The books Southern indie booksellers are recommending to readers everywhere!

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The Uncool by Cameron Crowe

I flew through Cameron Crowe’s upcoming memoir, releasing on October 28th. If you were born or raised in the 70s like I was, or if you just like rock music from that generation, you will probably find it as frothy and fascinating as I did! Crowe was the youngest music journalist in Rolling Stone’s history, touring with and interviewing the likes of Elton John, Fleetwood Mac, The Eagles, Led Zeppelin, David Bowie, and The Allman Brothers at just age 15. It is his life on which his movie, Almost Famous, is based. The memoir is made up of short, fast-paced chapters. We learn of his early family life, including his sister’s depression and subsequent suicide, and his relationships with his colorful and quirky mother and father. He imparts the history of where his love for music began and delves into his very first articles for small music magazines, followed by his early foray into writing for Rolling Stone as just a teen. The reader also learns of his movie writing career (Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Jerry Maguire, Almost Famous), but this is first and foremost a front row ticket to the music and bands of the 70s in their earliest iterations. The writing is honest and vulnerable, capturing the essence of youth, uncertainty, self-doubt, and the push-and-pull of those early core family relationships. While I picked up this memoir for the behind-the-curtain glimpse into music history, I didn’t expect to be so touched. Some of the chapters, particularly those about the death of his sister and the loss of his parents, elicited all the feels. There are some things about your parents that you might only come to appreciate in their absence. This was unlike other music memoirs I have read. There was less grit and more heart, humor, and humility — probably because this is a story originally written by a 15-year-old! There are many people in my life I look forward to recommending this to.

The Uncool by Cameron Crowe, (List Price: $35, Avid Reader Press, Simon & Schuster, 9781668059432, October 2025)

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

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Joyride by Susan Orlean

Aptly titled, this is a shimmering cruise through the ups and downs of Orlean’s writing career. Her love of writing shines through even in the cautionary tales. The appendix with several of her early pieces is a delightful bonus. If you love the behind-the-scenes world of writers, this is one for you.

Joyride by Susan Orlean, (List Price: $32, Avid Reader Press, Simon & Schuster, 9781982135164, October 2025)

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

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The Editor by Sara B. Franklin

Sara Franklin’s first-rate biography is a celebration of the “audacious life” of editor Judith Jones, whose career spanned the 1960s and into the millennium. With little more than instinct, pluck, and will, Jones began her career at Doubleday at age 17 and rose to senior editor and V.P. At Knopf in Paris. After being involved with noted authors like John Updike, Sylvia Plath, John Hersey, and Langston Hughes, and important manuscripts including The Diary of Anne Frank, she gained her most remarkable success by her association first with cookery guru Julia Child and later with James Beard and Jacques Papin, to become a true “culinary luminary.” This is an exceptional book, where even the end-notes make entertaining reading.

The Editor by Sara B. Franklin, (List Price: $29.99, Atria Books, 9781982134341, May 2024)

Reviewed by Michael Yetter, Joseph-Beth Booksellers Lexington in Lexington, Kentucky

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Reading the Room by Paul Yamazaki

This pocket-size book takes just an hour or two to read, structurally spans a day and a night, but holds half a century’s wisdom about bookselling. Paul Yamazaki has been the principal book buyer at Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s iconic City Lights bookstore in San Francisco for 50 years. This brief but complex and consequential collection of interviews with a venerable bookseller of color who’s experienced so much is a gift to all who love bookstores.

Reading the Room by Paul Yamazaki, (List Price: $13.95, Ode Books, 9781958846698, May 2024)

Reviewed by Megan Bell, Underground Books in Carrollton , Georgia

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First to the Front by Lorissa Rinehart

The book is not just a dry recounting of Dickey Chapelle’s story. The writing is moving, engaging, and gripping. The author captures Dickey’s personality and her drive. The reader learns about the many firsts that Dickey accomplished as well as the disturbing “unknown” behind-the-scenes events that the US participated in throughout many wars and conflicts across the globe. Her life spans WWII through the Vietnam war. An amazing life! An amazing story!

First to the Front by Lorissa Rinehart, (List Price: 32, St. Martin’s Press, 9781250276575, July 2023)

Reviewed by Robin, A Novel Escape in Franklin, North Carolina

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