The books Southern indie booksellers are recommending to readers everywhere!

Historical

The Four Queens of Crime by Rosanne Limoncelli

A love letter to cozy mysteries and the Golden Age writers, Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers, Margery Allingham, and Ngaio Marsh. The four women take on a mystery to prove their mettle. The result is a good puzzle and perhaps will lead to a renewed interest in their own novels.

The Four Queens of Crime by Rosanne Limoncelli, (List Price: $29.99, Crooked Lane Books, 9798892420600, March 2025)

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

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The Story She Left Behind by Patti Callahan Henry

Clara Harrington is summoned to England to retrieve the dictionary of her mother’s lost language. The dictionary disappeared, along with her mother, many years ago. Clara’s journey is full of more questions than answers, but she refuses to leave until she uncovers the truth. This is an enchanting novel inspired by a true literary mystery.

The Story She Left Behind by Patti Callahan Henry, (List Price: $29.99, Atria Books, 9781668011874, March 2025)

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

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A Love Song for Ricki Wilde by Tia Williams

This book is absolutely delightful. I had some great laugh-out-loud moments while reading. Tia Williams is becoming one of my favorite authors by far!

A Love Song for Ricki Wilde by Tia Williams, (List Price: $17.99, Grand Central Publishing, 9781538726716, February 2025)

Reviewed by Anastasia Williams, The Bottom in Knoxville, Tennessee

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Harlem Rhapsody by Victoria Christopher Murray

Murray’s novel of the life of editor Jessie Redmon Fauset takes readers deep into the world of the Harlem Renaissance. The story focuses largely on Fauset’s relationship with W. E. B. DuBois. The novel features cameos by many familiar writers of the time, including Countee Cullen, Langston Hughes, and Nella Larsen. Recommended for historical fiction fans and anyone seeking a deeper understanding of the Harlem Renaissance literary scene.

Harlem Rhapsody by Victoria Christopher Murray, (List Price: $29, Berkley, 9780593638484, February 2025)

Reviewed by Amanda Grell, Pearl’s Books in Fayetteville, Arkansas

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The Champagne Letters by Kate MacIntosh

Natalie is trying to pick up the pieces after she is blindsided by a divorce, and Barbe-Nicole is trying to keep her family’s wine-making business afloat after her husband’s untimely death. Both women face challenges as they navigate new lives, but each one’s story takes place in a different time. Natalie takes off for Paris to heal and explore in today’s time, while Barbe-Nicole is the famed Madame Clicquot struggling to produce and sell champagne during the 1800s. Told in alternating time periods, this story will appeal to anyone who believes in second chances, the timeless power of choice, and the healing properties of a lovely glass of wine.

The Champagne Letters by Kate MacIntosh, (List Price: $28.99, Gallery Books, 9781668061886, December 2024)

Reviewed by Mary Jane Michels, Fiction Addiction in Greenville, South Carolina

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The Rest Is Memory by Lily Tuck

It’s hard to think about Holocaust literature without the words of Adorno in my head–“to write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric”– but the discussion is too important, and the correctives too far-ranging. I physically ached while reading this book, and did, finally, cry–while reading Tuck’s acknowledgments. The care she has taken here to give voice to a young Catholic girl who would otherwise remain a number is evident both from the considerable research and the unflinching tone. The story that emerges feels piercingly, viscerally true, and alive. I won’t soon forget Czeslawa and her very real, youthful humanity, a girl in full bloom, afraid of her father, curious about boys, comforted by stories and prayer and the vastness of her imagination before it was starved to death. The insights into Poland’s history before and during the war, as well as the glimpses into the lives of various (real) notorious figures, create a haunting scaffolding for Czeslawa’s story. A heartbreaking novel whose integrity can’t be impugned.

The Rest Is Memory by Lily Tuck, (List Price: $24.99, Liveright, 9781324095729, December 2024)

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

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When the Jessamine Grows by Donna Everhart

Historical fiction at its absolute best! Everhart’s carefully crafted female protagonist shows strength, courage, and resolve in the face of the many cruelties of the Civil War. Joetta McBride is not your usual demure Southern Belle. She refuses to take sides in a conflict she feels has nothing to do with her family, while her oldest son is eager to fight for the Southern cause. Once her son flees to fight for the Confederacy, Joetta’s husband also gets caught up in the fight while searching for their son, leaving Joetta to care for the farm and remaining family on her own. Facing isolation and destruction from the townspeople for offering water to a Union soldier, Joetta deals with grief, starvation, and ruin with grace and grit. Even though she could face dire consequences, she still shows compassion to a young Union soldier who is on the verge of death. Everhart has created a new hero with the unflinching, steadfast, and ever-courageous Joetta McBride!

When the Jessamine Grows by Donna Everhart, (List Price: $17.95, Kensington, 9781496740700, January 2024)

Reviewed by Sharon Davis, Book Bound Bookstore in Blairsville, Georgia

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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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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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When the Jessamine Grows by Donna Everhart

Lovers of historical fiction will devour this Civil War-era story that takes place in North Carolina. When everyone is taking sides in the war, Joetta McBride and her husband choose to stay neutral, but when their oldest son leaves against their wishes to join the Confederacy, they are forced to get involved. Joetta is left to run their farm and house while Ennis goes off to hopefully find and bring back their 15-year-old son. Readers will love Joetta’s strong convictions and determination to keep things afloat in the midst of war and upheaval. A great read!

When the Jessamine Grows by Donna Everhart, (List Price: $17.95, Kensington, 9781496740700, January 2024)

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

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When the Jessamine Grows by Donna Everhart

Step back in time to the Civil War with a simple southern-loving family on a farm that is away from all the fray that surrounds the heated discussions of the time. We always hear of people being on one side or the other. This story is that of a mother, Joetta, who struggles with letting her husband and son go off to war. Though she is not in favor of slavery, she wants to stay out of the hullabaloo. You always think that you know what you would do in certain circumstances. But living through it, you never know. Especially when it comes to your family. With her husband and son gone, she is left to carry on the farm and loses contact with her family. You won’t want to put this book down.

When the Jessamine Grows by Donna Everhart, (List Price: $17.95, Kensington, 9781496740700, January 2024)

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

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The Empusium by Olga Tokarczuk

This was my first Olga Tokarczuk, and I’m still not sure what to make of it: a slow, coiling narrative set in the early 1900s follows a group of men thrown together in a sanitarium to cure their tuberculosis. At turns creepy (the gothic of the subtitle refers to mysterious disappearances, and talking walls, which are glossed over for most of the book), and philosophical (the characters spend their time getting high on a mysterious drink and setting the world to rights, mainly at the expense of women), there’s plenty to get your teeth into, and even a twist at the end. Intriguing.

The Empusium by Olga Tokarczuk, (List Price: $30, Riverhead Books, 9780593712948, October 2024)

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

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The Crescent Moon Tearoom by Stacy Sivinski

I loved this sweet cozy fantasy! It had me from the first page with the tantalizing descriptions of the smells and tastes of the tearoom. I was totally invested in the lives of the three sisters. This is the perfect book to distract you from real life!

The Crescent Moon Tearoom by Stacy Sivinski, (List Price: $18.99, Atria Books, 9781668058398, October 2024)

Reviewed by Kelley Dykes, Main Street Reads in Summerville, South Carolina

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Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Lord by Celeste Connally

Petra has lost her beloved fiancé to a terrible accident and has declared that she won’t marry. This is not an acceptable answer in Regency era London. While Petra is defending her decision, a couple of women of her acquaintance die under mysterious circumstances. Petra is determined to get to the bottom of things with help from her maid Annie and other members of the Ton. She feels she is being successful when one of her sources ends up dead….

Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Lord by Celeste Connally, (List Price: $18, Minotaur Books, 9781250867575, September 2024)

Reviewed by Monie Henderson, Square Books in Oxford, Mississippi

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