The books Southern indie booksellers are recommending to readers everywhere!

Fiction

Sipsworth by Simon Van Booy

“On her eightieth birthday, Helen spent the day moving things in the kitchen cupboard. Three years pass with nothing to fill their pockets. Then, early one morning, something happens.” Helen Cartwright is waiting to die. Her husband and son have passed, and she is ready to go. She has returned to her childhood town in an English village and she has been living a quiet life. This love story begins with her finding a mouse in her house and as the love grows with the mouse Sipsworth, so does Helen’s contacts. This is such a loving, moving story told with such skill and heart. This reviewer can’t wait to reread this tiny tale perhaps many times. Anyone who reads it will never look at a mouse or an octogenarian the same way.

Sipsworth by Simon Van Booy, (List Price: $26.95, David R. Godine, Publisher, 9781567927948, May 2024)

Reviewed by Nancy Pierce, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

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The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley

I am a former diplomat who worked on immigration to the U.S. for years, and this book spoke to me on so many levels. I haven’t been so moved by a fantasy novel since The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by VE Schwab, maybe even Exit West by Mohsin Hamid, both of which I will use as a basis of comparison while handselling the hell out of this book. The premise is not simple, but this world is incredibly easy to enter. The UK government of the near future has discovered time travel and is testing its impact on the bodies and minds of five “expats,” rescued from certain deaths in large-scale calamities of history. Each expat is assigned a “bridge,” a civil servant who will help them acclimatize to modernity (while reporting on their every move to the Ministry). At its heart, this novel is an often hilarious romance between one bridge and her expat. But the depth of world-building around their relationship, the back stories of each character, and the tremendous emotion on display through Ms. Bradley’s exquisite way with words make this anything but your run-of-the-mill love story. Come for the Bond-like moments of adventure. Stay for the pearls of wisdom Ms. Bradley drops on how our futures are truly built, one sealed door of possibility, hope, and forgiveness at a time.

The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley, (List Price: $28.99, Avid Reader Press / Simon & Schuster, 9781668045145, May 2024)

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

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Swiped by L.M. Chilton

What a fun read! It is a good thing I had a long car ride and nothing else to do because I couldn’t put it down. Swiped is a delightful rom-com murder mystery. Romance may be stretching it a little as the “Rom” part was Gwen trying to get over a breakup by swiping right on a dating app to hook up with six different dates, none of whom rated a second date. Comedy, definitely, as the dialogue was smart and witty, and definitely a murder mystery as Gwen’s dates were being murdered one by one and she soon became the prime suspect. I thought I had this one figured out at least three different times, but boy was I wrong.

Swiped by L.M. Chilton, (List Price: $27.99, Gallery/Scout Press, 9781668045701, May 2024)

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

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Exhibit by R. O. Kwon

Sexy sentences, startling images, and complicated and unexpected characters flesh out Kwon’s impressionistic peek inside the art world and the people who inhabit it. I kept finding myself picking up this book and flipping back to sections, re-reading them, and feeling like they were perfect little arias. Two women, with different art forms, brush up against one another at just the right time and form something larger than the sum of their parts. Not for those who need fast-paced, plot heavy action – but this book 100% rewards the lover of graceful language and intricate interiority. Loved, loved, loved.

Exhibit by R. O. Kwon, (List Price: $28, Riverhead Books, 9780593190029, May 2024)

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

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Crow Talk by Eileen Garvin

I read Crow Talk very slowly not wanting the words to ever end. Between the beauty of Beauty Bay and the cozy caretaker cottage and the facts about birds and especially crows, the story of Frankie was a touching tale of nature and love. Frankie has suffered a set back with her dissertation on spotted owls and sadly doesn’t know what to do next except escape to her family’s old summer home on the bay. Every page glows with the breathtaking view of the natural world and when Frankie rescues a young crow, the healing begins for Frankie and the neighbor Anne with her son Aiden. Besides the wonder of nature, this story dwells on family and healing and love and will be remembered by all who luckily read these words.

Crow Talk by Eileen Garvin, (List Price: $28, Dutton, 9780593473887, April 2024)

Reviewed by Nancy Pierce, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

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The Z Word by Lindsay King-Miller

King-Miller’s The Z Word captures the same cackling, DIY, gory energy of the first time I ever watched Return of the Living Dead. Set during the sweltering energy of small-town, Southwestern Pride, Wendy finds herself experiencing the start of the zombie apocalypse in the midst of Pride festivities. There’s found family, betrayal, and evil corporations, all centered around the fun bonding activity of hitting zombies with your car.

The Z Word by Lindsay King-Miller, (List Price: $16.99, Quirk Books, 9781683694076, May 2024)

Reviewed by Mikey LaFave, Avid Bookshop in Savannah, Georgia

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The Band by Christine Ma-Kellams

Anyone who has an idol has dreamed of finding them, alone and down on their luck, and becoming the only person they can trust. In many books this is the start of a daydream romance. In The Band, it is the start of dizzying, darkly humorous nightmare. Ma-Kellams’ fiction debut is an incisive examination of stardom, fandom, and parasocial relationships, both in K-pop and in ways applicable to a wide array of cultural phenomena, and it goes deeper than the hand-wringing to be found on social media. This book lays bare what drives real people to adore, and ultimately strive to possess, the projected “selves” of celebrities: dissatisfaction with reality that stems from loneliness, unhappiness, and the desire to adore and be adored at a level impossible to truly achieve. Our elusive narrator does not step fully into the frame until chapter seven, but she relates the interlocking histories of two Kpop groups with intimate knowledge that suggests either that she is omniscient or practicing the stan’s art of investigating and projecting what goes on behind the scenes of fame. As brutally honest–or at least blunt–as she can be, the narrator hardly touches on the most emotionally charged moments of her life, the roots of her own discontent. She breezes past them with (feigned?) nonchalance or elides them with footnotes and hints about her “next novel.” She appears to bare all while dodging true vulnerability–and isn’t that the point? She, like so many, is standing on the precipice of relinquishing herself to fantasy. Ma-Kellams’ prose is arch and clever, studded with research and footnotes, but it never feels overdone or gimmicky. The style is true to the novel’s heart. Her turns of phrase alternately made me laugh out loud and marvel at the depth of insight in a handful of words. While white American celebrities get special treatment, Korean celebrities in LA do not: “If said talent hails from some other part of the world, on the other hand, everyone gets treated as an equal, meaning, a nobody. The opposite of a somebody is an egalitarian.” It is ultimately this book’s compassion that allows its cultural critique to land. We see real sadness and human need in our narrator and her wayward celebrity houseguest. We see the real human cost of the system that entices and entraps idols and their idolators. I devoured this book in a few sittings, but I will be thinking about it for much, much longer.

The Band by Christine Ma-Kellams, (List Price: $27, Atria Books, 9781668018378, April 2024)

Reviewed by Luca Rhatigan, Epilogue: Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

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Crow Talk by Eileen Garvin

A beloved family lake house, a lonely ornithologist, and a heartbroken mother trying to communicate with her young son come together in this beautiful story of family, love, and overcoming grief. Eileen Garvin does such a solid job weaving characters’ stories as they grow together. Just as in her previous novel, the reader gets a cohesive, heartwarming story while Garvin shows how nature helps heal our hearts. A delightful, fulfilling read!

Crow Talk by Eileen Garvin, (List Price: $28, Dutton, 9780593473887, April 2024)

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

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Rainbow Black by Maggie Thrash

I know it’s still early in the year, but Rainbow Black is going to be on my Top Ten of 2024! Lacey is only thirteen when the Satanic Panic sweeps through her life, leaving her family in shambles. Despite the legal firestorms, the conniving therapists, and the loss of her entire support system, Lacey finds a way to survive, and years later, she’s living in Canada as Jo, a smart, capable lawyer with more secrets than she can stand. But America hasn’t forgotten her, and soon she’s the target of another witch hunt, but this time for a crime she did commit. This book will leave you outraged and weary of a legal system that abuses its power for nothing more than public appeasement. Five rainbow-colored stars for this one!

Rainbow Black by Maggie Thrash, (List Price: $18.99, Harper Perennial, 9780063286870, 2024-03-19)

Reviewed by Kate Towery, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia

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Spotlight On: Anita de Monte Laughs Last by Xochitl Gonzalez

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Xochitl Gonzalez, photo by Mayra Castillo

While this is absolutely a work of fiction, it comes from a deeply personal place to me. In some ways, this book has been percolating inside me since my own grandparents moved me from our walk-up in Brooklyn to College Hill nearly thirty years ago.

It was still, in those days, rare to be a Latina at Brown. I was part of a very small community of minority students that sat inside this larger school: a position that came with the comforts of an intimate collective, but all the challenges of feeling like a visitor to a dominant culture.

― Xochitl Gonzalez, Letter from the author

Anita de Monte Laughs Last by Xochitl Gonzalez

What booksellers are saying about Anita de Monte Laughs Last

  • An imaginative, inventive and interesting novel. Imaginative in putting together a historic event with present day significance, inventive in it’s use of magical realism, and interesting in its views on women in the arts, and privileged and unprivileged students in academia.
      ― Andrea Ginsky, Bookstore Number 1 LLC in Sarasota, Florida | BUY

  • Two days after I finished listening to this book, headlines broke that artist Carl Andre had died. Based on the life and work of Ana Mendieta and her husband, Carl Andrea, Gonzalez captures the ghostly rage of a woman murdered by her jealous husband while grounding the reader with a contemporary narrative that was extremely compelling.
      ― Adah Fitzgerald, Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina | BUY

  • Wow, wow, wow. This one has fangs. Anita is pure fire. Add Xoxhitl to your list of authors to watch, if you haven’t already. This is a vibrant revenge/coming-of-age story with dual timelines, mirrored situations, and magical elements. It explores the art world, and who is seen and why. A love song to minority women, to up and coming artists, and to anyone that wants to be seen and heard for who they are, not who they know.
      ― Krista Roach, E. Shaver, bookseller in Savannah, Georgia | BUY
  • A deeply moving book of art, race, feminism and power in relationships. Raquel is a latina woman at Brown, when she decides to base her senior thesis on famous minimalist artist, Jack Martin, she uncovers his artist wife, Anita De Monte. Martin was accused of murdering Anita and successfully erased both her and her art from history after he was acquitted. A gripping story told from the multiple perspectives of Anita, Jack and Raquel.
      ― Kathy Clemmons, Sundog Books in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida | BUY

About Xochitl Gonzalez

Xochitl Gonzalez is the New York Times bestselling author of Olga Dies Dreaming. Named a Best Book of 2022 by The New York Times, TIMEKirkusWashington Post, and NPROlga Dies Dreaming was the winner of the Brooklyn Public Library Book Prize in Fiction and the New York City Book Award. Gonzalez is a 2021 MFA graduate from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. Her nonfiction work has been published in Elle DecorAllure, VogueReal Simple, and The Cut. Her commentary writing for The Atlantic was recognized as a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. A native Brooklynite and proud public school graduate, Gonzalez holds a BA from Brown University and lives in her hometown of Brooklyn with her dog, Hectah Lavoe.

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A Court of Mist and Fury by Sarah J. Maas

Can I just live in this book please? A perfect book boyfriend, lovely world-building, just the right amount of spice….what more can we ask for? There is a reason it’s the most beloved book in the fantasy realm.

A Court of Mist and Fury by Sarah J. Maas, (List Price: $19, Bloomsbury Publishing, 9781635575583, June 2020)

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

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The Husbands by Holly Gramazio

A wonderful romp of a debut novel. Lauren’s search for “the right man” becomes hilarious drama when she discovers her attic has the magical ability to spit out one “husband” after another for her to “try on.” She sends one man after another back up the attic stairs, hoping the next one will be that “perfect man.” Every page is both fun and funny and the suspense for how she’ll finalize things will keep you reading.

The Husbands by Holly Gramazio, (List Price: $29, Doubleday, 9780385550611, April 2024)

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

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How to End a Love Story by Yulin Kuang

It’s actually unfair how good this book is. Kuang seamlessly weaves together grief, trauma, and hope in a way that cracked me open. Grant and Helen are linked by a horrific tragedy, and eventually wind up in the same television writers’ room, both trying their hardest to escape from themselves. A love letter to competency porn, vulnerability, and tripping headfirst into something great with the last person you should be falling in love with. An incredibly moving, honest debut.

How to End a Love Story by Yulin Kuang, (List Price: $18.99, Avon, 9780063310681, April 2024)

Reviewed by Gaby Iori, Epilogue: Books Chocolate Brews in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

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Women! In! Peril! by Jessie Ren Marshall

I’m happy to report that Women! In! Peril! lives up to its obsession-worthy title and cover. This short story debut is full of smart, fresh fiction that I wanted to savor. Marshall brings a hilarious voice to inventive literary stories about women whose struggles range from divorce to the destruction of the human race. Singular characters like a former ballerina with memory loss and a lesbian whose girlfriend thinks she’s carrying the baby Jesus make up this exciting and unabashedly queer collection!

Women! In! Peril! by Jessie Ren Marshall, (List Price: $17.99, Bloomsbury Publishing, 9781639732272, April 2024)

Reviewed by Julia Lewis, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia

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Colton Gentry’s Third Act by Jeff Zentner

I loved this story about second (and third) chances and rekindled young love in a small southern town. Themes of alcohol addiction and commentary on American gun violence give Colton Gentry’s Third Act depth that would make this romance a fabulous book club selection. And I loved the restaurant setting!

Colton Gentry’s Third Act by Jeff Zentner, (List Price: $30, Grand Central Publishing, 9781538756652, April 2024)

Reviewed by Jessica Nock, Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina

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