guidance, teaching the reader to accept and invite the unknown rather than fear it. ― Grace Sullivan, Fountain Books in Richmond, Virginia

Millie Fleur’s Poison Garden by Christy Mandin  [Orchard Books]

Every neighborhood needs a girl like Millie. Check out Millie’s unique, and yes, somewhat creepy garden and you just might find yourself starting a trend in your own community! ― Barb Rascon, Page 158 Books in Wake Forest, North Carolina

The Secret Dead Club by Karen Strong  [Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers]

This is a lovely story about friendship, grief, and starting over. I appreciated the level of diversity in this book, as well as the portrayal of what a modern family can look like. ― Becca Naylor, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Compound Fracture by Andrew Joseph White  [Peachtree Teen]

Andrew Joseph White delivers an edge-of-your-seat thriller that will keep readers hooked until the final page. Equal parts blood-soaked and beautiful, a testament to the resiliency and power of community organization. ― Charlie Williams, Square Books in Oxford, Mississippi

For the next couple months the SBR newsletter will include features and bookseller reviews of the finalists. Winners will be announced on February 14th. Visit The Southern Book Prize Ballot on Friday and cast your vote for your favorite Southern books.

 


You can help! The Book Industry Charitable Foundation

Independent bookstores in the South are still struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and now Hurricane Milton. You can help: Donate to Binc; a relief organization for booksellers and comic book sellers. Visit the SIBA Hurricane Relief Resources page to donate directly to store fundraisers. And shop online at a store that has been impacted.

Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory



Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

James by Percival Everett

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James by Percival Everett
Doubleday / March 2024

,, 
More Reviews from Malaprop’s

Southern Book Prize Finalist

2025 Southern Book Prize Finalist
See all | Vote Now!

A necessary look into the life of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn‘s Jim, or James, told with Percival Everett’s unflinching, poetic, and entertaining prose. The story gives insight into the titular character’s perspective while also serving as a damning look at the deep-seated racial injustices of slavery and the way marginalized characters are portrayed in American fiction. The pages fly by, leading to a triumphant finale that is as impactful as anything I’ve read in years.

Reviewed by James Harrod, Malaprop’s in Asheville, North Carolina

Pony Confidential by Christina Lynch

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Pony Confidential by Christina Lynch
Berkley / November 2024


More Reviews from Flyleaf Books

Read This Next!

A November Read This Next! Title

Pony Confidential galloped straight into my heart from page one. This cozy mystery is narrated by an ornery pony trying to clear the name of his beloved former owner Penny. It features rats, cats, birds, and dogs aiding our hero in his redemptive quest, and – oh, did I mention – this is based on The Odyssey? Easter eggs galore for the clever classicist. If you enjoyed playing spot-the-character in Demon Copperhead, just wait until you meet Circe the goat. Perfect for lovers of Remarkably Bright Creatures and Lessons in Chemistry.

Reviewed by Maggie Robe, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina



Bookseller Buzz

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What the Chicken Knows by Sy Montgomery

Sy Montgomery, photo credit Tianne Strombeck kind of think it’s a waste of a perfectly good friendship to cook and eat them. But chickens are the one bird that even if you can’t recognize a crow, even if you can’t recognize a robin, people can identify a chicken. But even though we recognize them, and everyone thinks they know a chicken, people underestimate them all the time. Chickens have a lot of wonderful things about them, but to me, the most wonderful of all is their company, and being able to travel in the chicken universe, and be able to see that even in this, you know, commonest of creatures that everyone can recognize, there is still like mystery and excitement. There’s still a soul there. Each animal is highly individual, and we have so much to learn from them.
― Sy Montgomery, Interview, Living on Earth

What booksellers are saying about What the Chicken Knows

What the Chicken Knows by Sy Montgomery
  • I loved this book! It always appeared to me that my dog had a friendship with one of the chickens who lived next door. And now I know he probably did. Sy Montgomery is so adept at describing animal behavior in a way that illuminates without anthropomorphizing. Another great read.
      ― Liz Feeney, E. Shaver, Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia | BUY

  • Pretty much everything I’ve ever learned about chickens I learned here. Montgomery’s simple, personal prose makes this short book on keeping, raising, and understanding chickens a pleasure even for those of us stuck in urban sprawl without even a window-box. Short, and very sweet.
      ― Doron Klemer, Octavia Books LLC in New Orleans, Louisiana | BUY

  • Sy Montgomery takes us on a fascinating journey that’s enjoyable, humorous and educational and I definitely learned a lot! I had no idea that chickens were so intelligent and complex. Apparently they know us humans far better than we know them. All of the specific details she shared were quite interesting. They can make up to 24 sounds each having a specific meaning. I personally would have never thought to hug a rooster. I now have a new-found love for chickens and I recommend this book to everyone, especially animal lovers. 5 stars!
      ― Sandra Pinkney, Underground Books in Carrollton, Georgia | BUY

  • Sy Montgomery works her magic again, this time with chickens. With animal shelters overrun with post-pandemic abandoned birds, Montgomery shares her life with chickens once again giving a sense of our shared nature with our fellow creatures.
      ― Jan Blodgett, Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina | BUY

  • While I’ve had backyard chickens for about five years, Sy Montgomery’s book What the Chicken Knows: A New Appreciation of the World’s Most Familiar Bird made me realize how much I didn’t know about my flock. This short book was a delight, filled with personal stories of chickens and their human keepers. Read this if you’re thinking about getting your own flock or are just chicken-curious.
      ― Rachel Watkins, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia | BUY

Sy Montgomery is a naturalist, adventurer, and author of more than thirty acclaimed books of nonfiction for adults and children, including The Hummingbirds’ Gift, The Hawk’s Way, the National Book Award finalist The Soul of an Octopus, and most recently, Of Time and Turtles, which was a New York Times bestseller. The recipient of numerous honors, including lifetime achievement awards from the Humane Society and the New England Booksellers Association, she lives in New Hampshire with her husband, writer Howard Mansfield, and a border collie.

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The Heartbeat Library by Laura Imai Messina

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The Heartbeat Library by Laura Imai Messina
The Overlook Press / October 2024


More Reviews from Bookmiser

“Preserving our memory….because people come back to life only in the memory of others.” The Heartbeat Library is about those we have lost but remember with grief and healing and good memories. It is a book that will never be forgotten but remembered as all readers live their lives with hopes and dreams and pain and grief and loves and sorrows. This book will touch the soul of all who turn its pages. Shuichi, a 40-year-old illustrator, returns to his hometown to ready the house of his recently deceased mother for sale. He meets Kenta, an 8-year-old boy who wanders his mother’s house like a shadow. The two help each other through difficult days of their lives. Hearing the heartbeat of his mother and deceased son, Shingo will forever impress these beats on all readers and have all thinking about happiness and memories and loss and hopes.

Reviewed by Nancy Pierce, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

Gather Me by Glory Edim

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Gather Me by Glory Edim
Ballantine Books / October 2024


More Reviews from Main Street Books

Heartbreaking and heartwarming, this is a powerful tale of the power of the right book at the right time and of perseverance. If you love books, this is a must-read. Edim’s Well-Read Black Girl clubs are a gift to the world, and her memoir makes that gift even more meaningful.

Reviewed by Jan Blodgett, Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina



Lonely Places by Kate Anderson

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Lonely Places by Kate Anderson
Flux / October 2024


More Reviews from Editions Bookstore

Chase and Guthrie are two sisters who essentially grew up traveling the country with their parents and living in a renovated school bus after a tragedy occurred in their lives. After another accident happens to Guthrie, the family decides they need stability. Settling in Pando, they take up residence in a fire lookout in the middle of a forest. Not long after, Guthrie becomes obsessed with some of the trees and begins talking to herself. The significance? Guthrie’s past tragedy rendered her mute. Trying to save money for college and escape from the "hippie" lifestyle, Chase takes a summer job at a nearby camp. Even though she tries to resist, she soon makes friends and has a summer crush. Throughout the summer, strange things continue to occur in the forest – trees appear to have faces, Guthrie brings home collections of bones, and the summer is overshadowed by the story of a girl who went missing in the same forest decades ago. Next – Guthrie goes missing, and the family must find her before it’s too late. To find Guthrie, Chase and her family must face their past and the trauma that brought them to Pando. Lonely Places is a "slow burn" YA horror novel that mixes the past with the present and presents a psychological plot twist that will keep the reader guessing to the very end.

Reviewed by Marcia Honeycutt Roseman, Editions Bookstore in Kannapolis, North Carolina

Wake Up, Moon! by Lita Judge

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Wake Up, Moon! by Lita Judge
Antheneum Books for Young Readers / October 2024


More Reviews from Parnassus Books

A delightful picture book about a moonlight romp through the snow.

Reviewed by Rae Ann Parker, Parnassus Books in Nashville, Tennessee

Leap by Simina Popescu

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Leap by Simina Popescu
Roaring Brook Press / November 2024


More Reviews from Bookmarks

Read This Next!

A November/December Read This Next! Kids Title

I loved everything about this story! This touched on typical dancer struggles, like eating disorders, cruel instructors, and envy among the student but it was done in a way that I feel lots of people who aren’t in dance can relate to. But much more than just a story about dancers we are following Ana who is struggling with her identity, her relationships, being queer, and her struggle to figure herself out. I also really appreciated the color pallet that was chosen for this story and for the times when the artist utilized other brighter colors as part of the story telling.

Reviewed by Sarah Blackwell, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

Sync by Ellen Hopkins

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Sync by Ellen Hopkins
Nancy Paulsen / August 2025


More Reviews from Page 158 Books

Loved this book. It had a really engaging plot and it is my favorite realistic fiction book I have ever read. This book is great for older teens and young adults. This book did a really good job of keeping the reader engaged and entertained. Whether you like cliffhangers or not, you’ll love this book! I can not wait for the sequel to come out, and I definitely recommend this book to all young adult readers.

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


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

Absolution Brothers Best American Short Stories 2024
Democracy Awakening Flamboyants

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“Books train your imagination to think big.”
— Taylor Swift

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805
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The Southern Bookseller Review 10/29/24

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of October 29, 2024

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The week of October 29, 2024

Southern Book Prize Season Starts Friday

The 2025 Southern Book Prize

November. It is a month of falling temperatures and falling leaves. Of holiday decorations going up and college football touchdowns. Of lines in supermarkets at Black Friday sales and at polling places.

One ballot readers will enjoy casting is the vote for which books deserve to be considered "the best Southern books of the year." The 2025 Southern Book Prize (SPB) ballot opens Friday, November 1st.

Each year, Southern indie booksellers select six books as finalists for each of the fiction, nonfiction, and young reader categories. Either set in the South, or by a Southern author, the finalist list is a collection of some of the favorite "hand sell" books of the year. Books that indie booksellers have supported, championed, and perhaps even schemed to get their customers to try.

The SBP finalists are announced on November 1, and readers are invited to vote for their favorites in each category. Voting also includes a chance to enter a raffle for a collection of the books on the ballot, and a $100 gift card to their local indie bookstore.

For the next couple months the SBR newsletter will include features and bookseller reviews of the finalists. Winners will be announced on February 14th. Visit The Southern Book Prize Ballot on Friday and cast your vote for your favorite Southern books.

 


You can help! The Book Industry Charitable Foundation

Independent bookstores in the South are still struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and now Hurricane Milton. You can help: Donate to Binc; a relief organization for booksellers and comic book sellers. Visit the SIBA Hurricane Relief Resources page to donate directly to store fundraisers. And shop online at a store that has been impacted.

Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory



Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

Hard Copy by Fien Veldman

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Hard Copy by Fien Veldman
Apollo / September 2024


More Reviews from Flyleaf Books

Wholly original, perfect for fans of Convenience Store Woman. A lonely young woman who has isolated herself from her family, friends, and colleagues turns to the one (semi)reliable relationship left in her life: her office printer. She dusts it lovingly, protects it from leaks, troubleshoots its needs. Is she delusional? Is it a fairy tale? Does that even matter? I came for the love story and stayed to see if she gets her HEA…and I’m not saying anything else because you should obviously read it if you’ve stayed with me this far. No spoilers.

Reviewed by Maggie Robe, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

The Night We Lost Him by Laura Dave

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The Night We Lost Him by Laura Dave
S&S / Marysue Rucci Books / September 2024


More Reviews from The Violet Fox Bookshop

The Night We Lost Him is such a good read! I didn’t want to put it down, but felt none of the anxiety or nail-biting tension that can often come with thrillers. It’s atmospheric, insightful, and reflective – all while giving us an emotional mystery. While the book does focus on a kind of maybe murder mystery, it’s also very much about who we are versus who we want to be, both publicly and privately. It’s about the choices we make again and again and how we can change those choices and our path in life. It’s a love story but also a story about grief. Laura Dave’s writing is lovely; the characters are wonderfully three-dimensional, and I loved the architectural bits as well. Highly recommend!

Reviewed by Emily Lessig, The Violet Fox Bookshop in Virginia Beach, Virginia



Bookseller Buzz

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Graveyard Shift: A Novella by M. L. Rio

M. L. Rio, photo by Cait Brady

It was an idea I’d been kicking around for a long time. I wanted to write a story that took place in just one night, but it didn’t feel like a whole novel. When my publisher asked if I had anything in the story drawer that might work for a novella, I thought of it immediately. The story grew from there, drawing on a lot of things in my academic past—including the graveyard behind my dorm where I hung out as an undergrad and my own experience of chronic insomnia and the desperation that it causes. Because I also work in the medical humanities, I was eager to try putting a sci-fi spin on something. With the length in mind, I wanted something fast-paced and fun, so I did kind of take Scooby Doo as a model. I’d like to think it’s a grown-up version of that—same wacky energy but with a little more intellectual substance.
― M. L. Rio, Interview, Los Angeles Public Library

What booksellers are saying about Graveyard Shift

Graveyard Shift: A Novella by M. L. Rio
  • If The Last of Us was told through a dark academia lens, it would be Graveyard Shift. After discovering a large, freshly-dug hole in the ground during a late-night meetup, a group of insomniacs uncovers a mysterious plot with dangerous ramifications. An absolutely immersive narrative!
      ― Matilda McNeely, Little Shop of Stories in Decatur, Georgia | BUY

  • M.L. Rio returns! This novella is the perfect way to spend a rainy evening. Graveyard Shift is a story made up of insomniacs and their worst imaginings. Nightmares meet reality, and it all unfolds in the span of a few sleepless hours. I could read it again and again!
      ― Rachel Randolph, Parnassus Books in Nashville, Tennessee | BUY

  • Brimming with late-night decadence, this novella will chill you through all your sleepless nights. M.L. Rio knows how to make a memorable cast of characters and propel you through the story with mystery and literary charm. I couldn’t get enough!
      ― Hallee Israel, Pearl’s Books in Fayetteville, Arkansas | BUY

  • The Breakfast Club meets The Last of Us meets—yes—Scooby Doo in this quiet, uncanny Gothic. Our tale begins with five acquaintances from different walks of life, bonded only by their chronic insomnia and pervasive loneliness, discovering an empty grave one sleepless night. Then come the rats. The ensuing unraveling of both a sinister conspiracy and our heroes’ collective sanity unfolds hour by hour, from midnight to 10am, as they piece together the awful truth about their mundane university town. M.L. Rio creates atmosphere like few can, attending to each grim detail with the macabre glee of someone who loves horror. (And let me just say: as a woman who spent many restless nights wandering the cemetery outside my dormitory, I felt deeply connected to this work.)
      ― Charlie Monroe, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina | BUY

  • An eerie story about a group of strangers all connected by their nocturnal movements, Graveyard Shift was a perfect combination of horror and sci-fi. I loved the way the characters’ lives intertwined yet still felt distinct. This story has added fuel to my suspicions that mushrooms are better off left alone. The story was well-paced and perfectly creepy despite being short. And I fully believe more books should include playlists and drink recipes.
      ― Ashley White, Cavalier House Books in Denham Springs, Louisiana | BUY

M. L. Rio is the author of international bestseller If We Were Villains, which has been published in twenty countries and eighteen languages. She holds an MA in Shakespeare studies from King’s College London and Shakespeare’s Globe and a PhD in English from the University of Maryland, College Park. Graveyard Shift is her first novella.

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The Blue Hour by Paula Hawkins

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The Blue Hour by Paula Hawkins
Mariner Books / October 2024


More Reviews from Fiction Addiction

Read This Next!

An October Read This Next! Title

The Blue Hour is a book about art – it is about the reclusive artist, the sculptures and paintings, the curator obsessed with her work and the people who have come to be in possession of pieces of her art. The description of the art and its inception is fascinating. No wonder her work has been fought over. The Blue Hour is also a psychological drama about self-worth, loneliness, loss, and love. You will probably not like most of the characters. You will probably be surprised by the slow revelations that have led to the present circumstances. But you will definitely not soon forget this dark and chilling story of obsessive love.

Reviewed by Nancy McFarlane, Fiction Addiction in Greenville, South Carolina

The Use of Photography by Annie Ernaux

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The Use of Photography by Annie Ernaux
Seven Stories Press / October 2024


More Reviews from Thank You Books

To throuple with two icons–no, that’s too simple. But this work, like all of Ernaux’s work, feels profoundly generous, an invitation into the most intimate enclave formed at the intersection of passion, memory, love, and death. Conceptually fascinating and artistically surprising, moving, hopeful, and brilliant.

Reviewed by Kristen Iskandrian, Thank You Books in Birmingham, Alabama



The Bitter End by Alexa Donne

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The Bitter End by Alexa Donne
Random House Books for Young Readers / October 2024


More Reviews from Bookmiser

Who doesn’t feel a little murdery from time to time? In Donne’s The Bitter End, eight teens are stranded on top of a mountain, cut off by the snow and the lack of phones for their digital detox retreat. When one student turns up dead, it’s mostly chalked up to an accident. But when another is found, they aren’t quite so sure. Soon, it’s a race to figure out the culprit and escape the mountain with their lives. You can never go wrong with an Alexa Donne book, and I’m happy to report that this one is no exception!

Reviewed by Jennifer Jones, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

Mr. Lepron's Mystery Soup by  Giovanna Zoboli

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Mr. Lepron’s Mystery Soup by Giovanna Zoboli
Candlewick Studio / October 2024


More Reviews from Parnassus Books

Stunning illustrations. Mr. Lepron is a handsome hare who makes extraordinary soup from farmers’ vegetables. He opens a factory but mass production makes people declare his soup has changed and is not extraordinary. So what’s a hare to do?

Reviewed by Ashby Rushing, Parnassus Books in Nashville, Tennessee

Turning Twelve by Kathryn Ormsbee

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Turning Twelve by Kathryn Ormsbee
Random House Graphic / October 2024


More Reviews from E. Shaver Bookseller

LITERALLY SO CUTE!!! This book is perfect for any pre-teen to read. And also just for anyone else. You follow the main character in her time before turning twelve, experiencing all the problems pre-teen girls go through- first periods, graduating from training bra to normal bra, shaving, feeling out of place, and discovering your sexuality. This book also includes segments where she deals with a toxic religious youth group. Telling her that women were made by god to complement men. How women should dress modestly to keep boys’ thoughts at bay. And how being gay makes god cry. Beautiful, happy ending. Wonderful read.

Reviewed by Stephanie St. John, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

Dreamers by Yuyi Morales

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Dreamers by Yuyi Morales
Neal Porter Books / September 2018


More Reviews from Books & Books

Gorgeous, timely, and moving; each and every page of Dreamers is a masterpiece. The story is my favorite part because it is familiar, and yet, I’ve never seen it so dazzlingly portrayed. It’s a subtle and sweetly told vignette in the life of an immigrant that I think will spur important conversations for little readers.

Reviewed by Cristina Russell, Books & Books in Coral Gables, Florida


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

God of the Woods What I Ate In One Year Pumpkin Spice Cafe
Witchcraft Millicent Quibb Mad Science

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“Reading is escape, and the opposite of escape; it’s a way to make contact with reality after a day of making things up, and it’s a way of making contact with someone else’s imagination after a day that’s all too real.”
— Nora Ephron

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805
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The Southern Bookseller Review 10/29/24 Read More »

The Southern Bookseller Review 10/22/24

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of October 22, 2024

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The week of October 22, 2024

Double, double toil and trouble.

Art credit Polina Bottalova

“I know of witches who whistle at different pitches, calling things that don’t have names.”
— Helen Oyeyemi, White is for Witching

The leading review in this week’s SBR is for Bright I Burn, a historical novel based on the life of the first woman in Ireland to be persecuted as a witch. Goddesses, demon brides, midwives, wise women, rebelious women…the witches in storybooks are complicated characters. Here are some other recently published witchy stories recommended by indie booksellers for your All Hallow’s Eve reading list. Halloween is not just for kids!

The Spellshop The Spellshop by Sarah Beth Durst

Imagine you’re a blue girl whose best friend is a sentient spider plant (one of my favorite characters). Once I discovered the storyline, I just had to read more. Magic, sorcery, spell books and numerous, fun characters…a fascinating and fun read. As the author, Sarah Beth Durst, says…"…escape and sink into a world filled with kindness and enchantment."
― Karen Solar, Copperfish Books in Punta Gorda, Florida

The Wedding Witch The Wedding Witch by Erin Sterling

Tamsyn’s job is finding the unfindable – magical artifacts and items that might skirt just this side of legality. When she’s hired by Bowen Penhallow to track down a VERY hard to get trinket, they find themselves at the witchy wedding of the century – until they’re accidentally sent back in time! Will they get back to their own time safely and with the goods they’re after? And will they fall for each other while they’re doing it? Another enchanting read from Sterling!
― Andrea Richardson, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia

The Witchstone

The Witchstone  by Henry H. Neff

The Witchstone was just the book I needed to start my summer reading: fast-paced, funny, and full of adventure. Laszlo the demon and the cursed Maggie Drakeford (along with her younger brother Lump) make a formidable pair as they work (often at cross-purposes) to break the Drakeford curse. Neff’s version of Hell as a corporate landscape with demons that will remind you of your worst bosses rings pitch-perfect to anyone who has ever had to suffer through a PowerPoint on maximizing ROI. Fans of the Good Place will love this book!
― Fisher Nash, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky

The Witches of El Paso

The Witches of El Paso by Luis Jaramillo

Wild how both books I read over vacation were about the golden threads of the universe and plagues and magic-wielding nuns. I wasn’t expecting that with one set in 1300s Italy and this one present day/1940s/1790s El Paso. But it makes sense at the same time, right? All those strings connecting everything. La Vista is such a cool way to explore magic and nature and forces out of our control that we think that we have figured out until we realize we’re just looking at a small piece of big picture. Nena was such a cool character and I loved how we were able to see her as a child, a young woman, and old lady. Maid, Mother, Crone to perfection.
― Candice Conner, The Haunted Book Shop in Mobile, Alabama

Midnight Rooms

Midnight Rooms by Donyae Coles

A deeply disturbing, and incredibly intriguing story that I couldn’t put down. Twists and turns abound, and at moments I was left to question which events were actually hallucination. Throughout it all, I was completely invested in finding out. If you like dark, gothic tales, intertwined with a touch of love and desire, this book is for you.
― Cindy Pagan, Spelled Ink in Orange, Virginia

 


You can help! The Book Industry Charitable Foundation

Independent bookstores in the South are still struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and now Hurricane Milton. You can help: Donate to Binc; a relief organization for booksellers and comic book sellers. Visit the SIBA Hurricane Relief Resources page to donate directly to store fundraisers. And shop online at a store that has been impacted.

Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory



Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

Bright I Burn by Molly Aitken

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Bright I Burn by Molly Aitken
Knopf / September 2024

Adult FictionDystopianFiction
More Reviews from Square Books

Came for the comparisons to Maggie O’Farrell and AK Blakemore, stayed for the evocative and immersive tale of a medieval woman born centuries ahead of her time. Bright I Burn is inspired by the real-life story of Alice Kyteler, who, in the 14th century, was the first woman in Ireland to be persecuted as a witch. In Aitken’s richly detailed telling, Kyteler is a wealthy, powerful and intelligent money lender, full of desires and secrets – all things that women of her time were not supposed to be. I absolutely loved it.

Reviewed by Jude Burke-Lewis, Square Books in Oxford, Mississippi

Rejection by Tony Tulathimutte

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Rejection by Tony Tulathimutte
William Morrow / September 2024


More Reviews from Thank You Books

I lost track of how many times I gasped while reading this; it may be *so* "so wrong it’s right" that it’s actually just, well, wrong. I almost threw the book across the room at several parts for being too funny, too heartbreaking, and/or too gross. There is sheer genius at work here, not just in the agile prose and acrobatic structure, but in how Tulathimutte dares to completely explode every social, romantic, artistic, and online convention–how the book risks annihilating even itself.

Reviewed by Kristen Iskandrian, Thank You Books in Birmingham, Alabama



Bookseller Buzz

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Spotlight on: he Wood at Midwinter by Susanna Clarke

Susanna Clarke, photo by Curtis Brown

Unsurprisingly, when I look back at my childhood the books that dominated are the Narnia books. It just was a world in which I felt completely at home. I think it wasn’t that I realized fantasy literature did something different perhaps from other literature I just felt more at home in Narnia and in other similar books perhaps historical books in some way that wasn’t the modern world. It just it made more sense to me. Then in in my teenage years I read Ursula LeGuin’s EarthSea series despite that being in in many ways a sort of archetypal fantasy with Wizards and Dragons it was it was so real and it gave me something which I was missing in my actual life…books like EarthSea sort of made a place for my emotion and made a place for my dreams and my intellect. I was at home there. I look to the to not so much to the architecture but to the landscape of some of those islands that make up EarthSea. I know that place. I feel I have walked there um I know it better than I know most places in the real world.

I feel that fantasy literature ― good fantasy literature ― gives meaning to the reader, the reader finds a world which is meaningful when so much of the world that we actually live in we feel, probably wrongly, but we feel is meaningless.
–Susanna Clarke, in conversation with Alan Moore, British Library

What booksellers are saying about The Wood at Midwinter

The Wood at Midwinter by Susanna Clarke
  • This story is quietly beautiful, following a young girl who understands the things she gives her interests to do not align with those around her. Yet, she continues to pursue them anyway. Questions of sainthood, trees that know more than we can possibly imagine, and nods to the Virgin Mary. What I loved most was the way Clarke’s author’s note gives so much context and depth to the origins of the story, making us think about the stories we tell and what they teach us about existing in the world. Beautifully done.
      ― Morgan DePerno, Bookmarks, Winston-Salem, North Carolina | BUY

  • What a beautiful little novella. I’m ready to run away and live in the woods.
      ― Lily Wilson, Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh, North Carolina | BUY

  • Super amazing novella that I was able to enjoy in one sitting, which is how I imagine this story is meant to be enjoyed. The illustrations are beautiful and the afterword from Clarke is amazing. I also agree that books should have more trees and pigs!
      ― Kait Boyd, The Haunted Book Shop in Mobile, Alabama | BUY

Susanna Clarke is the author of Piranesi, which won the Women’s Prize for Fiction, the Hugo Award–winning Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, and The Ladies of Grace Adieu and Other Stories. She lives in England.

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Snake Oil by Kelsey Rae Dimberg

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Snake Oil by Kelsey Rae Dimberg
Mariner Books / September 2024


More Reviews from Underground Books

Snake Oil is a dark literary thriller about Radical, a wellness company centered around holistic remedies. Dirty secrets about the company start coming out as Rhoda, the CEO, begins to lose her iron-tight grip on her precious company, causing loyalties to be tested and murder to occur. Snake Oil is gripping and nail-biting, showing the horrendous truth about the wellness world and the ugly underbelly of running a cutthroat business.

Reviewed by Anna Anabseh, Underground Books in Carrollton, Georgia

The Elements of Marie Curie by Dava Sobel

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The Elements of Marie Curie by Dava Sobel
Atlantic Monthly Press / October 2024


More Reviews from Malaprop’s

Read This Next!

An October Read This Next! Title

The Elements of Marie Curie is one of the best biographies I’ve ever read. It’s not just a deeply personal look at Curie’s life. By tying the elements that were part of her work to her family and staff, we’re introduced to the many women she supported in the sciences, especially her daughter. Radium’s dangers have made it lose its allure. But publicizing Curie’s fostering of women in the lab will give her reputation a renewed glow.

Reviewed by Rosemary Pugliese, Malaprop’s in Asheville, North Carolina



Twenty-Four Seconds from Now . . . by Jason Reynolds

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Twenty-Four Seconds from Now . . . by Jason Reynolds
Atheneum/Caitlyn Dlouhy Books / October 2024


More Reviews from The Country Bookshop

What can’t he do? After opening conversations about gun violence, the importance of belonging, bravery, and superheroes, now Jason Reynolds has turned the conversation to what real love looks like as navigated by sweet, kind, confused, scared (of dogs!) insightful 17-year-old Neon. This honest book is basically Judy Blume’s Forever written for today’s teen and should absolutely be required reading for every freshman English class.

Reviewed by Angie Tally, The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, North Carolina

At Our Table by Patrick Hulse

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At Our Table by Patrick Hulse
Little, Brown Books for Young Readers / October 2024


More Reviews from Main Street Books

At Our Table is a must-buy for your Thanksgiving displays and deserves a permanent spot on your bookshelves. A story about family, home as a safe space to be yourself, and gathering around a table that has room for everyone, all in a way that honors Indigenous Peoples and land. I can’t recommend this one enough!

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

The Night Mother Vol. 1 by Jeremy Lambert

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The Night Mother Vol. 1 by Jeremy Lambert
Oni Press / October 2024


More Reviews from E. Shaver Bookseller

Souls in lanterns. An eternal moon. A land with no time. This is reality during the reign of the current Night Mother. The title is held for those who guide lost souls to the moon and is passed down mother to daughter. But what if this mother is separated from her daughter? What if she takes souls that aren’t ready and thus not hers to take just yet? This gorgeous graphic novel is oozing with detail and keeps the reader wanting more. I know I’m ready for volume two already!

Reviewed by Lana Repic, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

One of Us is Lying by Karen M. McManus

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One of Us is Lying by Karen M. McManus
Delacorte Press / February 2023


More Reviews from Main Street Reads

Surrounding the unsettling mystery of the death of an infamous high school tattler, One of Us is Lying focuses on the 4 suspects in the murder of Simon Kelleher. A thrilling "whodunnit", One of Us is Lying will leave you guessing until the very last page and make your blood run cold at every unexpected turn. This chilling novel is both unpredictable and impossible to put down, keeping you engaged through the twists and betrayals of the story.

Reviewed by Makayla Summers, Main Street Reads in Summerville, South Carolina


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

Intermezzo War The Vegetarian
George Masa Knight Owl and Early Bird

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“The basis of all human fears, he thought. A closed door, slightly ajar.”
— Stephen King, Salem’s Lot

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

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The Southern Bookseller Review 10/22/24 Read More »

The Southern Bookseller Review 10/15/24

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of October 15, 2024

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The Southern Bookseller Review: A Book for Every Reader

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The week of October 15, 2024

In praise of the books that make us afraid to turn out the light.

Art credit Polina Bottalova

“Am I walking away from something I should be running away from?” — Shirley Jackson, The Haunting of Hill House

Why do we love books that scare the pants off us? As indie bookseller favorite author Andrew Joseph White said, "It’s messy, and visceral, and gut-churning!…horror infects everything it touches, and isn’t that wonderful?"

Horror is one of the most popular and reviewed genres by the booksellers whose reviews appear in The Southern Bookseller Review. There are over 100 books tagged "Horror," Here are some of the most recent ones that have made their readers afraid of the dark.

American Rapture American Rapture by CJ Leede

CJ Leede’s second book is a more emotional, personal take on the horror genre. I really enjoyed the depth of the characters, while also getting the thrill and gore that she writes so well. This was such an inventive way to explore the process of working through religious guilt and shame.
― Daniel Jordan, Pearl’s Books in Fayetteville, Arkansas

Don't Let the Forest In

Don’t Let the Forest In by CG Drews

If a hauntingly unhinged fever dream could physically exist, it would take form of this book. This is the type of story I will spend MONTHS thinking about.
― Shannon Rogers, Page 158 Books in Wake Forest, North Carolina

Memorials

Memorials by Richard Chizmar

What a creepy, look over your shoulder, slow burn novel! Three college students set off on a school project to shoot a documentary on roadside memorials. Things start out fairly smoothly, but as they get farther into Appalachia, strange events begin to occur. Angry townies, people lurking and watching from afar, and a menacing symbol drawn at the site of the memorials. Fans of Stephen King won’t be able to put this one down. Warning: It will keep you up at night.
― Kathy Clemmons, Sundog Books in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida

Sound Museum

Sound Museum by poupeh missaghi

In Sound Museum, a professional state interrogator addresses a room of journalists at the grand opening of her magnum opus—an interactive monument built to house the recorded sounds of the people her team has tortured over the years. Her speech reads like a torturer TED Talk, weaving pseudo-intellectual references to art and philosophy together with hollow feminist talking points. missaghi is an astonishing writer of social horror. She so deftly captures the voice of evil in the form of self-congratulatory virtue-signaling that it’s actually surreal to read. Bottom line: this book doesn’t feel like fiction. It feels like the grandstanding of every politician, dictator and tech mogul I have ever heard casually brush aside the human cost of their "progress." You will walk away from this book profoundly unsettled, as though you have witnessed something you weren’t supposed to.
― Charlie Monroe, Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

More horror reviews at SBR


You can help! The Book Industry Charitable Foundation

Independent bookstores in the South are still struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and now Hurricane Milton. You can help: Donate to Binc; a relief organization for booksellers and comic book sellers. Visit the SIBA Hurricane Relief Resources page to donate directly to store fundraisers. And shop online at a store that has been impacted.

Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory



Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

Tell Me Everything by Elizabeth Strout

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Tell Me Everything by Elizabeth Strout
Random House / September 2024


More Reviews from Wordsworth Books

Elizabeth Strout can do no wrong in my eyes and Tell Me Everything is just wonderful! I loved getting to know Lucy Barton’s friend Bob Burgess in this lovely story. Plus, finally getting Olive Kitteredge and Lucy Barton in the same ROOM was perfection! I chuckled because Olive is, well, OLIVE throughout, and I felt the emotions that Strout evokes for all of the characters in this novel. Strout is a singular voice and I LOVE IT!

Reviewed by Lynne Phillips, Wordsworth Books in Little Rock, Arkansas

Songs for the Brokenhearted by Ayelet Tsabari

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Songs for the Brokenhearted by Ayelet Tsabari
Random House / September 2024


More Reviews from Square Books

A chance discovery following her mother’s death prompts Zohara Haddad, a young Yemeni-Israeli woman, to explore her family’s history and in the process to reevaluate her own heritage in this absorbing and timely novel. Set in the mid-1990s, during the era of the Oslo peace talks and the assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, it’s also a fascinating insight into a little-known (to this reader, anyway!) aspect of Israeli culture. Tsabari writes beautifully, with the pacing of a mystery and the style of true literature, and I raced through it in just a few days.

Reviewed by Jude Burke-Lewis, Square Books in Oxford, Mississippi



Bookseller Buzz

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Spotlight on: Two-Step Devil by Jaime Quatro

Jaime Quatro, photo by Kristen Brock

Well, one thing I’ve learned is not to over describe. The tendency is to think, the more description, the more clarity. But I don’t think that’s true. Say I want to describe a vision of three green apples floating in mid-air above a sunlit table. Right now, a first-blush image has appeared in my head, and in yours. But if I go on and tell you that the apples are in a black bowl, that the bowl is also floating, that the table is white marble, and that the sunlight is coming from a dormer window above the table… the more I pile on, the more you have to go back and revise your initial image.

You want to give just enough detail, then let the reader fill in the rest. You’re trusting your reader this way, giving them agency. Reader, you and I are creating this book together. Too much description risks alienating them.
–Jaime Quatro, Interview Fiction Matters

What booksellers are saying about Two-Step Devil

Two-Step Devil by Jaime Quatro
  • Jamie Quatro’s Two-Step Devil is magnificent. While scavenging for pieces for his religious folk art, the Prophet sees a young girl at an Alabama filling station with zip-tied hands. Like the visions he paints, this is a sign from God. The Prophet forms a plan to rescue Michael and send her to the White House to share his messages regarding the moral state of the nation. Quatro’s writing has often explored the divine but Two-Step Devil takes this to a higher plane with an unforgettable reconceptualized devil. Quatro takes great risks writing of loss, faith, and survival through both her tone, lyricism, and technique. This book is dead serious, yet funny, and the skill with which Quatro addresses abortion rights, addiction, and sex trafficking is exceptional.
      ― Rachel Watkins, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia | BUY

  • An emotionally tumultuous and wholly unforgettable read. Through the character development of both the Prophet and Michael, his "Big Fish" and unexpected companion, you will delve into a deep conversation of the Christian faith, where you are confronted by the themes of salvation, belonging, and the human condition. Quatro’s elegant yet gritty prose will have you questioning what it truly means to be a good person. This book is a must-read for dark, esoteric literary fiction, or for those who are looking to see the world from a new perspective.
      ― Catherine Pabalate, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina | BUY

  • Such lyrical, moving writing. This is the story of the Prophet, an artist who lives alone in the woods and sees visions of God has decided he must save a young woman he sees is handcuffed and being trafficked. An examination of religion, the losses we face, our community and more. A perfect work of southern fiction.
      ― Kelley Barnes, Page 158 Books in Wake Forest, North Carolina | BUY

  • What begins as a novel reminiscent of Flannery O’Connor, eventually evolves — or perhaps devolves — into something different. This novel might be a lot of things, but first and foremost it is just plain ol’ creative. Quatro has a hell of a narrative voice, and more or less seamlessly works in changes in form and point of view, each which serves the story and pushes it to another level. I really appreciate that she is not afraid to go there, if there is indeed where she needs to go. Two-Step Devil is a powerful novel about the world we live in today. It is tragic, but not without a sense of humor. Put this one on your list for September.
      ― Caleb Bedford, Lemuria Books in Jackson, Mississippi | BUY

Jaime Quatro is the New York Times Notable author of I Want to Show You More, a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award and the National Book Critics Circle’s John Leonard Prize, and Fire Sermon, a Book of the Year for the Economist, San Francisco Chronicle, LitHub, Bloomberg, and the Times Literary Supplement. Quatro’s fiction has appeared in The New Yorker, The Paris Review, the New York Review of Books and Ploughshares. She is the recipient of fellowships from MacDowell, Yaddo, and Maison Dora Maar, and teaches in the Sewanee School of Letters MFA program. Quatro lives with her family in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

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The Crescent Moon Tearoom by Stacy Sivinski

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The Crescent Moon Tearoom by Stacy Sivinski
Atria Books / October 2024


More Reviews from Main Street Reads

Read This Next!

An October Read This Next! Title

I loved this sweet cozy fantasy! It had me from the first page with the tantalizing descriptions of the smells and tastes of the tearoom. I was totally invested in the lives of the three sisters. This is the perfect book to distract you from real life!

Reviewed by Kelley Dykes, Main Street Reads in Summerville, South Carolina

The Wilderness by Aysegül Savas

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The Wilderness by Aysegül Savas
Transit Books / October 2024


More Reviews from Avid Bookshop

In this slim volume, Savas beautifully explores the “wilderness” of postpartum and the mythologies that surround the first forty days after birth. Each short entry dives deep into the chaos of new motherhood—the newborn days full of paradox and pain, the deep wells of care and emotion that emerge, the mystery and lore of the mother-child bond. Savas argues that we mothers emerge from that beginning inexorably changed; we enter the wilderness and cannot help but emerge a bit wild ourselves. A perfect companion for reading in snippets during nursing sessions or wakeful nights—this is a book for anyone who enjoyed Jazmina Barrera’s Linea Nigra or Rivka Galchen’s Little Labors.

Reviewed by Hannah DeCamp, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia



Heir by Sabaa Tahir

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Heir by Sabaa Tahir
G.P. Putnam’s Sons Books for Young Readers / October 2024


More Reviews from Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews

As a long-time fan of Sabaa Tahir’s work, from her National Book Award-winning All My Rage, to the Ember in the Ashes quartet that Heir follows, I was ecstatic for her newest adventure. Heir did not disappoint. With characters that are somehow even more fearsome than their predecessors, Tahir’s most recent novel is blistering, romantic, and convoluted in a fantastical ode to all of the different definitions of family. Tahir subtly weaves in callbacks to her Ember series that will excite earlier fans of her work, all while skillfully making it accessible to every reader, whether or not they know the haunted halls of Blackcliff Academy. Tahir has already penned her name in the annals of young adult greats, and Heir’s scim-sharp prose only further cements her legacy.

Reviewed by Sydney Mason, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

When Black Girls Dream Big by Tanisia Moore

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When Black Girls Dream Big by Tanisia Moore
Scholastic Press / October 2024


More Reviews from Bookmarks

We are standing on the shoulders of giants. In the same vein as her glorious I Am My Ancestors’ Wildest Dreams, Tanisia Moore has mixed powerful affirmations with the strength of examples of those who have gone before. Robert Paul has put these children right alongside, holding the hands of, carrying on the work of our mentors and role models. This is a book that makes you feel stronger just by reading it.

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

Leon: Worst Friends Forever: A Graphic Novel (Leon #2) by Jamar Nicholas

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Leon: Worst Friends Forever: A Graphic Novel (Leon #2) by Jamar Nicholas
Graphix / October 2024


More Reviews from The Country Bookshop

"Make good Choices, Leon" is something Leon hears on the way to school every morning. As much as he tries, Leon knows he sometimes messes up and sometimes is conflicted about just what the best choices are. Sometimes things are just too much, but maybe figuring it all out is Leon’s superpower.

Reviewed by Angie Tally, The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, North Carolina


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo

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Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo
Dutton Books for Young Readers / December 2021


More Reviews from Flyleaf Books

1950s San Francisco is not the safest place for seventeen-year-old Lily Hu to realize she’s a lesbian, and the danger is only amplified by the anti-Chinese sentiment of the Red Scare. It starts with Lily’s infatuation over the male impersonator Tommy Andrews, and the companionship and understanding of Kathleen Miller, a friend from her math class. It coalesces with love found under the neon sign of the Telegraph Club, a lesbian bar that is equally as threatened by the paranoia of the Cold War. Last Night at the Telegraph Club is beautifully written and utterly transcendent, and serves as a testament to the power and necessity of queer love even in times of danger and intolerance.

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


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

Tell Me Everything From Here to the Great Unknown Never Whistle at Night
Doppelganger The Pumpkin Princess Forever Night

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“Beware the dark pool at the bottom of our hearts. In its icy, black depths dwell strange and twisted creatures it is best not to disturb.”
— Sue Grafton, I is for Innocent

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
Advertising: Linda-Marie Barrett / lindamarie@sibaweb.com
The Southern Bookseller Review is a project of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, in support of independent bookstores in the South | SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805

SIBA | 51 Pleasant Ridge Drive | Asheville, NC 28805
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