The books Southern indie booksellers are recommending to readers everywhere!

Ecosystems & Habitats

The Secret Life of a Cemetery by Benoît Gallot

Here, Benoit Gallot, the head curator of Paris’ Pere Lachaise (arguably the most famous cemetery in the world) shares his unique work-life experience. I so thoroughly enjoyed this book! Gallot beautifully details the history and everyday working routines of this famous cemetery but also its wildlife (complete with photos) and the life of its visitors (both living and dead). The space is an oasis of solace, a green space that is also home to red foxes, birds, trees, lichen, and moss. A love letter to the cycles of existence – life and death and the return to renewal. There is such quiet, contemplative delight and magic in these pages!

The Secret Life of a Cemetery by Benoît Gallot, (List Price: $28.95, Greystone Books, 9781778401589, February 2025)

Reviewed by Sarah Goldstein, Old Town Books in Alexandria, Virginia

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Is a River Alive? by Robert Macfarlane

Nature writer par excellence Robert Macfarlane’s latest work is a treat for all the senses. In it, he visits three rivers – one in Ecuador, one in India, one in Canada; one protected, one dying, and one under threat – in search of answers to his own question: is a river alive? The result is this beautifully written work that explores the rights of nature movement and the idea that rivers are more than mere matter for human use. Drawing upon both indigenous and Western knowledge, Is a River Alive? is erudite and eloquent, intelligent and passionate, and much needed.

Is a River Alive? by Robert Macfarlane, (List Price: $31.99, W. W. Norton & Company, 9780393242133, May 2025)

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

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Spotlight On: Sharks Don’t Sink by Jasmin Graham

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Jasmin Graham, photo credit Sonia Szczesna

My family spent a lot of time in the waters of Myrtle Beach. I loved science, and was curious about the ocean beyond a food source, and I would ask my family questions that they couldn’t always answer. So my parents sent me to MarineQuest, a five-day, sleep-away science camp. Once I realized that I could do this as a career—get paid to play in the ocean with fish everyday—I applied to all the marine biology schools.

― Jasmin Graham, Interview, Sarasota Magazine

Sharks Don't Sink by Jasmin Graham

What booksellers are saying about Sharks Don’t Sink

  • 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. Her stories of the pressures of being black and female in a male dominated field echo those of other recent memoirs. Her response was to co-found an advocacy group and create learning opportunities. Told with humor and clarity, this is a good addition to women in science shelves.
      ― Jan Blodgett, Main Street Books, Davidson, North Carolina | BUY

  • 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.
      ― Jamie Kovacs, Flyleaf Books, Chapel Hill, North Carolina | BUY

  • A fascinating and relatable memoir about life as a shark scientist. Really great at making the science accessible and connecting her life story to the work.
      ― Nicole Tortoriello, Old Town Books, Alexandria, Virginia | BUY

About Jasmin Graham

Jasmin Graham is a marine biologist in the field of elasmobranch ecology and evolution, currently specializing in smalltooth sawfish and hammerhead sharks. She is the co-founder of Minorities in Shark Sciences (MISS), an organization providing support for women of color in the field of shark biology and ecology, in order to foster greater diversity in marine science. She is a recipient of the WWF Conservation Leadership Award, the Safina Launchpad Center Fellowship, and a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.

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Soil: The Story of a Black Mother’s Garden by Camille T. Dungy

Observed with a poet’s eye, deeply concerned with social justice, history, community, and the natural world, Camille Dungy’s Soil recounts the process of creating a pollinator garden in her Colorado yard, circling around her history and the history of the plants, animals and politics of the West. “I dig up a lot of awful history when I kneel in my garden,” she writes. “But, my god, a lot of beauty grows out of this soil as well.”

This is a smart, beautiful, wide-ranging book that will draw you in and change how you look at the world around you.

Soil : The Story of a Black Mother’s Garden by Camille T. Dungy, (List Price: 28.99, Simon & Schuster, 9781982195304, May 2023)

Reviewed by Robin Wood, Books & Books @ The Studios in Key West, Florida

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