The books Southern indie booksellers are recommending to readers everywhere!

Fiction

The Ten Year Affair by Erin Somers

Somers’s suburban realism is sharp enough to cut glass, with more humor on a single page than most entire novels could ever hope to contain. Here, the marriage plot is replaced by the adultery plot, so innovatively executed that it results in two equally gripping storylines. Not since “Choose Your Own Adventure” has the reader been able to have it both ways! At its heart, this is a book about desire, refreshingly unmoralizing and dauntless at uncovering its sad and funny peculiarities. Smart, sexy, and ferociously readable.

The Ten Year Affair by Erin Somers, (List Price: $28, Simon & Schuster, 9781668081440, October 2025)

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

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Bog Queen by Anna North

Anna North has written a tale with mysteries from a body found in the bog, believed to be 2,000 years old, and today’s struggle for the environment and development. Agnes is a young American forensic anthropologist who is hired to help identify a body believed to be buried in the bog from 196,1 and instead dates the remains as from the Druidic order of Celtic Europe, over 2,000 years old but preserved in the bog. Readers meet the young Druid as her mother has declared her, as she travels to Camulodunon and returns with gifts. She dies at a Solstice celebration and is buried in the bog. Readers will also know much of the life of Agnes as she spars with environmentalists and developers as she tries to save the bog. The mystery of the distant past and today’s conflict will haunt all who open these pages.

Bog Queen by Anna North, (List Price: $28.99, Bloomsbury Publishing, 9781635579666, October 2025)

Reviewed by Nancy Pierce, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

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A Mountain to the North, a Lake to the South, Paths to the West, a River to the East by László Krasznahorkai

A prayer, a spiritual exercise, a meditation on the nature of time, with long, winding sentences that evoke the ploddingness of existence and the labyrinthine endlessness of the search for meaning and enlightenment. I loved the way this one made my brain feel—an alert sort of hypnosis, reminded me of some Calvino and Borges. Especially memorable was the section on how papyrus for sacred scrolls was made!

A Mountain to the North, a Lake to the South, Paths to the West, a River to the East by László Krasznahorkai, (List Price: $15.95, New Directions, 9780811234474, November 2022)

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

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Herscht 07769 by László Krasznahorkai

An absolutely stunning achievement in fiction. In one meandering, cascading, kaleidoscopic sentence across four hundred pages, Krasznahorkai paints a compelling portrait of the banality, beauty, heartbreak, and absurdity of the current era. We follow Florian Herscht, a gentle giant who works at a graffiti removal service, as he embarks on a one-sided correspondence with German Chancellor Angela Merkel to warn her about the impending end of the world through a reversal of the Big Bang. Meanwhile, he is roped by his boss (a neo-Nazi and inveterate Bach fan) into hunting down a graffiti artist who has been defacing all of the monuments to Johann Sebastian Bach in the city with pictures of wolves. Then real wolves show up, and things go off the rails. Herscht 07769 is weird and sad and truly one of a kind. It invades your mind and spirals outward, demolishing your sense of self and embedding you in the hopelessness and powerlessness of modern life.

Herscht 07769 by László Krasznahorkai, (List Price: $18.95, New Directions, 9780811231534, September 2024)

Reviewed by Charlie Marks, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia

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What We Can Know by Ian McEwan

I’m gonna need a minute after this one. This book has me questioning every motive of every person I’ve ever met. Even if I haven’t met you, you’re included in my scrutiny if I’ve read about you, seen a picture of you or been made aware of your existence. I have more questions than answers right now. WHAT ACTUALLY CAN WE KNOW?!?!

What We Can Know by Ian McEwan, (List Price: $30, Knopf, 9780593804728, September 2025)

Reviewed by Amanda Kirkland, G. J. Ford Bookshop in St. Simons Island, Georgia

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The Volcano Daughters by Gina María Balibrera

This is a heartwrenching story that will bring you to tears. Graciela and Consuelo are two Indigenous sisters who were taken from their homes to serve under a dictator. When genocide strikes their community, they flee in an effort to make new lives for themselves. Both believing each other to be dead, fate brings them back together years later. This story feels like a fresh wound, and waiting for time to let it heal. This story explores the dark colonial past of a nation while still exploring hope, love, and the importance of family in the end.

The Volcano Daughters by Gina María Balibrera, (List Price: $28, Pantheon, 9780593317235, August 2025)

Reviewed by Gabriela Warner, Epilogue: Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

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Vampires at Sea by Lindsay Merbaum

What happens when your lover burns your immortal beloved’s art? You go on vacation to rekindle the flame (and hunt, obviously). Join Rebekah and Hugh as they navigate the emotional depths of a queer cruise and realize that they aren’t the only ones hunting. Merbaum’s storytelling perfectly captures the essence of ‘We’re on Vacation’ mode. Full of humor, glamour, and orgies, Vampires at Sea will expose the longevity of being an immortal in love.

Vampires at Sea by Lindsay Merbaum, (List Price: $18, Creature Publishing, 9781951971229, October 2025)

Reviewed by Jenny Gilroy, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia

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Overdue by Stephanie Perkins

Overdue is such a delight to read. Even with Ingrid’s crazy “we’re on a break” plan, I thought the characters were fun, fleshed out, and people I would want to be friends with. Her curmudgeon-y co-worker Macon is adorable – I love everything about him. Plenty of solid tropes in this one … friends to lovers, grumpy/sunshine, workplace romance. Slowburn and lots of good fun. I adored all of the library and bookstore references. A book about books!!!

Overdue by Stephanie Perkins, (List Price: $31, Saturday Books, 9781250313461, October 2025)

Reviewed by Christina Tabereaux, The Snail On the Wall in Huntsville, Alabama

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Ramón and Julieta by Alana Quintana Albertson

Fans of the high drama of telenovelas will find plenty to enjoy in this Romeo and Juliet retelling. Julieta is the head chef at her family’s fish taco restaurant in a heavily Latinx area near La Jolla. But when their landlord sells their entire block to the Taco King owners, everyone is infuriated, bit none more than Julieta and her mom. See, when Julieta’s mom was young and living in Mexico, she had her own fish taco stand, and she fell in love with a young Mexican American man. But he stole her recipe and took it back to the US to create his fast food empire, and she never saw him again. But, not knowing who he is, Julieta meets the man’s son during the Day of the Dead celebration and falls for him immediately. But are they doomed to fail?

Ramón and Julieta by Alana Quintana Albertson, (List Price: $16, Berkley, 9780593336229, February 2022)

Reviewed by Jennifer Jones, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

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In a Distant Valley by Shannon Bowring

I inhaled this book! I have loved all of the Dalton series books, and the end to the series did not disappoint. Spending time with the same characters and getting in the heads of the other minor characters from previous books gives you a giant hug that gets you through the day. Shannon has a way in her writing that makes you feel like you are a part of the story. She makes the place in Maine seem like its own character. I am going to miss Tru, Bev, Nate, Rose, and all the town folk who make this story so vivid. The line “With each mouthful of champagne, Trudy feels lighter and fuller at the same time” Is just an example of the beauty of her writing. There is so much more to love in her newest book, and I can’t wait to see what she does next! Amazing

In a Distant Valley by Shannon Bowring, (List Price: $19, Europa Editions, 9798889661405, October 2025)

Reviewed by Suzanne Lucey, Page 158 Books in Wake Forest, North Carolina

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Red City by Marie Lu

The balance Lu crafted between Sam and Ari is pure perfection, you could even say it’s alchemical. I should have prepared myself for how entranced by this world that I would be, but I was taken off guard in the best way. A fresh addition to fantasy that I can’t and won’t stop thinking about.

Red City by Marie Lu, (List Price: $29.99, Tor Books, 9781250885678, October 2025)

Reviewed by Sarah Hudson, M. Judson Booksellers in Greenville, South Carolina

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The Wayfinder by Adam Johnson

Epic in scope, epic in size and epic in ambition: The Wayfinder, by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Adam Johnson, is a masterful and immersive wonder of a novel, one that – despite its heft – I raced through in a matter of days. Set hundreds of years ago, at the height of the Tongan empire in the South Pacific, it focuses on two groups of people – Korero and her people, on the brink of starvation on their isolated island, and the family of the Tongan leader, engaged both in a feud amongst themselves and a wider war across the region – whose fates become intertwined across the seas. Blending myth, storytelling, and historical fact, and touching on themes of over-consumption, power, family, and individual autonomy, The Wayfinder is brilliantly realised and impeccably researched. It is a mark of Johnson’s skill that he makes a story so remote in time and geography feel wholly alive and relevant to today’s world. Highly recommended.

The Wayfinder by Adam Johnson, (List Price: $30, MCD, 9780374619572, October 2025)

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

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The Knives: A Criminal Book by Ed Brubaker

Brubaker and Phillips, the best crime/noir team in comics, return with another stellar graphic novel in their acclaimed Criminal series. Do you need to read the previous 11 (all great) books in this series first? No! Interweaving tales of crime, regret, and failure collide, pulp fiction-style, in gritty, personal, and shocking tales unfold, the most interesting of which parallels a bit of the Hollywood runaround Brubaker himself experienced as a creator pushing against the system. As always, The Best!

The Knives: A Criminal Book by Ed Brubaker, (List Price: $29.99, Image Comics, 9781534355590, September 2025)

Reviewed by Seth Tucker, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky

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Venetian Vespers by John Banville

Venetian Vespers reads like a suspenseful old Gothic novel by Daphne du Maurier. Highly atmospheric with a slow, taut build, deep character studies, and moody descriptions of 1899 Venice. Chilling at times, I just had to keep reading and could not put it down until I was finished!

Venetian Vespers by John Banville, (List Price: $32, Random House Large Print, 9798217170166, October 2025)

Reviewed by Josh Niesse, The Underground Bookshop LLC in Carrollton, Georgia

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Sad Tiger by Neige Sinno

I like the game of encoding into the mind of someone who is deliberately immoral, who knows he is destroying another person, yet who nonetheless keeps doing it…One giant trigger warning of a book, full of contradictions and contrasts, starting with the juxtaposition, of the beauty of the cover to the brutal content that follows, from the very first sentence. The devastating opening paragraphs, (we are plunged straight in with the first section heading, ‘Portrait Of My Rapist,’), hit hard, and Sinno then slides into literary criticism. But this is an analysis of Nabakov’s Lolita, with all the problems that invokes in a memoir about child abuse. How can a sufferer write so acutely, so incisively about such a book? Sinno’s analogies, metaphors and references are varied, erudite, relentless. The human soul is the dark side of the moon; abuse takes place “in another dimension…physically, the same as the one in which the rest of life happens, superimposed onto it like a duplicate of unbearable clarity.” William Blake, the Rwandan genocide, fairy tales: her voice ranges far and wide, but always returns to earth with the most basic, raw, fundamental questions – why did it happen? How do I live now? How do they? Unreliable narrators run through the text, from Humbert Humbert to her step-father rapist, and even, she admits forty pages in, when we are already caught in her emotional web, Sinno herself.I would never have thought a book on incestuous rape could be so readable, but Sinno’s art is to take a topic and view it from every possible viewpoint; literature, cinema, through the eyes of her mother, the reader, even the perpetrator himself, in a hypnotic kaleidoscope that belies her own words: “I want {this book} to exist, but I hope it doesn’t have too many readers.”Too late for that, both sadly and fortunately.

Sad Tiger by Neige Sinno, (List Price: $22.95, Seven Stories Press, 9781644214671, April 2025)

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

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