The books Southern indie booksellers are recommending to readers everywhere!

Fantasy

Unhallowed Halls by Lili Wilkinson

I loved the Gothic setting of a castle with ancient roots on a desolate Scottish moor. I’m not really one to go after books about demons because I feel they can hem in the plot, but I loved the way Oak described them as elementals, and how he could see everything alive on the empty-looking moor just by knowing how to look. He was probably my favorite character. I also liked how Page took her chronic pain and made it her superpower later in the book. A big theme of the book is physical bodies versus the mind, and I think Wilkinson did an excellent job weaving that theme through every aspect of the book. From the lessons the Agathion professors taught, to Page’s endometriosis, to the LGBTQ characters, and to the ancient stories of the gods.

Unhallowed Halls by Lili Wilkinson, (List Price: $19.99, Delacorte Press, 9780593810989, February 2025)

Reviewed by Candice Conner, The Haunted Book Shop in Mobile, Alabama

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But Not Too Bold by Hache Pueyo

Where to even begin with this book other than wowza. I was not expecting to be given the most thrilling sapphic monster romance in the entire world. But Not Too Bold gave me goosebumps, and I fear that’s all you really need to know about how incredible it was.

But Not Too Bold by Hache Pueyo, (List Price: $24.99, Tordotcom, 9781250376633, February 2025)

Reviewed by Caitlyn Vanorder, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

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The Otherwhere Post by Emily J. Taylor

You’ll want to get your little ink-stained hands on this one as soon as possible! Maeve is getting by in her world by never staying in one place for long and changing her name with every move. See, her father was a known murderer and everyone thinks Maeve is dead. But when she received a letter from seven years ago from an anonymous “friend” claiming that her father is innocent, she must find out the truth. To do this, she’ll have to take on a new identity and apprentice with the Otherwhere Post: the only people who can cross words now (supposedly thanks to her father) to deliver messages. But can she find out the truth before she’s found out herself?

The Otherwhere Post by Emily J. Taylor, (List Price: $20.99, G.P. Putnam’s Sons Books for Young Readers, 9780593404546, February 2025)

Reviewed by Jennifer Jones, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

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The Otherwhere Post by Emily J. Taylor

Maeve’s world burned down (literally) seven years ago. Her father was responsible for the crime. A letter from the past arrives, claiming he’s innocent. Maeve practices scriptomancy, the magic of enchanting letters. She impersonates her way into the only place she can uncover the truth in this atmospheric, dark fantasy.

The Otherwhere Post by Emily J. Taylor, (List Price: $20.99, G.P. Putnam’s Sons Books for Young Readers, 9780593404546, February 2025)

Reviewed by Rae Ann Parker, Parnassus Books in Nashville, Tennessee

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The City and Its Uncertain Walls by Haruki Murakami

This novel is uber-Murakami, the author back to the magical best of his earlier novels such as Hardboiled Wonderland and the End of the World (note: this makes sense, as the author writes in an afterword that this novel was a second attempt at reworking a novella, the first attempt being Hardboiled Wonderland). You don’t read a Murakami novel; you live it, holding on for dear life until it lets you off at the end, slightly confused but highly entertained. A magical world slowly unravels through an unnamed girl, while everyday life interweaves with it, featuring all the traditional Murakami Bingo tropes (loneliness, high school, jazz, pasta recipes, The Beatles, wells, libraries, cats…all the greatest hits!) There were a few minor logical bugbears, but plot logic was never Murakami’s strong suit. The simplicity of his language has long been a feature, but lately has felt more like a bug at times, with the repetition of banal thoughts (‘it was just my conjecture, but I was sure of it’; I nodded vaguely’ etc.) – perhaps as one of my all-time favourite authors I have come to expect more, but it was still great to be back in Murakami world.

The City and Its Uncertain Walls by Haruki Murakami, (List Price: $35, Knopf, 9780593801970, November 2024)

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

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Spotlight on: The City in Glass by Nghi Vo

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Nghi Vo, photo credit CJ Foeckler

I’ve been describing The City In Glass as three hundred years of grief and city planning.

It’s about a demon named Vitrine who loves a city called Azril, and what happens when angels from across the sea destroy that city. Vitrine has to decide what she does after the end of the world and what revenge she can possibly take on one of the angels responsible.

If The City In Glass was inspired by anything, it’s the end of the world and how often in your life you might be confronted with such a terrible thing. It’s inspired by what comes after the end of the world, because so far as I know, there’s always been a time after the end of the world, whether or not we’re around to see it.

― Nghi Vo, Interview, Paul Semel

The City in Glass by Nghi Vo

What booksellers are saying about The City in Glass

  • If something or someone is lucky enough, in their life they will love and be loved. The demon of Azril, Vitrine, knows what is like to love, to love her city and each person in it, to know their story as intimately as she does her own. She also knows what it is to grieve, when angels come to rain fire on her city, destroying every carefully laid stone and extinguishing every last soul. As Vitrine rebuilds her city over the centuries, accompanied by the angel who she cursed to stay with her, she learns what it is like to be loved: by the new inhabitants, and by her angel, try as she might to get rid of him. Vo’s prose sings in her latest novel, a gorgeous explosion of color and life that blooms and decays as Vitrine’s narration alternates between the Azril of old and new. At once a history, a love story, and voyage into the fantastic, The City in Glass is a genre-defying triumph.
      ― Sydney Mason, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina | BUY

  • While a demon rebuilds her beloved city brick-by-brick after its utter devastation, the angel responsible looks on, cursed to witness the destruction he caused. The years that pass between them are raw with grief and rage, but also soft with hope and new beginnings, and by the end of the book our hearts are just as wrapped up in this magical, improbable city as the demon and the angel. Every book Nghi Vo writes is a revelation, and The City in Glass is an exceptional example of her unparalleled imagination. It is diamond-sharp, sumptuous, and heady, full of luscious prose and a healthy dose of erotically-charged angel-humbling, and will stay with you long after you’ve finished it.
      ― Rebecca Speas, Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh, North Carolina | BUY

  • This is a novel of feminine rage, grief, and loss. Nghi Vo masterfully asks, “Who do we become in the face of loss?” “How much of ourselves die with those we’ve lost?” and “What happens when we finally accept that loss and realize that grief is a symbol of love (a love that never fades), not loss?
      ― Hezekiah Olorode, Old Town Books in Alexandria, Virginia | BUY

About Nghi Vo

Nghi Vo is the author of the novels Siren Queen and The Chosen and the Beautiful, as well as the acclaimed novellas of the Singing Hills Cycle, which began with The Empress of Salt and Fortune. The series entries have been finalists for the Nebula Award, the Locus Award, and the Lambda Literary Award, and have won the Crawford Award, the Ignyte Award, and the Hugo Award. Born in Illinois, she now lives on the shores of Lake Michigan. She believes in the ritual of lipstick, the power of stories, and the right to change your mind.

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Spotlight on: The Nightmare Before Kissmas by Sara Raasch

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Sara Raasch, photo courtesy the author

Show of hands—who’s had a rough couple of years? It’s a mark of just how brutal life’s been that I know your hand went up. Life’s been hard. It’s been cruel. And in the summer of 2022, I’d had it. I was tired of being sad and feeling crushed by the continued crap life heaped on us all. So, I set out to recapture joy by writing a rom-com. A silly, irreverent, whimsical rom-com about how you spend your life chasing nostalgia even when you know those moments will never be quite the same; about not just surviving, but living, and doing that while being unapologetically queer.

― Sara Raasch, Letter to indie booksellers

The Nightmare Before Kissmas by Sara Raasch

What booksellers are saying about The Nightmare Before Kissmas

  • This novel was a charming tale about a marriage competition between the princes of Halloween and Christmas over the princess of Easter. The twist — they fall for each other instead of the princess. Filled with themes of family, the meaning of joy, and how love can heal The Nightmare Before Kissmas was an adorably sweet story that is perfect for the upcoming season.
      ― Ashton Ahart, Page 158 Books in Wake Forest, North Carolina | BUY

  • I came for the silly, lighthearted gay romance, and I stayed for the political coup/anti-capitalist take down of holiday consumerism. Not at all what I expected, I had a jolly time reading this book with all its Christmas shenanigans, delightful flirting, and unique take on the commodification of joy during the holidays.
      ― Gray Koesters, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky | BUY

  • I am obsessed! This is entirely too delightful and it slayed me (sleighed me?)! I need only tell you that the prince of Christmas and the prince of Halloween fall in love. This is a world of holidays with lands and lore, ruling families and political intrigue. Sara Raasch has got me in her pocket and I have never felt more giddy while reading a novel. The holiday highjinks are high key and the foundational friendships had my whole heart.
      ― Michelle Cavalier, Cavalier House Books in Denham Springs, Louisiana | BUY

  • Anyone who knows me knows I LOVE a holiday romance. Put together Christmas AND Halloween??? Bliss! Prince Nicolas “Coal” Claus used to love Christmas. But since his dad turned it into a soulless, predatory corporation, he is jaded. He is set up for a fake marriage to the Princess of Easter (his best friend) to seal a business arrangement. After drowning his sorrows, he has a super sexy brief encounter with a mysterious man behind the bar. Later he finds out that that man is the ultra-hot Prince Hex of Halloween. Light and dark magic combine to create super fiery scenes and a deeply satisfying ending!
      ― Kelly Justice, Fountain Books in Richmond, Virginia | BUY

About Sara Raasch

Sara Raasch grew up among the cornfields of Ohio and currently lives in the historical corridor of southeastern Virginia. She is the New York Times bestselling author of seven books for young adults. In her debut adult novel, Raasch offers readers all the joy, irreverent wit, and crackling sexiness of your favorite sweet-as-a candy-cane holiday romp.

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Final Cut by Charles Burns

The latest graphic novel from Charles Burns is as visually stunning as ever, in his inimitable style. In this tale, we are presented with a melancholy, teenage angst story that verges on horror by the end. as a group of friends attempt to make a home movie. The autobiographical aspects may not be subtle, as one of the protagonists struggles with the difficulties of turning the images in his head into reality, but as we flit from the tortured artist to the girl he has become fixated on, taking in their mutual friends and his situation at home, Final Cut presents us with a moving, layered tale of creation and destruction.

Final Cut by Charles Burns, (List Price: $34, Pantheon, 9780593701706, September 2024)

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

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Divine Mortals by Amanda Helander

The divining magic system really got my attention, and the plot twists kept me reading. Mona is the favored mortal of the crow god of love, and has the ability to divine soulmates. She’s also an agoraphobe because she accidentally killed her older brother as a child. (This isn’t a spoiler because it’s in the very first line.) She’s one of the most unlikable characters I’ve read in a while, but I kinda had to keep reading to see how far she would go–lying, cheating, scheming, teasing poor Master Whitman–to hold onto her truths.

Divine Mortals by Amanda Helander, (List Price: $18.99, Disney Hyperion, 9781368096171, October 2024)

Reviewed by Candice Conner, The Haunted Book Shop in Mobile, Alabama

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The Wild Huntress by Emily Lloyd-Jones

A huntress accidentally enchanted as a baby to see hidden magic and the Other Folk embarks on a deadly hunt with a trickster and a reluctant prince to save her Mam. Emily Lloyd-Jones strikes again with the gorgeously-written, unique Welsh fantasy that will utterly captivate readers with each page.

The Wild Huntress by Emily Lloyd-Jones, (List Price: $19.99, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, 9780316568142, October 2024)

Reviewed by Cindy Otis, The Stacks Bookstore in Savannah, Georgia

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Off Menu by Oliver Gerlach

I love a good cooking duel and this was great! The artwork was adorable and I loved the found family aspect of this!

Off Menu by Oliver Gerlach, (List Price: $24.99, little bee books, 9781499815030, October 2024)

Reviewed by sarah dimaria, Cavalier House Books in Denham Springs, Louisiana

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Spotlight on: Where the Library Hides by Isabel Ibañez

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Isabel Ibañez, photo courtesy the author

I grew up reading Agatha Christie. Her mysteries are classic and even amidst the dead bodies, oddly nostalgic and comforting for me. I have always wanted to write a mystery with lots of plot twists but do it in a way that feels true to me and my interests. When I was a kid, I wanted to be an Egyptologist, and so when I grew up and writing became my career, I knew I’d one day write a story set in Egypt. The Secrets of the Nile duology has all of my favorite things: a main character who isn’t a warrior but a dreamer, wanting to belong somewhere and yearning to make sense of the world around her. She’s bright and curious and impulsive, a teenager of her time and perhaps with an eye to the future, too. The love interest is morally gray and constantly questioning people and their motives and intentions. He’s cynical and sensitive and probably a little sad all the time. Together, I think they learn to heal and grow up, making mistakes along the way because no one gets it right the first time, or even the second.
― Isabel Ibañez, Interview, She Reads

Where the Library Hides by Isabel Ibañez

What booksellers are saying about Where the Library Hides

  • This was a wonderful conclusion to What the River Knows! It’s a mix of Indiana Jones and Atlantis. This story involves rivals turned lovers and also features a touch of grumpy x persistently-will-give-up-no-matter-what dynamic! It also makes you yearn to see the sights and monuments described! The epilogue was also a nice touch!
      ― Sarah Dimaria, Cavalier House Books in Denham Springs, Louisiana | BUY

  • A fantastic read! This is full of adventure, history, mystery, and romance. There are so many great twists and turns, heartbreaks and swoony scenes! Though it helps if you read book 1 first, I think it works on its own, too. Jump in here and then circle back to the first in the Secrets of the Nile series. You won’t regret it!
      ― Jamie Southern, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina | BUY

  • Get ready to head back to Egypt as you get swept into the final book in this series. Ibañez does it again with beautiful imagery and wonderful banter between the two main characters. As Inez tries to unlock the secrets behind her mothers betrayal she has to overcome the fact that her new husband Whit also used her for her money. Despite the fact he stole from her Whit desperately wants to stay with Inez and help her, so he makes her a deal that if they work together he will let her have a quiet devoice, even if that is not what he wants. Enjoy being swept away into this world that Ibañez has built as this beautiful adventure and love story unfold.
      ― Kelli Dynia, Copperfish Books in Punta Gorda, Florida | BUY

  • Loved these books!!! Ready to hear more about the other characters and their adventures!
      ― Sandra Huff, Virginia Highland Books in Atlanta, Georgia | BUY

  • This story is overflowing with an abundance of betrayal that can only be described as luscious! I found myself gasping at reveals, only for the next twist to shock me further. My heart was pulled in all directions, and ultimately ended with me in love Egypt as much as the characters.
      ― Halli Heinmets, Underbrush Books in Rogers, Arkansas | BUY

About Isabel Ibañez

Isabel Ibañez is the author of the Secrets of the Nile duology (Wednesday Books), and Woven in Moonlight (Page Street), a finalist for the William C. Morris Award, and listed among Time Magazine’s 100 Best Fantasy Books Of All Time. She is the proud daughter of Bolivian immigrants and has a profound appreciation for history and traveling. She currently lives in Asheville, North Carolina, with her husband, twin sons, their adorable dog, and a serious collection of books. Say hi on social media at @IsabelWriter09.

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The Scholar and the Last Faerie Door by H. G. Parry

Are you on the H. G. Parry train? If not, get on! Her books are amazing! To read one of her books is a gift to yourself as you fall into her wonderfully crafted places and worlds where humans, fairies, and magical creatures and objects overlap and collide. In The Scholar and the Last Faerie Door, Clover enters a school of magic, hoping to learn enough magic to heal her brother, who was cursed on a WWI battlefield when a fairie door was opened, and the fairie that came through killed and cursed hundreds of men. Afterwards, the magical community destroyed all the fairie doors. Clover feels out of place at the school until she joins a group of friends led by wealthy student Alden. Her friends change her life and she loves the school. But there’s more than one secret in this group and at the school, and one of them could destroy the world. Because it’s possible that not every fairie door was destroyed.

The Scholar and the Last Faerie Door by H. G. Parry, (List Price: $19.99, Redhook, 9780316383905, October 2024)

Reviewed by Mary Patterson, The Little Bookshop in Midlothian, Virginia

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Blood Over Bright Haven by M. L. Wang

Well damn, I going to be thinking about it for awhile. Blood Over Bright Haven is the perfect story for the person who wants to rage at the system of oppression against women and also the way in which religion and history are often used to tell a story that continues to make a person or people group be regarded as less than. Just add a technical magic system called “siphoning” and a group of mages who use their skills to learn where to siphon magic in order to power their city. Sciona is fueled by her desire to be the first woman accepted into this society of mages. She cares about nothing and no one else other than her work and her ability to be the best and make a name for herself when the majority believe as a woman, her delicate disposition will be her downfall. Nothing could be further from the truth because truth and magic are her focus, and nothing will stop her from seeking it. But what if the truth reveals something that completely changes the lens and paradigm of how you view the world? What then? Perfect for fall, perfect for the reader who wants to RAGE at the impacts of colonialism, racism, sexism.

Blood Over Bright Haven by M. L. Wang, (List Price: $29.99, Del Rey, 9780593873359, November 2024)

Reviewed by Morgan DePerno, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

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Spotlight On: The Wood at Midwinter by Susanna Clarke

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Susanna Clarke, photo by Curtis Brown

Unsurprisingly, when I look back at my childhood the books that dominated are the Narnia books. It just was a world in which I felt completely at home. I think it wasn’t that I realized fantasy literature did something different perhaps from other literature I just felt more at home in Narnia and in other similar books perhaps historical books in some way that wasn’t the modern world. It just it made more sense to me. Then in in my teenage years I read Ursula LeGuin’s EarthSea series despite that being in in many ways a sort of archetypal fantasy with Wizards and Dragons it was it was so real and it gave me something which I was missing in my actual life…books like EarthSea sort of made a place for my emotion and made a place for my dreams and my intellect. I was at home there. I look to the to not so much to the architecture but to the landscape of some of those islands that make up EarthSea. I know that place. I feel I have walked there um I know it better than I know most places in the real world.

I feel that fantasy literature ― good fantasy literature ― gives meaning to the reader, the reader finds a world which is meaningful when so much of the world that we actually live in we feel, probably wrongly, but we feel is meaningless.
–Susanna Clarke, in conversation with Alan Moore, British Library

The Wood at Midwinter by Susanna Clarke

What booksellers are saying about The Wood at Midwinter

  • This story is quietly beautiful, following a young girl who understands the things she gives her interests to do not align with those around her. Yet, she continues to pursue them anyway. Questions of sainthood, trees that know more than we can possibly imagine, and nods to the Virgin Mary. What I loved most was the way Clarke’s author’s note gives so much context and depth to the origins of the story, making us think about the stories we tell and what they teach us about existing in the world. Beautifully done.
      ― Morgan DePerno, Bookmarks, Winston-Salem, North Carolina | BUY

  • What a beautiful little novella. I’m ready to run away and live in the woods.
      ― Lily Wilson, Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh, North Carolina | BUY

  • Super amazing novella that I was able to enjoy in one sitting, which is how I imagine this story is meant to be enjoyed. The illustrations are beautiful and the afterword from Clarke is amazing. I also agree that books should have more trees and pigs!
      ― Kait Boyd, The Haunted Book Shop in Mobile, Alabama | BUY

About Susanna Clarke

Susanna Clarke is the author of Piranesi, which won the Women’s Prize for Fiction, the Hugo Award–winning Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, and The Ladies of Grace Adieu and Other Stories. She lives in England.

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