The books Southern indie booksellers are recommending to readers everywhere!

Amateur Sleuth

Everyone in the Group Chat Dies by L.M. Chilton

Another funny and unputdownable murder mystery/killing spree from the author of Don’t Swipe Right!. Bridget Jones meets I Know What You Did Last Summer in this page-turner about a small British town with a dark past, and the four deadbeat flatmates that get caught up in it when an online sleuth shows up at their door. The hilarious narration from protagonist Kirby is just as entertaining as the mystery itself, which unfolds in a fast-paced dual-timeline format. It’s like Chilton can’t help but write fabulous and unfortunate characters you’re bound to fall in love with!

Everyone in the Group Chat Dies by L.M. Chilton, (List Price: $19, Gallery/Scout Press, 9781668094174, December 2025)

Reviewed by Julia Lewis, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia

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Strange Pictures by Uketsu

If you are looking for a fresh and unique horror/mystery, then you have come to the right place. This book is fairly slow-paced, but it lays out such an intricate and layered story that you have to make sure you are paying attention to every detail. While also talking about the many complex emotions humans feel and the sometimes deadly, decisions we make because of them.

Strange Pictures by Uketsu, (List Price: $17.99, HarperVia, 9780063433083, January 2025)

Reviewed by Brianna Lloyd, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

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Spotlight on: The Rivals by Jane Pek

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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

The Rivals by Jane Pek

What booksellers are saying about The Rivals

  • 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

About Jane Pek

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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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. The trademark wry humor and references to classic mystery tropes still resonate and make this a playful and perfect gift to yourself or others.

Everyone This Christmas Has a Secret by Benjamin Stevenson, (List Price: $19.99, Mariner Books, 9780063412866, October 2024)

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

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Spotlight On: The Lost Boy of Santa Chionia by Juliet Grames

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Juliet Grames, photo credit Nina Subin

As a child, I was intensely proud of my Italian origins, as I understood them from the cultural products my wonderful grandparents bestowed upon me. It was only as I grew up and tried to read and learn more about Calabria and what it meant to be Calabrian that I realized how misunderstood and under-celebrated my grandmother’s homeland was. I became fixated on the idea of offering another perspective.

― Juliet Grames, Interview, Italics Magazine

The Lost Boy of Santa Chionia by Juliet Grames

What booksellers are saying about The Lost Boy of Santa Chionia

  • Grames has given us Santa Chionia in full, all the life in this “dying” village in 1960s Calabria. Francesca, a twenty-seven year old American, leads the tour with her hopes, stubborness, smarts, and naivete, delightfully unnerving the wary locals. While we share in her revelations big and small. from a surprising bite of food, to the complicated history of the town itself, we inexorably move toward understanding the great mystery of who is The Lost Boy of Santa Chionia.
      ― Land Arnold, Letters Bookshop in Durham, North Carolina | BUY

  • Ooooh, this is a good one! Set in an isolated Italian village, it is so rich in detail, so deep in characterization, that it’s like eating dessert in a fine restaurant where you savor each bite, letting it linger on the palette, the memory staying with you long after you finish. That is what this was for me, a book that I read slowly (very unlike me) just so I could make it last. Easily one of my favorite books of the year so far!
      ― Pete Mock, McIntyre’s Books in Pittsboro, North Carolina | BUY

  • Another immersive novel from Juliet Grames! In Lost Boy, the author transports the reader to Southern Italy and unfurls a riveting story of young, idealistic Francesca, an American working to open a nursery school in the clifftop town of Santa Chionia. She gets pulled into the mystery of finding out who the skeleton discovered in the town is AND into the dark, ruthless politics of the secluded town. This was a real page-turner!
      ― Lynne Phillips, Wordsworth Books in Little Rock, Arkansas | BUY

  • Multi-genre book part historical fiction, part mystery. Francesca, a young American woman, travels to a remote Italian village to start a nursery school. In the village, she finds the residents secretive and unfriendly. When a flood uncovers a body under the post office she is drawn into the mystery of finding out the identity of the corpse.
      ― Kathy Clemmons, Sundog Books in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida | BUY

About Juliet Grames

Juliet Grames is the best-selling author of The Seven or Eight Deaths of Stella Fortuna. Her essays and short fiction have appeared in Real Simple, Parade, and The Boston Globe, and she is the recipient of an Ellery Queen Award from the Mystery Writers of America. She is editorial director at Soho Press in New York.

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Liar, Dreamer, Thief by Maria Dong

A beautifully odd and weird story, full of imagination, obsession, and layers upon layers of intrigue. Katrina Kim is living on the edges of life, barely able to afford her shared apartment, struggling with her temp job, and lowkey stalking her coworker Kurt. There’s something about him and his strangeness that compels her to watch him. Then one night she sees Kurt jump off a bridge, drawing Katrina into the mystery that was his life. I can’t recommend this strange book enough!

Liar, Dreamer, Thief by Maria Dong (List Price: $28, Grand Central Publishing, 9781538723562, January 2023)

RReviewed by Kate Towery, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia

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Like a Sister by Kellye Garrett

Like a Sister is as much a story about today’s social media culture and societal issues especially those of race and class as it is a masterfully written twisty mystery. The story is narrated by the very relatable Lena Scott, half- sister of realty star Desiree Pierce who is found dead of a presumed overdose. Lena uses sarcasm and wit to hide her emotions because as a young Black woman in today’s world Lena believes what her mother has always told her – that she must always show her super-woman side to the world. While Desiree was a known alcoholic and coke user, one of the main reasons the sisters had not spoken in two years, Lena is convinced that Desiree didn’t die from an accidental overdose of heroin. She wouldn’t have been surprised if it were coke but never heroin, as Desiree hated needles and was too vain to ever leave track marks. Lena believes the last favor she can do for her sister is find out the truth behind her death even, as it turns out, at the risk to her own life.

Like a Sister by Kellye Garrett, (List Price: $28, Mulholland Books, 9780316256704,  March 2022)

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

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