The books Southern indie booksellers are recommending to readers everywhere!

Adult Fiction

American Rapture by CJ Leede

I will never recover from American Rapture. This book will do everything: make you cry, make you scream, make you shiver, and make you think about your life in a way you’ve never done before. Sophie, a teenage girl raised in a stifling and strict Catholic town, goes on a journey across the Midwest, searching for her twin brother across a landscape of violence and pestilence. Along the way, she builds a found family of other wandering survivors, and she discovers new perspectives on faith, desire, shame, queerness, authority, and righteousness. CJ Leede will tear your heart out with this high-octane horror/thriller.

American Rapture by CJ Leede, (List Price: $27.99, Tor Nightfire, 9781250857927, October 2024)

Reviewed by Catherine Pabalate, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

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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.

Memorials by Richard Chizmar, (List Price: $29.99, Gallery Books, 9781668009192, October 2024)

Reviewed by Kathy Clemmons, Sundog Books in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida

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Spotlight On: Two-Step Devil by Jaime Quatro

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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, InterviewFiction Matters

Two-Step Devil by Jaime Quatro

What booksellers are saying about Two-Step Devil

  • 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

  • SWhat 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

About Jaime Quatro

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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Songs for the Brokenhearted by Ayelet Tsabari

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.

Songs for the Brokenhearted by Ayelet Tsabari, (List Price: $29, Random House, 9780812989007, September 2024)

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

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Tell Me Everything by Elizabeth Strout

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!

Tell Me Everything by Elizabeth Strout, (List Price: $30, Random House, 9780593446096, September 2024)

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

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Spotlight On: Intermezzo by Sally Rooney

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Sally Rooney in Merrion Square, Dublin; Photograph by Ellius Grace, New York Times

Interestingly, the first voice that came to the page for me in this project was Margaret’s — the character who becomes entangled in Ivan’s life in the course of the book. It certainly wasn’t that I sat down thinking, I have to write a book where the male voice is central. I just felt my way through the story that seemed to emerge when I encountered these characters, which is what I always try to do. Of course I had moments of self-reflection and self-consciousness, because I was thinking, What do I know about this form of interiority and specifically — which is different from Connell in “Normal People” — relationships between men?
–Sally Rooney, InterviewThe New York Times

Intermezzo by Sally Rooney

What booksellers are saying about Intermezzo

  • Intermezzo is the book I’ve been waiting for Sally Rooney to write, the one I always believed she had in her, by far her best to date. The auspicious talent she’s displayed in her previous novels (all of which I’ve loved to varying degrees), most notably her almost unrivaled ability to identify and animate the emotional valences that exist between people in relationships, has been honed and deepened in Intermezzo, resulting in an abundantly rich emotional journey for readers. The personal-is-political ethos that would all too often result in didacticism and character speechifying has been fully metabolized by Intermezzo’s characters, resulting in full, complex, utterly compelling people. Rooney’s latest is an utterly masterful home-cooked meal, so rich, so satisfying, so nourishing, but never fussy, not bespoke, clearly made by a human’s hands and heart. Intermezzo will engross you, transport you, leave you full. It’s wonderful.
      ― Matt Nixon, A Cappella Books in Atlanta, Georgia | BUY

  • Again, Sally Rooney has written a tender, devastating, and hopeful triumph of a novel. Intermezzo introduces us to Peter and Ivan, brothers who are grieving their father. In the uprooted days that follow, we see them and the people they love as they come to terms with the new shape of the world they live in, and witness the evolution of their complex connections to each other. This is a book that you can speed-read, careening as you experience the depths of love, loss, grief, and purpose that fill these pages. If I were you, though, I’d read slowly, savoring each gem of a page.
      ― Maya Shenoy, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina | BUY

  • Easily the best Sally Rooney book. While her writing is stellar, as always, there is something about Peter and Ivan’s story that immediately draws you in. You just have to root for these messy and complicated people as they figure out life and love.
      ― Kelley Barnes, Page 158 Books in Wake Forest, North Carolina | BUY

  • This is the millenial’s Mrs. Dalloway – and the best Sally Rooney yet. Intermezzo follows the aftermath of grief on two very different brothers – a chess champion and a high-strung but tenderhearted barrister – and their attempts at meaningful romantic relationships. It’s Rooney, so the characters also act as entry points into larger social commentary, but the lessons she’s imparting are always graceful, never heavy-handed. Small, interpersonal moments cartwheeling out into moving, philosophical passages that made it so I almost couldn’t read this book in public, because it kept making me cry. A total triumph.
      ― Rachel Knox, Tombolo Books in St. Petersburg, Florida | BUY

  • A triumph of a novel that will intensify the fandom of existing Rooney devotees (me!) and doubtless create many new ones. I was entranced by the beautiful sentences, prose whose style was outmatched only by its substance, and the gorgeous complexity of each character as they fought for love, belonging, and understanding. This is a multi-dimensional love story, but above all a love story between brothers. Somehow Rooney is able to lean on archetypes while also subverting and reinventing them, and Peter and Ivan (and Sylvia, and Margaret, and Naomi) will remain in my heart for a long time, stirring me as flesh and blood people do. With one of the tenderest and most perfect endings I can think of in recent contemporary literature–brought me to tears. A standing ovation from me!
      ― Kristen Iskandrian, Thank You Books in Birmingham, Alabama | BUY

About Sally Rooney

Sally Rooney is an Irish novelist. She is the author of Conversations with Friends; Normal People; and Beautiful World, Where Are You. She also contributed to the writing and production of the Hulu/BBC television adaptation of Normal People.

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The Long Game by Elena Armas

Adalyn Rayes has spent her life working hard to earn her spot in her dad’s company. But when a video of her having a really bad day goes viral her world is turned upside down. She is sent to the middle of nowhere in North Carolina to help make something of a girls soccer team. The head coach just so happens to be Cameron Caldani, recently retired professional goalkeeper. The hate and attraction are almost instant between the two, with a very slow burn that finally explodes. Add in feisty preteen girls, farm animals, a quirky mayor who seems to have a hand in basically everything that happens in the town, and you have a great weekend read.

The Long Game by Elena Armas, (List Price: $18.99, Atria Books, 9781668011300, September 2023)

Reviewed by Heather Way, Angel Wings Bookstore in Stem, North Carolina

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Spotlight On: A Song to Drown Rivers by Ann Liang

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Ann Liang, photo by Alyssa Liang

I wrote A Song to Drown Rivers when I was twenty-one—a time when I could feel my world changing shape around me, when my teenage years were starting to feel increasingly distant but adulthood still felt like an abstract concept I hadn’t fully grasped yet—but the seeds for this book were planted long before that. It began with the myths my mother told me when I was a child. Stories about women so beautiful they could bring kingdoms to their knees, about first and final loves so fierce they lived on even in death, and kings as cruel as they were cunning. Even then, the tale of Xishi—the girl, the concubine, the spy—stood out to me. What was it like, I found myself wondering, to have to conceal your true thoughts at every turn? To be tasked with the tremendous mission of making the man you loathe fall in love with you?
–Ann Liang, Letter from the author

A Song to Drown Rivers by Ann Liang

What booksellers are saying about A Song to Drown Rivers

  • A Song to Drown Rivers is an epic historical fantasy about Xishi, one of the four beauties of Ancient China. The Wu people have recently conquered the Yue and life for the Yue is brutal. Xishi, a Yue woman so beautiful she has to wear a veil to escape attention, is approached by the military advisor of her people with a plan to overthrow the Wu by becoming a beloved concubine of their king. Suddenly her small life in her village is over and she’s being coached in court life, falling for the advisor along the way. But she’ll have to put that behind her if she’s going to succeed and save her people. This stunning but heartbreaking tale will take you right back to Ancient China right along with Xishi.
      ― Jennifer Jones, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia | BUY

  • This one is for the readers who want their love stories stained with tragedy. With its gorgeous prose and captivating main character, A Song to Drown Rivers will leave readers tearful and yearning.
      ― Courtney Ulrich Smith, Underbrush Books in Rogers, Arkansas | BUY

  • Inspired by the legend of Xishi, one of China’s famed Four Beauties, this novel is as stunning and captivating as its muse! Liang’s poetic prose and vivid imagery beautifully explore themes of war, sacrifice, and love against all odds. What sets this novel apart is its ability to make something so ancient feel immediate and personal, as if Xishi herself stepped out of legend to tell her tale. This book made me feel every emotion, and embodies what a tragic yet profound love story should be!
      ― Janisie Rodriguez, Copperfish Books in Punta Gorda, Florida | BUY

  • A lush, evocative novel of mythical proportions. Filled with atmosphere, longing and intrigue this story is about Xishi, who is handpicked for her singular beauty to win the heart of a king and destroy a kingdom. This one has Young Adult crossover appeal as well. Can’t wait to hand-sell it!
      ― Jessica Nock, Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina | BUY

  • A Song to Drown Rivers retells ancient legend with phenomenal voice, bringing a truly worthwhile addition to the historical fiction genre. The romance in this book was also done so perfectly! There was so much tension and longing. I felt more emotions through one of their glances than I have through some entire romance books. I also appreciated how the love story never took away from the important messages in the book but it was also never overshadowed by them. This book is an absolute gem, a stunning, compelling, and emotionally charged journey that left me breathless.
      ― Baldwin Bookseller, Baldwin & Co. in New Orleans, Louisiana | BUY

About Ann Liang

Ann Liang is the New York Times and Indie bestselling author of the critically acclaimed YA novels This Time It’s Real, If You Could See the Sun, and I Hope This Doesn’t Find You. Born in Beijing, she grew up traveling back and forth between China and Australia, but somehow ended up with an American accent. She now lives in Melbourne, where she can be found making overambitious to-do lists and having profound conversations with her pet labradoodle about who’s a good dog.

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Women in Power by Stephanie McCarter

Stephanie McCarter is so wonderful! The community effort of translators that went into this anthology pays off – with a thorough scope, a great introduction essay, and super helpful notes throughout. I can see this being super helpful in structuring a class about ancient women or ancient literature, and a great jumping board for anyone trying to get into ancient femininity but doesn’t know where to start.

Women in Power by Stephanie McCarter, (List Price: $20, Penguin Classics, 9780143136361, September 2024)

Reviewed by Mac Chamberlain, Parnassus Books in Nashville, Tennessee

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The Blue Hour by Paula Hawkins

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.

The Blue Hour by Paula Hawkins, (List Price: $30, Mariner Books, 9780063396524, October 2024)

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

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The Empusium by Olga Tokarczuk

This was my first Olga Tokarczuk, and I’m still not sure what to make of it: a slow, coiling narrative set in the early 1900s follows a group of men thrown together in a sanitarium to cure their tuberculosis. At turns creepy (the gothic of the subtitle refers to mysterious disappearances, and talking walls, which are glossed over for most of the book), and philosophical (the characters spend their time getting high on a mysterious drink and setting the world to rights, mainly at the expense of women), there’s plenty to get your teeth into, and even a twist at the end. Intriguing.

The Empusium by Olga Tokarczuk, (List Price: $30, Riverhead Books, 9780593712948, October 2024)

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

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A Song to Drown Rivers by Ann Liang

A Song to Drown Rivers retells ancient legend with phenomenal voice, bringing a truly worthwhile addition to the historical fiction genre. The romance in this book was also done so perfectly! There was so much tension and longing. I felt more emotions through one of their glances than I have through some entire romance books. I also appreciated how the love story never took away from the important messages in the book but it was also never overshadowed by them. This book is an absolute gem, a stunning, compelling, and emotionally charged journey that left me breathless.

A Song to Drown Rivers by Ann Liang, (List Price: $32, St. Martin’s Press, 9781250289469, October 2024)

Reviewed by Baldwin & Co. in New Orleans, Louisiana

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The Crescent Moon Tearoom by Stacy Sivinski

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!

The Crescent Moon Tearoom by Stacy Sivinski, (List Price: $18.99, Atria Books, 9781668058398, October 2024)

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

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Calico by Lee Goldberg

Following a dramatic fall from grace with the LAPD, detective Beth McDade has landed in the lonely desert city of Barstow. Located between LA and Las Vegas, Barstow is, for the most part, a quiet town. That changes on Feb. 2nd when Beth is called to investigate the death of an apparently homeless man who ran into the path of an RV. Wearing raggedy clothes with no buttons or zippers and with only a couple of coins dated in the 1880s in his pockets, Beth can find no evidence of who this man is or was. What’s more, during an apparent electrical storm that same evening that resulted in two separate explosions on nearby military bases, another traveler heading back to LA from Las Vegas seems to simply disappear along with his SUV while in the same area. A few days later, when an old grave is encountered at a nearby construction site, Beth’s investigation takes a wild turn when the construction site body is determined to be that of the missing traveler, but the remains themselves appear to be over 100 years old. Beth continues to investigate the case when she is confronted by the military police and told in no uncertain terms to let it go at the risk of her career and possibly even her life. This one is a roller coaster ride with some incredible twists that will keep you turning pages until the end. A taut thriller that takes the imagination on a wild ride.

Calico by Lee Goldberg, (List Price: $16.99, Severn House, 9781448314560, September 2024)

Reviewed by Brent Bunnell, Fiction Addiction in Greenville, South Carolina

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Spotlight On: Compound Fracture by Andrew Joseph White

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Andrew Joseph White, photo credit Alice Scott

Horror will always be the genre that feels the most like home to me, largely because it’s the only genre that will let me get away with the sort of stuff I want to write. It’s messy, and visceral, and gut-churning! (Plus, once you include a single horror element in, say, a romance novel, it becomes a horror-romance by definition; horror infects everything it touches, and isn’t that wonderful?)
–Andrew Joseph White, Interview, F(r)iction

Compound Fracture by Andrew Joseph White

What booksellers are saying about Compound Fracture

  • Andrew Joseph White has taken us to an eco-Christofascist apocalypse, a Victorian asylum full of spirits and mediums, and now an Appalachia haunted by blood feuds and class war. This is his most unputdownable book yet, a bloody tour-de-force, mining and queering West Virginia’s buried socialist history, with a lovable, neurodivergent, rage-fueled transboy at the center and a whole lot of gore all around him. Prepare to be hurt, haunted, and ultimately heartened.
      ― Megan Bell, Underground Books in Carrollton, Georgia | BUY

  • Another stunning read from Andrew Joseph White, this time set in Appalachian coal country. White does a masterful job of weaving the throughlines of generational trauma and rage that simmer, boil, and ultimately explode off the page. As always, the portrayal of trans characters is thoughtful and authentic – with important reminders that trans identity is not new. It is merely increasingly visible. The violence is, at time, shocking – but not gratuitous. The visceral descriptions are essential to the story being told. A great read.
      ― Kate Snyder, Plaid Elephant Books in Danville, Kentucky | BUY

  • Andrew Joseph White continues to deliver sharp, compelling writing with his third novel, Compound Fracture. There hasn’t been a novel from White that I haven’t loved– his previous two releases are equally phenomenal– but Compound Fracture has earned the spot of my favorite Andrew Joseph White book. Andrew Joseph White delivers an edge-of-your-seat thriller that will keep readers hooked until the final page. At the same time, White utilizes his characters to address the lasting impacts of trauma, poverty, and economic exploitation on both individuals and communities. Compound Fracture is equal parts blood-soaked and beautiful, a testament to the resiliency and power of community organization. This is easily my favorite book of 2024!
      ― Charlie Williams, Square Books in Oxford, Mississippi | BUY

  • Having loved The Spirit Bares its Teeth with my whole heart, I snatched this book as soon as the ARC came in and nearly devoured it, but I’m so glad I forced myself to take it slow. Just like his other two books, this is something to be savored and really taken in deeply as you read it. It’s a love letter of the most brutal, loud, and angry variety, and I love how raw this writing is. This time it’s for the working class fighting against those exploiting them for profit over centuries, and for Appalachia. It’s a story about doing whatever it takes to survive, about the strength of community and family and even more beneath the layers. Like his other work it’s unsetting, violent, and heartbreaking – though I think this is probably the lightest on the graphic violence – but there’s an undeniable ray of hope at the end that refuses to be diminished. I adore this story.
      ― Winter Goldsmith, E. Shaver, Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia | BUY

About Andrew Joseph White

Andrew Joseph White is the New York Times and #1 Indie bestselling author of Hell Followed with Us and The Spirit Bares its Teeth. A queer, trans writer from Virginia, he grew up falling in love with monsters and wishing he could be one too. He received his MFA in Creative Writing from George Mason University in 2022.

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