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The Southern Bookseller Review 12/15/25

The week of December 15, 2025

Make a bookseller’s day – vote now.

Voting is still ongoing for the 2026 Southern Book Prize, where readers decide the all-important question of “what is the best Southern book of the year.”

Vote here!

One of the perks of voting is that you can enter a raffle to win a selection of Southern Book Prize finalists. Another is that the finalists make a great list of last-minute gift ideas for the readers on your holiday list. (See the nonfiction finalists list below.)

And perhaps the best perk of all is that you get to show your local bookstore how much you appreciate them. One of the questions on the ballot is simply a space that says, “Say something nice about your local bookstore.”

SBR passes along to bookshops the comments people made about the store when they voted—a welcome moment of cheer during a busy holiday season. Hearing how much you value your local bookstore is one of the best presents you can give them. 

Make a bookseller’s day, vote now.


SBP Nonfiction Finalists

The Harder I Fight the More I Love You: A Memoir 

Neko Case (Grand Central Publishing)

“I have long admired Neko Case as a powerful singer and incredible songwriter, so I was desperate to get my hands on this book — but you don’t have to already be a fan to be moved by her story. The rawness and vulnerability that Case shares in her life’s story give me a new appreciation for her album.” –Emily Liner, Friendly City Books in Columbus, Mississippi

Food for Thought: Essays and Ruminations

Alton Brown (Gallery Books)

“You don’t have to be familiar with any food programs to have great fun reading these essays. Funny, quirky, and honest, they are as much about life as food, or even food as life.” –Jan Blodgett, Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina

Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People 

Imani Perry (Ecco)

“A stunning, kaleidoscopic work of intense research and imagination, spanning centuries, disciplines, and profoundly moving possibilities, from one of our most innovative thinkers. Perry’s writing deserves its own rich shade of blue.” –Kristen Iskandrian, Thank You Books in Birmingham, Alabama

The New Book: Poems, Letters, Blurbs, and Things 

Nikki Giovanni (William Morrow)

“Reading Nikki Giovanni’s final collection of poetry is a bittersweet experience. The New Book is full of reflection and encourages readers to think critically about recent events in our nation’s history. It feels like a final love letter, urging us to be kind to ourselves and to one another.” –Beth Seufer Buss, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Written in the Waters: A Memoir of History, Home, and Belonging 

Tara Roberts (National Geographic)

“A memoir, a message, and a deeply felt paean to history. Roberts weaves her personal narrative into the depths of the history she shares all the while highlighting the reasons these sites go underresearched and stories untold. Moving, inspiring, and essential reading!” –Michelle Cavalier, Cavalier House Books in Denham Springs, Louisiana

All These Ghosts  

Silas House (Blair)

“So glad that the former Kentucky Poet Laureate has a poetry collection at last! As with his fiction, House’s work resonates most deeply the closer he stays to his Appalachian roots. Poems about queerness, protest, timesickness and soup beans all exist side by side in this collection, as in life.” –Sam Miller, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky

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