The Southern Bookseller Review 5/14/24

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of May 14, 2024

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The Southern Bookseller Review: A Book for Every Reader

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The week of May 14, 2024

Coming soon, can’t wait!

Six short reviews of soon-to-be-released books

beach books Click on the book title to read more and, if you just can’t wait, to order from the indie bookstore that feels just like you do.

Here for the Wrong Reasons
by Annabel Paulsen, Lydia Wang
Juicier then even the most dramatic season of "The Bachelor". If you’ve ever wondered why the girls on the show don’t just date each other instead, this book is for you. –Tara Leimkuehler, Parnassus Books

The Dinosaur in the Garden by Deb Pilutti
There will never be too many picture books that inspire young readers to want to grow up and become paleontologists! –Kate Storhoff, Bookmarks

A Good Life by Virginie Grimaldi, Hildegarde Serle (Trans.)
At first glance, you might think that this book won’t rip your heart out, but I can tell you that it absolutely does! –Kelsey Jagneaux, Tombolo Books

Just Some Stupid Love Story by Katelyn Doyle
A novel perfect for those who wished Romantic Comedy had twenty years of romantic tension simmering under the surface. –Sydney Mason, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews

Margo’s Got Money Troubles by Rufi Thorpe
Go ahead, challenge your book club to read this one. Underneath the humor and cascading calamities are serious questions about what’s real. –Jan Blodgett, Main Street Books

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




Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

Exhibit by R. O. Kwon

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Exhibit by R. O. Kwon
Riverhead Books / May 2024


More Reviews from Tombolo Books

Read This Next!

A May Read This Next! Title

Sexy sentences, startling images, complicated and unexpected characters flesh out Kwon’s impressionistic peek inside the art world and the people who inhabit it. I kept finding myself picking up this book and flipping back to sections, re-reading them, and feeling like they were perfect little arias. Two women, with different art forms, brush up against one another at just the right time and form something larger than the sum of their parts. Not for those who need fast-paced, plot heavy action – but this book 100% rewards the lover of graceful language and intricate interiority. Loved, loved loved.

Reviewed by Rachel Knox, Tombolo Books in St Petersburg, Florida

Sipsworth by Simon Van Booy

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Sipsworth by Simon Van Booy
David R. Godine, Publisher / May 2024


More Reviews from Bookmiser

Read This Next!

A May Read This Next! Title

“On her eightieth birthday, Helen spent the day moving things in the kitchen cupboard. Three years pass with nothing to fill their pockets. Then early one morning, something happens.” Helen Cartwright is waiting to die. Her husband and son have passed and she is ready to go. She has returned to her childhood town in an English village and she has been living a quiet life. This love story begins with her finding a mouse in her house and as the love grows with the mouse Sipsworth, so does Helen’s contacts. This is such a loving, moving story told with such skill and heart, this reviewer can’t wait to reread this tiny tale perhaps many times. Anyone who reads it will never look at a mouse or an octogenarian the same way.

Reviewed by Nancy Pierce, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia



Bookseller Buzz

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Spotlight on: Lies and Weddings by Kevin Kwan

Kevin Kwan, photo courtesy the author

I wanted to do something tonally different, a relief from this big, heavy family story. This new book continues with Sex and Vanity’s theme of Asian characters outside of Asia. When I was thinking about what the whole trilogy would be, for lack of a better metaphor, I thought of a Chanel bottle: New York, London, Paris. This time they’re in England. I’m taking that traditional English country manor novel, sort of a Jane Austen world, and turning it on its head.

― Kevin Kwan, Hollywood Reporter

What booksellers are saying about Lies and Weddings

Lies and Weddings by Kevin Kwan
  • Lies and Weddings is everything I was hoping it would be (and more): The footnotes (I’m here for all of them), the unlikeable matriarch (all those unachievable expectations), the commentary on excess (wealth, debt, drugs), and of course the love story (or, really, stories). A must add to your summer TBR!
      ― Jenny Gilroy, E. Shaver, Bookseller in Savannah, GA | BUY

  • Crazy Rich Asians author Kevin Kwan has outdone himself! Posh parties, fashions, cars, architecture and food set the scene while a family of British nobles is trying to remedy failing finances by arranging a family marriage to “new money” Asians of wealth and in doing so fall head-first into an intriguing mystery. A fun escapist read. Hilarious dialogue and family dynamics!
      ― Patience Allan-Glick at Hills & Hamlets Bookshop, Chattahoochee Hills, GA | BUY

  • Kevin Kwan’s newest book returns to the kind of love story that captured our hearts in Crazy Rich Asians. A little bit of Cinderella, a little bit of Mansfield Park (Kwan always reminds of me Austen at her satirical best), this book takes a classic friends-to-lovers story but sets it across the globe in the must luxurious, most ridiculous settings from England to LA to Morocco to Hawai’i (with a volcanic eruption, no less). A page-turning rollicking delight!
      ― Kate Storhoff, Bookmarks, Winston-Salem, NC | BUY

  • What a FUN read! Full of drama that is definitely reminiscent of Crazy Rich Asians but updated for today’s social climate. I enjoyed the storyline, following a man who wants what the heart wants and a mother who wants status instead. This was an EXCELLENT book to get lost in, I ate chunks of the day and didn’t realize how much time had past! Overall, if you like a little romance with a a LOT of money, societal discord and familial drama, this right here just might be your jam.
      ― Deziree Bunn, Book No Further in Roanoke, VA | BUY

Kevin Kwan is the author of the international bestsellers Crazy Rich Asians, China Rich Girlfriend, and Rich People Problems. Crazy Rich Asians was a number one New York Times bestseller and major motion picture and has been translated into forty languages. In 2018, Kevin was named by Time magazine as one of the one hundred most influential people in the world.

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The Paris Novel by Ruth Reichl

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The Paris Novel by Ruth Reichl
Random House / April 2024


More Reviews from Givens Books Little Dickens

Reading this book was like being in Paris. The description of food, wine, couture, art, and BOOKSHOPS was just luxurious. Plus, throw in a Mysterious Artist, missing paintings, evil fiancées, lost fathers, and a band of bookish misfits— the perfect recipe for a can’t-put-it down read! Ruth Reich hasn’t just written a book, she’s created an EXPERIENCE. The kitchen scenes were my favs. Loved it!

Reviewed by Elisa Forshey, Givens Books Little Dickens in Lynchburg, Virginia

The Backyard Bird Chronicles by Amy Tan

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The Backyard Bird Chronicles by Amy Tan
Knopf / April 2024


More Reviews from Main Street Books

This is a welcome addition to birding accounts. Lighter in tone than Trish O’Kane’s Birding to Change the World, Tan still evokes the powerful effects of engaging with nature. Wry observations about birds and about herself, along with delightful sketches taken from her journals, make this a special treat for birders and those who do their birding vicariously via books.

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



Twelfth Knight by Alexene Farol Follmuth

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Twelfth Knight by Alexene Farol Follmuth
Tor Teen / May 2024


More Reviews from Book No Further

This book was a fun read. I really like the dynamic between Jack (the jock) and Viola (the nerd). The reader gets to see their personality and relationship grow as the book progresses and they end up spending more time with each other outside of school. The book has a few twists on the traditional opposites-attract you wouldn’t expect.

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

Finding the Way to Faraway Valley by Cecilia Heikkila

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Finding the Way to Faraway Valley by Cecilia Heikkila
Floris Books / May 2024


More Reviews from Octavia Books

Read This Next!

A May/June Read This Next! Kids Title

A lovely story of a grandfather and his grandson who go searching for Faraway Valley; a place that his grandfather visited when he was younger. This is a sensitive story of the connection they share in order to find this most amazing location.

Reviewed by Judith Lafitte, Octavia Books in New Orleans, Louisiana

Parachute Kids by Betty C. Tang

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Parachute Kids by Betty C. Tang
Graphix / April 2023


More Reviews from Bards Alley

An honest take on the concept of a modern “parachute kid” phenomenon where children are left to study in the U.S. without their parents. An emotional story of a tight-knit family falling into near-despair as three middle-high school aged kids are forced to look after themselves as their parents’ visas expire. A commentary on unreasonably slow immigration policies, forcing families apart, and growing up too young.

Reviewed by Mallory Sutton, Bards Alley in Vienna, Virginia


Decide for Yourself

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

Kneel by Candace Buford

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Kneel by Candace Buford
Inkyard Press / July 2022


More Reviews from Oxford Exchange

I have never cared so much about football as I have while reading Kneel. This is a fantastic debut.

Reviewed by Cat Chapman, Oxford Exchange in Tampa, Florida


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

Paris, a novel Shakespeare, the Man Who Pays the Rent Dune
Backyard Bird Chronicles  Luigi, the Spider Who Wanted to Be a Kitten

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“A story is not like a road to follow … it’s more like a house. You go inside and stay there for a while, wandering back and forth and settling where you like and discovering how the room and corridors relate to each other, how the world outside is altered by being viewed from these windows. And you, the visitor, the reader, are altered as well by being in this enclosed space, whether it is ample and easy or full of crooked turns, or sparsely or opulently furnished. You can go back again and again, and the house, the story, always contains more than you saw the last time. It also has a sturdy sense of itself of being built out of its own necessity, not just to shelter or beguile you.”
— Alice Munro

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
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