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The Southern Bookseller Review 7/22/25

The Southern Bookseller Review Newsletter for the week of July 22, 2025

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The week of July 22, 2025

Meet Treat Yo Shelf Books!

“I absolutely adore seeing faces light up because of something they see in my store. It makes everything worth it.”― Ashley Watroba, Treat Yo Shelf Books in Mountain Home, Arkansas

Treat Yo Shelf Books in Mountain Home, AR opened in January 2023 inside a charming building from the 1930s. The store prioritizes being a welcoming sanctuary for all, more than just a place to buy books. Owner Ashley Watroba said the best part of being a booksellers is, “The people. I absolutely adore seeing faces light up because of something they see in my store. It makes everything worth it.”

One of Watroba’s favorite store events is “Tales & Tails,” where anyone can come to read to adoptable animals, and the adoption fee is lowered with the purchase of a book. The store has gotten at least one animal adopted with each event, and Watroba doesn’t plan to stop until every fur baby has a home. Treat Yo Shelf also partners with a local coffeehouse and brewery to do a monthly Boozy Book Fair with a different theme each time. They also partner with the Baxter County Literacy Foundation. 

Watroba loves to handsell The House of Ash and Bone by Joel A. Sutherland. Watroba said, “It was such an amazing and terrifying book to read, and I have to tell everyone about it. Read this book!”

You can follow Treat Yo Shelf at @treatyoshelfbooksllc and visit their website at www.treatyoshelfbooks.com.



Read This Now | Read This Next | Book Buzz | The Bookseller Directory




Read This Now!

Recommended by Southern indies…

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Boustany by Sami Tamimi
Ten Speed Press / July 2025


More Reviews from Fountain Bookstore

Boustany has been on my radar for a while now, and I am happy to report it is everything you could want and more! Filled with luscious recipes that are rich in tradition yet infused with new ideas that bring something fresh, the pantry section alone had me feeling like I had ascended into spice and pickled heaven. The history and culture that’s embedded in each dish add something so special and meaningful that it brings this book to a new level, truly something for everyone!

Reviewed by Grace Sullivan, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia

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Daikon by Samuel Hawley
Avid Reader Press / July 2025


More Reviews from Underground Books

Daikon is thrilling! It kept me riveted to the very end. The fictional premise is “What if Japan got its hands on one U.S.-made atomic bomb and had to decide whether to use it or not against America?” Set against the backdrop of the U.S. bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the Japanese players struggle with moral, ethical, and very personal choices about the bomb and the crushing pressure of a ticking deadline. Military leaders with questionable agendas, a Korean soldier, the civilian physicist educated in the U.S. and his wife round out the robust cast of characters. Daikon, the code name for the radish-shaped bomb, is a deadly character all its own. A superb debut novel that took the South Korean author 27 years to complete.

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



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Angel Down by Daniel Kraus
Atria Books / July 2025


More Reviews from Friendly City Books

Daniel. Dan. My guy – what’re you DOING to me?? Up til 2:00 a.m. again, breathless and weeping, because I could. not. stop. reading!! How do I even talk about this book coherently? *deep breath* Okay. Angel Down. Immediately, page one, you’re plunged into a fever dream of WW1 front line trenches – bullets whizzing too close, the unearthly whistle and crash of artillery fire, bodies and mud and death. Then comes the shriek – an unending howl driving the soldiers mad. Five are ordered to find the cause, and they do – but it’s nothing they could have ever predicted. An angel is down. What follows is a gut-spilling, reality-warping, soul-searing clash with divinity that will bring you to your knees. It’s gonna take me days, probably weeks, to process this incredible book. Angel Down is set during WW1, but the questions it asks are exactly what we’re asking today: how do we break the systems of war that prop up the world? Do individual lives still have meaning when destruction and violence seem unstoppable? What do we do when confronted with the true, untameable, terrifying divine? Make time to read this book in one sitting, and don’t forget the tissues. And if, at the end, you find yourself devastated and elated beyond words….me too, friend. Me too.

Reviewed by Rachel Derise, Friendly City Books in Columbus, Mississippi


Bookseller Buzz

Flashlight by Susan Choi

The premise, of a family in Japan, draws on my experience directly, because I spent time in Japan with my family when I was a child. But what prompted the novel are less specific memories themselves than the hazy, fragmentary quality of my memories from that time, the extent to which they’re partial and distorted. My memories from that time feel like dreams, and their atmosphere is sometimes quite ominous. Eventually a storyline that departs pretty dramatically from any event of my life came along to suit that weird, ominous tone.

― Susan Choi, Interview, Lithub

Flashlight by Susan Choi

  • An absolutely engrossing novel that delves deeply into identity, family, nationality, illness, and suffering. It is hard to describe the totality of the characters, since their essence is so shaped by what is done to them, as well as their perception what they have seen. When a displaced family is left adrift by a disappearance, their precarious and distrustful lives unravel in troubling and unexpected directions. This is a hard book to summarize…it goes it many different directions. There are mysteries solved, and threads that meander away. Susan Choi writing is as intricate as the story, but also wry and unsettling.
      ― Andrea Ginsky, Bookstore Number 1 LLC in Sarasota, Florida | BUY

  • In Flashlight, Choi creates a family so perfect in its flaws, a hit in spite of all the misses, and lets the world, in all its gory glory, try to separate these seemingly debilitated magnets. Sometimes love’s slow match reaches the gunpowder just after the cannon sinks beneath the waves or compassions’ cannonball hits the target decades after the castle walls have become a tourist’s picnic backdrop. In the vein of Crossroads or The Bee Sting, each member of the family gets their chance to be both relatable and objectionable, all in the midst of a larger than life, and in this case semi-global, tragedy.
    ― Ian McCord, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia | BUY

  • A multi-faceted read based in a mystery. Louisa is a young girl who is out walking with her father, Serk, on the coast of Japan one evening. The next morning, Louisa’s body is found, barely alive, but her father is missing. What follows in the progression of this novel is an unraveling of each character’s history as the reader slowly pieces together this mystery using the breadcrumbs that Choi drops along the way.
    ― Sarah Goldstein, Old Town Books in Alexandria, Virginia | BUY

  • Haunting multigenerational tale deftly told. Choi shines a light (pun intended) on a gruesome topic, handling it with unflinching honesty and heart. Her characters move through time and trauma in a compelling way; urging us to follow along despite the difficult topics she explores: loss, alienation, and the search for connection. *Deliberately vague about the story to avoid giving away plot twists.
    ― Liz Feeney, E. Shaver, Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia | BUY

Susan Choi is the author of Trust Exercise, which received the National Book Award for fiction, as well as the novels The Foreign Student, American Woman, A Person of Interest, and My Education. She is a recipient of the Asian-American Literary Award for fiction, the PEN/W. G. Sebald Award, a Lambda Literary award, the Sunday Times Audible Short Story Award, and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation. She teaches in the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University and lives in Brooklyn, New York

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Mayra by Nicky Gonzalez
Random House / July 2025


More Reviews from Tombolo Books

What’s scarier: a haunted house in the Everglades or a toxic female friendship? Por que no los dos? Lush, eerie, and intense, Mayra is Shirley Jackson by way of I-95. I loved Gonzalez’s writing, which manages to be funny and wry while also pressing on the tender bruises of adolescence and insecurity. More Florida horror by women, please!

Reviewed by Rachel Knox, Tombolo Books in St Petersburg, Florida

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Lawless by Leah Litman
Atria / One Signal Publishers / May 2025


More Reviews from Bookmiser

Leah Littman of Crooked Media takes the post-Warren Supreme Court and explains just exactly how they run on "conservative grievance, fringe theories, and bad vibes." Using pop culture analogies at times, Littman compares the court to Mean Girls, Game of Thrones, and Arrested Development. If you’re looking for a book that clearly states exactly how we got to where we are today, this is absolutely the book for you.

Reviewed by Jennifer Jones, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

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The Great Misfortune of Stella Sedgwick by S. Isabelle
Isabelle, S. / July 2025


More Reviews from Parnassus Books

Stella Sedgwick is a young black woman in late 19th-century England. She wants to be a writer and an independent woman. When a surprise inheritance brings her into London society, she resurrects her mother’s newspaper advice column anonymously in this fun YA historical romance.

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



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Witchycakes #1: Sweet Magic by Kara LaReau, Ariane Moreira (Illus.)
Random House Books for Young Readers / August 2025


More Reviews from E. Shaver Bookseller

Grab your beach cruiser and join Blue as they make the daily bakery deliveries around the community. Along the way they’ll create a little havoc with their untamed magic abilities, but is always there to help clean up the remnants of the spells. Perfect for young witches-to-be who like cooking, helping their community, and want to start their own coven.

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

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Raging Clouds by Yudori
Fantagraphics / July 2025


More Reviews from Bookmarks

A BRILLIANT DEBUT set in 16th-century Netherlands that will stick with you. Honestly, this one really made me rage. It’s a reminder of the injustice women have encountered in time (and to this day). What resonated the most is how the author captures the way in which women are pitted against one another. But, when we come together — like this unlikely pair — we soar. We experience a kind of freedom. Heartbreaking and hopeful.

Reviewed by Morgan DePerno, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina


Decide for Yourself

Books that appear on PEN America’s list of challenged books.

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Fates and Furies by Lauren Groff
Riverhead Books / September 2016


More Reviews from Avid Bookshop

My skin feels like it’s buzzing and purring after having finished this book. Groff’s writing is very often quite breathtaking at the sentence level, so much so that I was occasionally forgetting to notice how masterfully she was setting up an intricate and many-layered plot. Lotto, Mathilde, and the other characters jump off the page so vividly, it’s hard for me to imagine they aren’t really out there, living their fierce and complicated lives. Five stars.

Reviewed by Janet Geddis, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia


Southern Bestsellers

What’s popular this week with Southern Readers.

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Funny Story by Emily Henry
Berkley / February 2025


More Reviews from Copperfish Books

Emily Henry just GETS IT. She has the perfect recipe for a book that has just the right amount of humor, romance, and the kind of real-life hurdles that hit close to home. What sets this book apart are the characters, who are grappling with life’s ups and downs in a way that feels incredibly real. It’s the "just one more chapter" book that you’ll actually stay awake until 1 AM to finish. And hey, maybe I’m speaking from personal experience.

Reviewed by Janisie Rodriguez, Copperfish Books in Punta Gorda, Florida

[ See the full list ]


Parting Thought

“You’re never going to kill storytelling because it’s built in the human plan. We come with it.”
— Margaret Atwood

Publisher: The Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance / siba@sibaweb.com
Editor: Nicki Leone / nicki@sibaweb.com
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