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Southern Book Prize Finalist 2026

Book Buzz: The Summer We Ran by Audrey Ingram

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Audrey Ingram, photo credit Joyly Hannahs“I worked on a gubernatorial campaign in high school and fell hard for the drama and passion that surround elections. Nostalgic for shows like The West Wing and Scandal, I began weaving together an unlikely love story between opposing candidates forced to confront their past…This novel is about the experiences that bind us together and the differences that tear us apart as two people navigate the tension between love and ambition…To be loved is to be seen but for Tess and Grant, the person they love sees the world very differently.

I believe that stories are bridges, a way to find humanity, connection, and even love with the people with whom we disagree. Our backgrounds, families, experiences, fears, and dreams all swirl together to shape who we become.”
  ― Audrey Ingram, Interview, Deborah Kalb Books

The Summer We Ran by Audrey Ingram

What booksellers are saying about The Summer We Ran

  • Audrey Ingram’s The Summer We Ran has set the bar high! It’s 1996. We’re all jamming out to Tracy Chapman’s “Give Me One Reason” or the entirety of Mariah Carey’s Daydream (or both). Working-class Tess and affluent Grant, two kids from opposite sides of the proverbial tracks, meet that summer and share a quick-ish but life-altering romance. 25 years later, while both are running for Governor of Virginia, secrets and truths from that summer rear their ugly heads, threatening both their private and political lives. And I. Was. CAPTIVATED! The whole time! The falling for your first love. The tragedy and tumult that ensues. The secrets buried so deep, even the ones who buried them forgot the impact. The having to come to terms with your past so you can be your best present and future. And to end so powerfully. This book packs a beautiful punch!
      ― Thomas Wallace, Reading Rock Books in Dickson, Tennessee | BUY

  • The Summer We Ran reveals the powerful secrets and choices of first loves that we forever carry with us. Filled with family secrets, unexpected losses, and the hope of what could have been, you’ll be hard pressed to put this down until all the lies of been uncovered. Ingram balances the nostalgia of the 90s plus the timely political stage to remind us that the secrets we keep can’t stay hidden forever.
      ― Jenny Gilroy, E. Shaver, Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia | BUY
  • In the summer of 1996, 17 year old Tess and her mom move onto a Virginia estate as the help. When a neighbor asks Tess to help with her flowers, Tess meets her son, Grant Alexander. They spend the next few months falling in love and talking about the future. However, Grant’s perfect family is only that way on the outside. His father is controlling and does not want him to waste his life on a girl from the wrong side of the tracks, even if she does have high ambitions. Now, it’s 25 years later and Tess and Grant are running for governor against each other. Secrets of that summer threaten to ruin them both, and there are unresolved feelings to sort out. I was in from page one. I loved the dual timelines and multiple POVs. It’s coming of age and rich boy/poor girl with twists. I honestly chose it for my Book of the Month because I usually love the publisher Zibby Books, and it has a gorgeous cover. I loved Tess. I can’t decide if I love Grant.
      ― Karmen Somers, Court Street Books in Florence, Alabama | BUY

About Audrey Ingram

Audrey Ingram is the author of The River Runs South and The Group Trip. She is a graduate of Middlebury College and Georgetown University Law Center, and she practiced law in Washington, D.C., for fifteen years. When not writing, she can be found diffing in her garden or hiking the Blue Ridge Mountains. An Alabama native, she currently lives in Virgina with her husband and three children.

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Hellions by Julia Elliott

Swampy Southern Gothic at its finest. These stories are lush, each driven by magical, wicked, wholly-alive characters so deeply rooted in their surroundings—or their desires—its difficult to see where person begins and wild ends. Discerning and empathetic, Elliott’s eye for the strange wonders that bring folklore and fairytale to life is unmatched.

Hellions by Julia Elliott, (List Price: $17.95, Tin House Books, 9781963108064, April 2025)

Reviewed by Miranda Sanchez, Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

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Happy Land by Dolen Perkins-Valdez

I loved the author’s previous book, so I was excited to read this new one! This dual timeline, multi-generational story explores the real Kingdom of Happy Land that was created by ex-slaves on the North Carolina / South Carolina border in the 1870s, and its lingering legacy in the present day. The citizens of Happy Land were able to build lives and eventually buy the land that gave them security and roots that had been denied them in the time of slavery. The land was stability, security, a legacy. They still struggled, but it was interesting to see how they made their way in difficult times. In the current day, the last remnants of Happy Land is under threat–can the family bond together and heal years of doubt and misunderstanding in time to save the heritage left to them? If you have a place that gives you peace and security, that you long for when you are away, you will understand this story.

Happy Land by Dolen Perkins-Valdez, (List Price: $29, Berkley, 9780593337721, April 2025)

Reviewed by Amy Dance, The Snail On the Wall in Huntsville, Alabama

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All These Ghosts by Silas House

House’s collection of poetry is full of beauty, of perfect lines that punch one in the gut and evoke profound feelings. His imagery immerses readers in the South, capturing every day life experiences, yet his poems are also memories of family love and sacrifice, of loss and grief. This collection inspires reflection on how we relate to the past, on how we grieve the loss of people and place, on how nature soothes us in troubled times, on how deeply we love. All These Ghosts is a remarkable gift to the world.

All These Ghosts by Silas House, (List Price: $22.95, Blair, 9781958888698, September 2025)

Reviewed by Lera Shawver, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

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All These Ghosts by Silas House

So glad that the former Kentucky Poet Laureate has a poetry collection at last! As with his fiction, House’s work resonates most deeply the closer he stays to his Appalachian roots. With poems like “Double Creek Girl” and “Lunchlady” he transports the reader to a hardscrabble start that was tough but also suffused with the joy of family ties and the beauty of nature. Poems about queerness, protest, timesickness and soup beans all exist side by side in this collection, as in life.

All These Ghosts by Silas House, (List Price: $22.95, Blair, 9781958888698, September 2025)

Reviewed by Sam Miller, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky

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Written in the Waters by Tara Roberts

A compelling tale of the power and pain of reclaiming history. Discovering the world of Black underwater archeologists determined to uncover and teach about slave ships forces Roberts to confront her family’s traumatic legacies. It also guides her to reclaim the strength and joy in her family history. A National Geographic explorer, her story reads well with fellow Explorer Rae Wynn-Grant’s Wild Life.

Written in the Waters by Tara Roberts, (List Price: $30, National Geographic, 9781426223754, January 2025)

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

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The New Book by Nikki Giovanni

I loved this collection, which runs the gamut of thoughts on politics, justice, early family life and upbringing, personal history, everyday small moments to her life as a professor at and pride for Virginia Tech. I marveled over many of the pieces here, as Giovanni’s emotional and philosophical depth shone through the words and images. I’ve loved her poetry for a long time, but the offerings in this book revealed more of her inner world as an older woman who had seen and experienced so much. She found joy and beauty in small pleasures, relationships, honest work, and words. I love how she signs many of her letters “Poetically, Nikki.” What a force of passion and wisdom she was. A great gift for the poetry collector!

The New Book by Nikki Giovanni, (List Price: $26, William Morrow, 9780063447523, September 2025)

Reviewed by Sarah Goldstein, Old Town Books in Alexandria, Virginia

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Food for Thought by Alton Brown

You don’t have to be familiar with any food programs to have great fun reading these essays. Funny, quirky, and honest, they are as much about life as food, or even food as life.

Food for Thought by Alton Brown, (List Price: $28.99, Gallery Books, 9781668064214, February 2025)

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

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The Incredibly Human Henson Blayze by Derrick Barnes

Being the star athlete and leading your team towards an undefeated season is a dream. But when one of your biggest fans is brutally attacked by the police, your focus shifts. You want to be there for him and not just under the Friday night lights. What you don’t expect is for the town to turn on you, treating you like you’re “just a football player” and nothing more. This story feels so real and so now, especially with the way athletes, young and old, are standing up against injustice and police brutality. Powerful story and an on-time read.

The Incredibly Human Henson Blayze by Derrick Barnes, (List Price: $17.99, Viking Books for Young Readers, 9781984836755, September 2025)

Reviewed by Morgan Gayles, The Book Worm Bookstore in Powder Springs, Georgia

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Witchkiller by Ashlee Latimer

Ashlee Latimer’s Witchkiller takes the story of Hansel & Gretel and completely flips it on its head with siblings who are increasingly at odds, witches who aren’t what they seem, and romance that keeps you on the edge of your seat. Gretel’s journey into learning who she is and who she wants to be is one that will resonate with young readers everywhere. Plus, it’s the perfect spooky season read!

Witchkiller by Ashlee Latimer, (List Price: $19.99, Scholastic Press, 9781546137689, October 2025)

Reviewed by Tori Finklea, Union Avenue Books in Knoxville, Tennessee

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Millie Fleur Saves the Night by Christy Mandin

The dark might seem scary, but the dark is full of wonderful, magical, important things, from night-blooming plants to nocturnal creatures. Millie Fleur La Fae loves them all, but her town of Garden Glen isn’t as keen as she is on inviting the dark into town. But, what might happen if we turn off our lanterns and join Millie Fleur in the dark of her moon garden? Millie Fleur Saves the Night is a gorgeously written and illustrated tale of embracing the wonders of the dark, from the moon to the stars, from raccoons to bats. A perfect book to pair with a full moon hike at a local park or preserve!

Millie Fleur Saves the Night by Christy Mandin, (List Price: $18.99, Orchard Books, 9781339023373, July 2025)

Reviewed by Mikey LaFave, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia

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King of Ashes by S. A. Cosby

What can’t S.A. Cosby write? When it comes to crime fiction loaded with action, Cosby is the man! Once again, Cosby takes the reader on a journey that one is not fully prepared for. The underlying storyline of the missing mother, along with the main storyline of the “no good” son, played in such a parallel that is easily missed if not paying close attention. King of Ashes begs the question of how far are you willing to go for the family you love? One thing that is different about this Cosby novel from the others is that we actually get a female character’s perspective. Cosby handles this point of view very well. I am sad that I have already finished this book, but I cannot wait to start putting it into customers’ hands!

King of Ashes by S. A. Cosby, (List Price: $28.99, Flatiron Books: Pine & Cedar, 9781250832061, June 2025)

Reviewed by Kayla Saxon, M. Judson Booksellers in Greenville, South Carolina

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The Summer We Ran by Audrey Ingram

I always enjoy Audrey Ingram’s books, and this one didn’t disappoint! This story weaves together love, ambition, and love — and how it can one day circle back to you, bringing up old secrets. This is the summer read you’re waiting for, with explorations of resilience, lost love, and beautifully flawed characters.

The Summer We Ran by Audrey Ingram, (List Price: $17.99, Zibby Publishing, 9798989923069, June 2025)

Reviewed by Leah Fallon, Birch Tree Bookstore in Leesburg, Virginia

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J vs. K by Kwame Alexander

These two are superstars in the Literary world. I had the privilege of meeting both of them and know they live and breathe getting kids to love reading and are such advocates of telling real stories for all. Their pretend jabbing is something that will leave you on the floor laughing. I know kids will love reading this because they will feel like they personally know these guys and they are on the inside joke.

J vs. K by Kwame Alexander, (List Price: $16.99, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, 9780316582681, May 2025)

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

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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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