The books Southern indie booksellers are recommending to readers everywhere!

Fiction

Book Buzz: Aftertaste by Daria Lavelle

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Daria Lavelle, photo credit Caroline BaptistaFood has always been an obsession of mine, but I had never written it really into my fiction, aside from, occasionally describing what somebody was eating, describing a flavor somebody remembered. But this was the first time where, I think years of reading cookbooks, of watching cooking shows, of watching my parents cook, of cooking myself, and experiencing different flavors and different cuisines, and being really tuned into that…I think this was when all of that sort of manifested. This was my first try at writing something that felt like eating. And there were even moments where I would try to eat the foods that I was describing to get the mouth feel right…I completely invented recipes for for several of the dishes in Aftertaste that wind up being these sort of spiritual connections that can bring a spirit back. And in some cases, I would attempt to make the flavors, but in most cases, I just knew in my head what it would taste like from from just experiencing cooking and experiencing flavors. I would use that sort of intuition, also paired with what that character needed at the time. So I think one of the things in Aftertaste that happens is that the food is never just the food. The food is really evocative of a particular flavor of memory. So is it they’re sweet? Is it? Is it something that really disturbs the spirit that’s trying to come back? Is it something warm? Is it something that they’re excited to taste again? Is it a recollection that buoys them, or is it something that crushes them?

― Daria Lavelle, Interview, Table Talk

Aftertaste by Daria Lavelle

What booksellers are saying about Aftertaste

  • If you could have one meal, just one more perfect special meal, with anyone who has passed on from this world, what would it be? Granny’s mashed potatoes? The cheezy fries you used to have with your college roommate? In Aftertaste, a fun cautionary tale that reads a bit like a mash up of The Bear meets the Sixth Sense, you just might get the chance to order up. Fast paced, fun, and a little fantastical, Aftertaste is delicious delightful.
      ― Angie Tally, The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, North Carolina | BUY

  • The richness of the following recipe is enough to make any reader’s mouth water. One part NYC high pressure kitchen culture, one part communing with the Dead, two parts learning to love and be loved, one half part mobster madness, one half part spice. Whisk together with a heavy dollop of grief over low heat until heartwarmingly creamy. Best served with a side of cheeky comedy.
      ― Mandy Martin, Novel. in Memphis, Tennessee | BUY

  • I was debating on whether to shelf this book in Fantasy, Mystery, Food or Fiction, as each of these elements are strongly represented in Aftertaste….but, my recommendation would be on the front table. This was a delightful book with plenty of twists and turns. I always enjoy a book with multiple likable characters and this book certainly does just that. The author does a great job of building a story while never quite letting you know what is around the next bend.
      ― Jim Clemmons, Sundog Books in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida | BUY

  • What if you could have one last meal with a lost loved one? What if your lost loved one could come back for one last conversation and the closure you both need? Daria Lavelle combines ghosts with international cuisine and explores the power of food, how it tells stories, holds histories, heals us, connects us, and lets us express ourselves. It’s equal parts heartwarming and heart-wrenching. There’s loss and grief and regret, but there’s also friendship and joy and love. And let me tell you – Lavelle knows how to write about real love… You will drool, your chest will ache with loss, you will hold your breath, groan with frustration, swoon, and close the book full of hope. You will also look up a hundred new foods you’ve never heard of but will immediately want to try!
      ― Emily Lessig, The Violet Fox Bookshop in Virginia Beach, Virginia | BUY

About Daria Lavelle

Daria Lavelle is an American fiction writer. Born in Kyiv, Ukraine, and raised in the New York metro area, her work explores themes of identity and belonging through magic and the uncanny. Her short stories have appeared in The Deadlands, Dread Machine, and elsewhere, and she holds degrees in writing from Princeton University and Sarah Lawrence College. She lives in New Jersey with her husband, children, and goldendoodle, all of whom love a great meal almost as much as she does. Learn more at DariaLavelle.com..

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The Director by Daniel Kehlmann

This dramatic, thought-provoking novel challenges us to consider the moral and creative problems faced by acclaimed Jewish film director G.W. Pabst as Hitler comes to power. After Pabst travels back to Europe from Hollywood, the Nazis force him to remain and film in Austria for the duration of the war where he struggles with family loyalty, love for his country, and his own driving ambition. Vivid descriptions of 1940s film techniques and scenes with greats like Greta Garbo, the film propagandist Leni Riefenstahl, and writer Alfred Karrasch. Dramatic and thought-provoking.

The Director by Daniel Kehlmann, (List Price: $28.99, S&S/Summit Books, 9781668087794, May 2025)

Reviewed by Patience Allan-Glick, Hills & Hamlets Bookshop in Carrollton, Georgia

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What Happens in Amsterdam by Rachel Lynn Solomon

This is a good old-fashioned “I need to stay up late reading and see what happens” romance! This second-chance story, inspired by the author’s own expat journey, follows Dani, an adrift American, as she tries to get her bearings in Amsterdam following a messy breakup. As she struggles to prove to her family (and herself) that she can handle her new adventure, a long-lost first love appears to provide some solutions. Can she put her resentments for her first heartbreak aside and be civil long enough to find her purpose? Can he? Tension! Tulips! So bingeable and wanderlust-inspiring!

What Happens in Amsterdam by Rachel Lynn Solomon, (List Price: $19, Berkley, 9780593548554, May 2025)

Reviewed by Julia Lewis, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia

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Book Buzz: A Gardin Wedding by Rosey Lee

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Rosey Lee, photo credit Meghan Renee PhotographyA Gardin Wedding allows readers to take an emotional journey with Martha—one where she drops her tough exterior and heals the hurt inside. While this heartwarming family and friendship drama with romantic elements is the second book in my Gardins of Edin series, it can also stand alone. I welcome readers who are familiar with the Gardin family because they enjoyed The Gardins of Edin as well as those who haven’t read it yet.

Rosey Lee is a pen name. I like to say that my “alter ego” is a physician. My commitment to empowering people with health information carries over to my creative life through the health themes in my stories. A Gardin Wedding highlights mental health, the connection between high blood pressure and dementia, and couple’s counseling. And because my “alter ego” works in community health, I know firsthand that it’s frequently easier for people to relate to physicians in community settings than it is in a hospital or doctor’s office. So, Martha, who is a physician, partners with a local library for a talk about high blood pressure, where she demonstrates how to use a blood pressure monitor, highlights the library’s blood pressure monitor lending program, and later joins the library patrons and staff on a community walk. I won’t spoil what happens at the events. I’ll only say that the attendees aren’t the only ones to learn something there. (Hint: Martha may have learned a little something too.)

― Rosey Lee, Letter to a Librarian

A Gardin Wedding by Rosey Lee

What booksellers are saying about A Gardin Wedding

  • A Gardin Wedding is a beautiful and wholesome novel showcasing the importance of trusting your instincts, and shows us just how amazing a great family and support system can be. This book will leave readers satisfied and feeling connected to the Gardin Family like never before.”
      ― Elizabeth Dowdy, Baldwin & Co. in New Orleans, Louisiana | BUY

  • Rosey Lee’s characters come to life in her new title A Gardin Wedding. Martha Gardin, with her prestigious family in tow, takes on a new chapter full of challenges and growth in finding the balance in her work, romantic life, and making room for friendship. Her relationship with her family has come to a solid place, but Martha still has to find room in her life for more, including in her budding relationship with the kind and charming Oji Greenwald, who, much like Martha, is full of surprises.
      ― Jenna Lucas, 44th and 3rd Bookseller in Peachtree Corners, Georgia | BUY

  • Rosey Lee did it again with a perfect sequel to The Gardins of Edin. The way she writes characters and the way they communicate is so refreshing. Her characters feel real, like you know someone like them in your town. I could picture every detail and I just know Martha had the most beautiful wedding. Martha and Oji have such a beautiful relationship, you can tell how much they love each other by how hard they work at trying to fix their relationship and learn to communicate with each other. I can’t wait to read more by Rosey Lee and read more about the Gardin family.
      ― Keila Cone, The Bookshelf in Thomasville, Georgia | BUY

About Rosey Lee

Rosey Lee writes stories about complicated families and complex friendships, but a happy ending is guaranteed. She is a nominee for a 2025 Georgia Author of the Year Award for her debut novel, The Gardins of Edin. Rosey lives in Atlanta, about an hour away from the fictional town of Edin, Georgia, where her characters live. She grew up on the Westbank of New Orleans and carries the area and her loved ones in her heart when she’s away from them. Her essays have appeared in Writer’s DigestDeep South Magazine, and The Nerd Daily.

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The Names by Florence Knapp

What’s in a name? A lot – at least in Florence Knapp’s thought-provoking and assured debut novel. It’s 1987, and a young mother trapped in an abusive marriage is about to register the birth of her new son. Her controlling husband expects the child to be named after him, but she wants to give him his own identity. What follows is a Sliding Doors-esque split narrative, in which Knapp imagines three parallel futures for the child: in each one he’s given a different name, which alters the trajectory of his life. While at times The Names makes for difficult reading, there’s a beauty and tenderness at the heart of this novel that meant I couldn’t put it down.

The Names by Florence Knapp, (List Price: $30, Pamela Dorman Books, 9780593833902, May 2025)

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

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The Artist and the Feast by Lucy Steeds

This story bursts with light, color, and the sensuality of art, food, and intimacy. In 1920s Provence, a renowned but bitter artist called Tata paints in recluse, alone except for Ettie, the niece he has raised. She longs to paint too, but is forbidden by the controlling Tata and subjugated to serve as his assistant. Joseph, a young journalist, comes to stay to write about Tata. As the summer heats up, a desire blooms between Joseph and Ettie that they must hide from Tata. Suspense builds, secrets are revealed, and everything is put at risk for art, food, love, and ambition. Simply wonderful.

The Artist and the Feast by Lucy Steeds, (List Price: $27.99, Union Square & Co., 9781454960522, May 2025)

Reviewed by Patience Allan-Glick, Hills & Hamlets Bookshop in Carrollton, Georgia

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Book Buzz: Vanishing World by Sayaka Murata

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Sayaka Murata, photo credit Bungeishunju Ltd.I have had relationships with humans, but I’ve also loved a lot of people in stories. I’ve been told by my doctor not to talk about this too much, but ever since I was a child, I’ve had 30 or 40 imaginary friends who live on a different star or planet with whom I have shared love and sexual experiences. ……Some say that the worlds I write about are dystopian, but a lot of people think that actually reality is worse… I’ve often felt love, obsession, desire, friendship, a kind of faith, or almost a prayer-like relationship with these men – and they’ve always been men, so it’s a heterosexual relationship – who live inside stories. With Vanishing World I was trying to create a place where it might be easier for people who find it difficult to live in this world.

― Sayaka Murata, Interview, Guardian

Vanishing World by Sayaka Murata

What booksellers are saying about Vanishing World

  • When we live in a world that’s constantly changing around us, how can we even define what it means to be human? With her signature page-turning prose and uncanny, off-kilter storytelling, Sayaka Murata’s latest explores these questions and lives up to her previous titles that are beloved by so many.
      ― Maddie Grimes, Parnassus Books in Nashville, Tennessee | BUY

  • Vanishing World is a triumph of speculative fiction. Set in an alternate Japan in which almost all children are conceived through artificial insemination, sex is out of fashion, and intercourse between married couples is considered incest, a woman tries to understand her sexuality. She is cursed by romantic and sexual impulses, at odds with the broader societal understanding of relationships. Her story is both an excavation and an assimilation–the more she understands herself, the more she is struck with the quiet, inescapable horror of being different.
      ― Charlie Marks, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia | BUY

  • Marriage has become a platonic practicality in Japan. What remains of interpersonal relationships is artificial insemination for the sole purpose of reproduction. An outlier, Amane still finds physical and emotional satisfaction in intercourse, and thought her husband understood that about her, until they move into an experimental project that disrupts any and all of the family structures that Amane held sacred. An uncensored and introspective glimpse into a speculative reality, Vanishing World speaks to sexual taboos, family structure, and the role of relationships in postmodern society, challenging her readers with her signature Weirdness.
      ― Flora Arnsberger, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina | BUY

About Sayaka Murata

SAYAKA MURATA is the author of many books, including Convenience Store Woman, winner of the Akutagawa Prize, Earthlings, and Life Ceremony. Murata has been named a Freeman’s “Future of New Writing” author and a Vogue Japan Woman of the Year.

GINNY TAPLEY TAKEMORI has translated works by more than a dozen Japanese writers, including Ryu Murakami. She lives at the foot of a mountain in Eastern Japan. 

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Ocean’s Godori by Elaine U. Cho

This book was a perfect change of pace for me! Ocean’s Godori is a space opera set in future post-unification Korea. To me, the world-building was both totally unique and also super inviting. Each character perspective starts independent from the others and then eventually entwines as the plot thickens. I’m excited for more after this excellent debut from Elaine U. Cho!

Ocean’s Godori by Elaine U. Cho, (List Price: $18, Zando – Hillman Grad Books, 9781638932840, June 2025)

Reviewed by Johanna Albrecht, McIntyre’s Books in Pittsboro, North Carolina

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Maybe Someday by Colleen Hoover

My first Colleen Hoover read! I can definitely see where all the hype is with her novels. She does pull you in and stir up all the feels. It was entertaining, I thought the female lead character did not stand up for herself enough, and love triangles are always tricky. The most interesting part was learning how the hearing-impaired male lead was able to teach himself to play and write music. Can’t wait to read more of her books!

Maybe Someday by Colleen Hoover, (List Price: $16.99, Atria Books, 9781476753164, March 2014)

Reviewed by Krista Roach, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia

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The Poppy War by R. F. Kuang

This was a violent, disturbing, and brilliantly written fantasy. The characters are flawed, messy, and strong. The depictions of war are horrific and even more so as they’re based in historical reality. Kuang’s research is impeccable and informs her world-building in the best possible way. I can’t wait to see how this story unfolds in the next two books.

The Poppy War by R. F. Kuang, (List Price: $9.99, Harper Voyager, 9780063429147, April 2025)

Reviewed by Melissa Taylor, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia

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A Song to Drown Rivers by Ann Liang

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.

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

Reviewed by Courtney Ulrich Smith, Underbrush Books in Rogers, Arkansas

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No Funeral for Nazia by Taha Kehar

A powerful addition to the trope of a dying woman leaving instructions that will change lives. In this instance, Nazia is all too aware that her closest family and friends all hold very different stories about her. All the misunderstandings and lies fall apart on one fateful night, and no one will be the same again. All the varying perspectives are skillfully arranged and prove the power of stories.

No Funeral for Nazia by Taha Kehar, (List Price: $16.99, Neem Tree Press, 9781911107743, July 2024)

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

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Their Divine Fires by Wendy Chen

I really enjoyed this lush, mystical story that follows a family through China’s Cultural Revolution and generations after. Fans of Pachinko and Wandering Souls will love this one.

Their Divine Fires by Wendy Chen, (List Price: $28, Algonquin Books, 9781643755151, May 2024)

Reviewed by Jessica Nock, Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina

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Old School Indian by Aaron John Curtis

Be forewarned: begin reading Aaron John Curtis’s Old School Indian and you’ll quickly fall into a conspiratorial relationship with the protagonist Abe’s alter ego, Dominick Deer Woods, a poet, and a tell-it-like-it-is fella. Suffering from a life-threatening illness baffling his doctors, Abe goes home to the Ahkwesáhsne reservation to see his family and escape the isolation of his marriage. Dominick Deer Woods’s familiar tone when schooling the reader on the true history of Indigenous peoples in America is brutal, funny, and heart-wrenching. It’s an honor to witness Abe’s journey to remember and embrace his past while seeking clarity for the future. Old School Indian is gorgeously written and brutally beautiful.

Old School Indian by Aaron John Curtis, (List Price: $28, Zando – Hillman Grad Books, 9781638931454, May 2025)

Reviewed by Mitchell Kaplan, Books & Books in Coral Gables, Florida

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Run for the Hills by Kevin Wilson

In Kevin Wilson’s latest, we have a different kind of sibling drama–one in which the siblings in question don’t even know the others exist. That is, until they’re thrown together in a PT Cruiser on a road trip to ambush–er, confront–the father who abandoned them all. When Madeline “Mad” Hill, a farmer in rural Coalfield, Tennessee, meets her older half-brother Rube, a mystery writer, the quiet life she’s built for herself is turned on its head. Likewise, when the two of them leave Coalfield together to seek out their younger half-sister Pepper, they disrupt a propulsive college basketball season. And it doesn’t stop there. As they collect still more siblings, more lives are interrupted, more trajectories diverted. But as the siblings get to know each other and themselves, they find that maybe the thing that was missing from each of their lives was each other. Traveling west, this group of just-introduced siblings follows the path and pieces together the puzzle of their shared, absent father–a man who methodically tried on different identities and shed them as he sought his own happiness, forsaking theirs. With heart, humor, and empathy, Kevin Wilson explores the divide between the family we’re born with and the family we choose, and what happens when they intersect.

Run for the Hills by Kevin Wilson, (List Price: $28.99, Ecco, 9780063317512, May 2025)

Reviewed by Joyce McKinnon, Thank You Books in Birmingham, Alabama

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