The books Southern indie booksellers are recommending to readers everywhere!

Fiction

The Spy by James Phelan

This book is the first in a new series featuring Jed Walker, a former deep cover CIA operative. On Jed’s last sanctioned mission, he learns that one of the primary goals of the mission includes making sure Jed Walker does NOT survive it. He escapes only by faking his own death and then strikes out on his own to track down the forces that are trying to remove him. That final mission was to infiltrate a mysterious group known as Zodiac, who are plotting a series of devastating terrorist attacks meant to destabilize the current world order. The first of these attacks is set to go off in a little less than 4 days, and Jed will need to use all of his skills and resources if he is able to stop it and at the same time identify those who are working to have him removed. Not knowing who he can and cannot trust, Jed has to rely on his wiles and the network he had developed in his previous life as a CIA operative. The question is, can he trust these resources or is he setting himself up for betrayal? This first in a new series is a blistering page-turner and I can’t wait to see what comes next!

The Spy by James Phelan, (List Price: $16.99, Blackstone Publishing, 9781094193205, August 2024)

Reviewed by Brent Bunnell, Fiction Addiction in Greenville, South Carolina

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Silken Gazelles by Jokha Alharthi

This shattered my poor heart into a million pieces. The third Alharthi novel I’ve read and now, my favorite. Easily the most insightful novel on female friendship of the decade. Perfect for Ferrante and Rooney fans, for anyone who’s lost a friend and searched for her in every shadow of their life. A haunting and dazzling story.

Silken Gazelles by Jokha Alharthi, (List Price: $27, Catapult, 9781646222070, August 2024)

Reviewed by Emily Tarr, Thank You Books in Birmingham, Alabama

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Beautiful Dreamers by Minrose Gwin

With Beautiful Dreamers, Minrose Gwin firmly establishes herself among the masters of Southern literature. I treasured the experience of reading this heartbreaking yet perfectly crafted tale, with sensitively wrought characters straight out of a Tennessee Williams play and a picturesque Mississippi setting to boot.

Beautiful Dreamers by Minrose Gwin, (List Price: $28, Hub City Press, 9798885740364, August 2024)

Reviewed by Emily Liner, Friendly City Books in Columbus, Mississippi

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Haunted Ever After by Jen DeLuca

This is a great summer romance full of coffee, sunsets, and ghosts! Cassie is starting over in a small Florida town, independent of those she’d clung to in Orlando, and ready to make a new life for herself. What she was not prepared for was sharing her newly purchased home with a ghost. This book is full of different kinds of love and loss and I found it an oddly therapeutic read as much as a fun romance!

Haunted Ever After by Jen DeLuca, (List Price: $19, Berkley, 9780593641217, August 2024)

Reviewed by Jamie Southern, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

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House of Glass by Sarah Pekkanen

House of Glass is a terrifying story that you won’t be able to put down as Stella Hudson, a best interest lawyer for children during custody disputes, tries to learn as much as she can about nine-year-old Rose Barclay’s family and what really happened the day Rose’s nanny fell to her death from a third story window. The more she learns the more she questions the guilt or innocence of all of the family, including her 9-year-old client Rose. One thing is abundantly clear, Stella always has Rose’s best interest at heart and even if Rose has done something truly awful she, not her family, is the best chance for Rose to get meaningful help.

House of Glass by Sarah Pekkanen, (List Price: $29, St. Martin’s Press, 9781250283993, August 2024)

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

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I Don’t Care by Ágota Kristóf

What a freaky little book! A good intro to Kristof’s bleak humor and hyper-precise observations. Some stories have a charming O. Henry quality; others start weird and just get weirder. Recommended for anyone who needs to be shaken out of a mental torpor–like having icy water thrown onto your brain.

I Don’t Care by Ágota Kristóf, (List Price: $13.95, New Directions, 9780811235167, September 2024)

Reviewed by Kristen Iskandrian, Thank You Books in Birmingham, Alabama

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Empire of Storms by Sarah J. Maas

It’s been a long time since a book ending has made me cry, but Maas made me sob. The growth of Aelin and her court is phenomenal. Over the course of this series, I have seen Aelin grow from an injured, malnourished assassin to a strong, magical queen. The journey and backstories of these characters is mind blowing and will stick with me for a while after finishing the series.

Empire of Storms by Sarah J. Maas, (List Price: $19, Bloomsbury, 9781639731039, February 2023)

Reviewed by Melissa Gray, The Blytheville Book Company in Blytheville, Arkansas

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Headshot by Rita Bullwinkel

It would be easy to use boxing similes or metaphors to describe how good this book is (as many a blurb has already done), but to me Headshot is a stunning cubist novel, weaving in and out of the minds of eight young women in a boxing tournament in Reno. In prose as taut as their muscles, we are shown almost simultaneously the fighters’ pasts, presents, and futures, via subtle commentary on social expectations, childhood, and how to hit the person in front of you. Rita Bullwinkel has written a book on boxing as vital as Bryce Courtney or Norman Mailer, because it’s not (just) about the boxing, but about who and what and how to be. Headshot‘s fractured viewpoint reflects and refracts the characters making the fights themselves almost incidental, leaving a short, sharp novel of brutal beauty.

Headshot by Rita Bullwinkel, (List Price: $28, Viking, 9780593654101, March 2024)

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

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The Phoenix Keeper by S. A. MacLean

I really enjoyed this book! I read Sorcery and Small Magics earlier in the month, and there was a recommendation for this book in the back. Well, Orbit, that worked because I read both! As a lover of conservation and zoology, this seemed right up my alley, and it was! Aila was a very well-written and believable portrait of anxiety, to an almost frustrating degree. But the growth she experienced throughout, being able to change her perceptions and grow in her career and community, was wonderful to see. I especially loved how her relationship development was paralleled by the relationship of the courting phoenixes in her care. The cast felt fleshed out and believable, I loved her friendship with Tanya which felt a lot like my own relationship with my best friend, whom I’ve known since college. Her crush on Connor and her rivalry with Luc were great starting points for growth over the course of the story. While I could see the twist coming and knew what the climactic confrontation would be, I did not mind it! MacLean dropped lots of little foreshadowing bits that I also didn’t see coming, and it all felt fresh and satisfying. The world’s pettiest gripe was that she was pulling so many late nights at work, but no one ever mentioned how the animals at her apartment were being cared for! Who was feeding her carbuncle and fern lizards and other critters? Overall though, I’d highly recommend this if you love animals and awkward women growing into their best selves.

The Phoenix Keeper by S. A. MacLean, (List Price: $19.99, Orbit, 9780316573092, August 2024)

Reviewed by Amanda White, Writers Block Bookstore in Winter Park, Florida

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Pink Slime by Fernanda Trías

I’m a sucker for a good dystopian novel, and Pink Slime is up there among the best (it’s also subtler and more nuanced than the title would suggest). In an unnamed South American city, an environmental catastrophe is unfolding: the streets are alternately blanketed by an all-encompassing fog and buffeted by a red wind, the result of a deadly algae bloom that has poisoned the air, while the population is slowly dying. Caught in the past – between her former husband and her mother, between her memories and ugly reality, between the fog and the wind – the novel’s unnamed narrator is unable to move forward. The result is elegiac, beautiful and haunting.

Pink Slime by Fernanda Trías, (List Price: $24, Scribner, 9781668049778, July 2024)

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

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Hum by Helen Phillips

Hum is the kind of book that instantly changes your perception of your world. We are all acutely aware of the technology that surrounds us every day, the speed at which that technology is taking over, and the impact it’s having on our lives and our world. But Humputs the sort of magnifying glass onto it that really makes it feel uncanny. Like Orwell’s 1984. While doing all of that, though, Phillips manages to give us these vulnerable, complex characters that make us both root for humanity in a world of tech and pity them. You love them and feel exhausted by them. Because they are us. Hum is billed as speculative fiction… but is it really? Didn’t feel like it by the end.

Hum by Helen Phillips, (List Price: $27.99, Marysue Rucci Books, 9781668008836, August 2024)

Reviewed by Emily Lessig, The Violet Fox Bookshop in Virginia Beach, Virginia

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There Are Rivers in the Sky by Elif Shafak

Oh my. There Are Rivers in the Sky is just wonderful. Stretching from ancient Mesopotamia to modern day London, via the River Tigris and the River Thames, Elif Shafak has woven a beautiful, multi-layered tale, in which three seemingly disparate narratives are revealed to be intrinsically linked. Impeccably researched and gorgeously written, blending poetry and history, There Are Rivers in the Sky will stay with me for a long time.

There Are Rivers in the Sky by Elif Shafak, (List Price: $30, Knopf, 9780593801710, August 2024)

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

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Slow Dance by Rainbow Rowell

Slow Dance is a beautiful tale of humans being human. It’s funny and poignant and heartbreaking, sometimes all at once. It gave me the same emotions I get from watching old home movies…a weird mixture of joy and sadness all wrapped up in nostalgia and a clear, sharp feeling of how much things have changed while also nothing has really changed at all. If you like seeing the flaws of humanity and having faith in them anyway, this book is for you.

Slow Dance by Rainbow Rowell, (List Price: $28, William Morrow, 9780063380196, August 2024)

Reviewed by Victoria Herrmann, Cavalier House Books in Denham Springs, Louisiana

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The Wedding People by Alison Espach

A big-hearted, smart story about figuring out who you want to be when you grow up when you are already a grown-up! Phoebe, queen of the sad girls, arrives at a posh wedding by mistake to the irritation of the micromanaging bride, and things take off from there. A deep and charming story of family drama, wedding guest gossip, and how women can support each other in surprising ways.

The Wedding People by Alison Espach, (List Price: $28.99, Henry Holt and Co., 9781250899576, August 2024)

Reviewed by Susan Williams, M. Judson Booksellers in Greenville, South Carolina

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The Dead Cat Tail Assassins by P. Djèlí Clark

The Dead Cat Tail Assassins leads you astray, trips your feet out from under you, and then dunks your head underwater, all in the span of one night. This novella is an action-packed romp through a gloriously rich and well-defined world. Clark crafts a succinct and enthralling story that carries you through until the last page, offering a wide cast of vivid characters (mostly assassins) who capture your attention and your heart. On top of all of that, there lies a time paradox to challenge and twist your perception of the world itself.

The Dead Cat Tail Assassins by P. Djèlí Clark, (List Price: $20.99, Tordotcom, 9781250767042, August 2024)

Reviewed by Faith Skowronnek, Epilogue: Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

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