In the land of SIBA
Blog Home All Blogs

What We're Reading/Listening to/Watching

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, March 14, 2024

Linda-Marie Barrett:
Reading: ˆThe Saddest Girl On The Beach by Heather Frese. Set on North Carolina's Outer Banks, this novel's "saddest girl," Charlotte, seeks solace after her father's death by staying with her best friend's family on Hatteras Island. Gorgeous descriptions of Pamlico Sound, particularly its natural landscape and wildlife, complement a moving story. Also reading The Culture Code by Daniel Coyle for the Professional Booksellers School.
Listening: To restful soundscapes on my Calm app.
Watching: Death in Paradise and the newest season of Madame Blanc.

Candice Huber:
Reading: About halfway through An Education in Malice by S.T. Gibson. If you read A Dowry of Blood, you'll want to pick this one up also!
Listening: Beyonce's Texas Hold 'Em on repeat. I can't wait for her full country album!
Watching: Rewatching Avatar the Last Airbender (the cartoon) since my partner has never seen it. And only a few episodes left of the X-Files!

Nicki Leone:
Reading: In This House of Brede by Rumer Godden. I finished Daniel Coyne's The Culture Code with mixed feelings, but there is some good stuff in there. And I just started The Rediscovery of America by Ned Blackhawk.
Listening: The audio versions of some old favorite Robin McKinley stories.
Watching: Not much time for TV this week, I did turn on the news periodically, and lasted about twenty minutes before I turned it off and went out in the garden to pull weeds..

SP Rankin:
Reading: Well into Mary V. Dearborn's truly excellent new Carson McCullers: A Life, a complex portrait of the writer and singular soul which draws on a wealth of previously unavailable source material. I loved Alison Bechdel's latest work, The Secret to Superhuman Strength, a funny, moving, and beautifully drawn account of her lifelong pursuit of physical fitness.
Listening: I mentioned the singer/composer/musician Krystle Warren last week, and she continues to fill the house. Some songs in particular get stuck on repeat, like her wryly bouncy Eleanor Rigby-inflected take on William Blake's poem, "The Clod and the Pebble." (I realize that sounds pretentious but that is entirely MY fault, not hers.)
Watching: A little bit of late-to-the-party catching up: Oppenheimer, The Holdovers, and Anatomy of a Fall. I enjoyed all three (mostly), loved two of them, and absolutely can't stop thinking about one of them. Episodes of The Love Boat have replaced HGTV at breakfast.

Andrea Richardson:
Reading: A Grave Robbery by Deanna Raybourn - preparing for our store's upcoming event with her this weekend. It's as fun as her books always are!
Listening
: Pop punk covers of Taylor Swift. I have a feeling admitting my listening habits to y'all every week is going to get embarrassing.
Watching: Ryan Gosling's I'm Just Ken video from the Oscars every time it appears on social media, because it's the best thing I've seen in weeks.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Southern Indie Bestsellers for March 10, 2024

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, March 14, 2024
southern bestseller list

SOUTHERN INDIE BESTSELLER LIST
For the week ending 3/10/2024

Edelweiss Collections:
(sort by "Catalog Order" to see each list according to rating)

Hardcover Fiction | Hardcover Nonfiction | Trade Paperback Fiction | Trade Paperback Nonfiction | Mass Market | Children's Illustrated | Children's Interest | Children's Series

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Navigating to NVNR: Planning Your Schedule and Budget

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, March 14, 2024

New Voices New Rooms"My goals for NVNR? Meeting booksellers and store managers to share ideas with, coming back with great ideas from the managers retreat, networking with publisher reps."
--NVNR 2023 Attendee

NVNR recognizes that attending conferences represents a significant investment of time and money for bookstores, especially if they want to bring along their frontline staff. In fact, sending frontline booksellers to conferences is an important part of any long-term strategy for stores seeking to promote staff development. It is not unusual for veteran store owners to send staff to conferences in their stead, or even in some cases to close the store entirely so the entire staff can attend. Indie bookstores know what sets them apart is not the books on their shelves, it’s their people.

Planning ahead is vital:

  • Block out your calendar for August 7-11, 2024 now to avoid schedule conflicts later.

  • Create a separate category in your budget to track both expenses and any income earmarked to pay for the conference.

  • Commit early. Take advantage of our full event pass early bird rate in April: $250, usually $300.. 

  • Apply for available grants, scholarships, and funding. NVNR offers travel grants, and many other organizations sponsor scholarships in support of bookseller development. Check with your regional association for details.

By committing to attend NVNR 2024 and starting your planning now, you may find it possible to bring along more staff or be able to stay longer and make the most out of your time at the conference.

Registration for NVNR opens April 2. 

Click here to be added to the NVNR early notification list and be eligible for earlybird discount prices.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

What to do in March: 5 Things for SIBA Bookstores

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, March 7, 2024

SIBA LogoThis has been a busy, active Spring for bookstores in the SIBA region, with a waterfall of opportunities, programming, and things to check off of an ever-growing check list. Here is what booksellers should have on their radar for this month:

  1. Your Summer Catalog Orders are due March 15.
    These are beautiful gift catalogs filled with great books, They are FREE to all SIBA member bookstores, and come with digital and printable marketing assets. And they are an effective way to raise your store's visibility in your own community.
    Place your orders now.

  2. Apply for the McCoy Grant by March 21
    The McCoy Grant awards two $1500 grants to unpublished southern women or nonbinary booksellers who harbor ambitions to be published writers. Since it is common for writers to gravitate to jobs in bookstores, make sure your store staff know about this opportunity. Full eligibility criteria and grant application

  3. Both the SIBA Census and the Bylaws Ballot close on March 31
    These two important initiatives will guide SIBA into the future, so we need every SIBA member bookstore to participate. Yes, EVERY bookstore.
    View and vote on the bylaws here
    Fill out your census form

  4. Prepare for Independent Bookstore Day: Sign Up by March 31
    If you have plans for Independent Bookstore Day on April 27, you can still add them to the IBD map. Click here.

  5. Start planing for the New Voices New Rooms Conference August 7-11.
    Registration opens on April 2, and April registrations receive earlybird pricing. Click here to be added to the NVNR early notification list.


This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Interview with McCoy Grant Recipient Kendra Gayle Lee

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, March 7, 2024
Sarah McCoy, photo courtesy the authorKendra Gayle Lee

Applications are currently open for the McCoy Grant for Bookseller-Writers, one of the most unique grants available to SIBA members. There is a close bond between booksellers and writers. The McCoy Grant, created by author Sarah McCoy in partnership with SIBA, is for any unpublished southern women or nonbinary booksellers who harbor ambitions to be published writers. Two $1500 grants will be awarded. The deadline to submit an application is March 21, 2024.

2024 is the second year the McCoy Grant has been offered. Sarah McCoy spent some time talking to the recipients of last year's grant recipients, Here is her conversation with Kendra Gayle Lee of Bookish in Atlanta, GA.

Sarah McCoy: First off, congrats again on being the 2023 McCoy Grant recipients. It may be a new year, but we’ll be celebrating you until the 2024 recipients are announced in August! So, we thought it the perfect time to sit down and chat about what you’ve been up to. How has the McCoy Grant made an impact on your writing?

Kendra Gayle Lee: The McCoy Grant provided validation for me that my writing—and my voice—is valuable. It's easy for my writing to get sidelined for other endeavors—like running the bookstore—that bring in money. Capitalism has me pretty conditioned to assign value based on cash flow in. But this grant allowed me to step back and realize that my writing deserves to be nurtured, not because it brings in money, but because ideas and perspective are equally important. And because stories matter.

SM: Would you like to tell us a little about your work in progress?

KGL: My work in progress is a series of essays about the evolution of the love that my ex and I share. He and I were together for 20 years. During that time, we got sober, navigated several years of infertility, and he transitioned from female to male. That's a lot of change and emotional upheaval to navigate! What we learned, over the years, is that being true to ourselves is how we show up best for each other. And family is something that we get to define and celebrate, whether it matches up with other people's ideas or not.

SM: How has the McCoy Grant made an impact on your personal life?

KGL: The McCoy Grant has allowed me to hire someone to manage my February writing schedule so that I'm actually producing work that will get read by another human who can give me solid feedback. My ADHD brain needs a little outside management for big projects, so being able to hire someone as an accountability partner is a huge step in getting together a complete draft of the book I hope to finish this year.

SM: What would you tell other bookseller writers who are thinking of applying?

KGL: I applied on a whim. I never thought I'd receive the grant. I think as writers, we become really accustomed to rejection. Take a chance on yourself and your writing. The McCoy Grant was just the encouragement I needed. And it's allowing me to move into a new level where I'm more committed to the process of writing. You are worth taking a chance on. Go ahead and apply for the grant. (Also, Sarah McCoy is a gem of a human who will make you feel spectacular every time she interacts with you. Don't miss out on this.)

SM: You both are diamonds and I count myself blessed to have found your sparkles in the mine. Such a pleasure catching up. You both have bright futures ahead of you. I know your fellow booksellers are cheering for you and your bookstores. As am I! 

Sarah McCoy is the New York Times, USA Today, and international bestselling author and creator of the McCoy Grant.

Kendra Gayle Lee is a memoirist, lead bookseller, and owner of Bookish Atlanta in Atlanta, Georgia.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

What's Up at March Madness: Week 2

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, March 7, 2024

March Madness Bookseller SeriesThe second week of March Madness is all about the joys of genre! Booksellers will meet up at Blue Cypress Books in New Orleans, The Haunted Book Shop in Mobile, AL and Firestorm Books in Asheville, NC. Registration remains open so you can still sign up.

BLUE CYPRESS BOOKS
March 12 in New Orleans, LA |Edelweiss Collection

March Madness Bookseller Series Nobody does dragons like twice-nominated Astounding Award finalist Jenn Lyons! Lyons will be at Blue Cypress to talk about her standalone novel, The Sky on Fire (but there are still dragons, don't worry!) After spending thirty years working as a graphic artist, art director, and video game producer (in that order), Lyons now spends her days writing fantasy. She traces her geek roots back to playing first edition Dungeons & Dragons in grade school. Her five book epic fantasy series, A Chorus of Dragons, begins with The Ruin of Kings.

THE HAUNTED BOOK SHOP
March 13 in mobile, AL

March Madness at The Haunted Book Shop in Mobile, AL is a bookseller-focused and idea-exchange event. Instead of an author lunch, booksellers will talk shop, and talk genre! Genre books are one of the fastest growing segments of the book industry. Haunted specializes in genre-focused bookselling tailored for Gen Z and Millennial readers, offering a unique experience through hyper-categorized genres, engaging staff, and dynamic events. They'll explore their innovative approach to bookselling, highlighting why they thrive alongside giants like Amazon by focusing on experience over transactions, as illustrated in the owner's 'widget vs. experience-seeking shopper' theory. 

FIRESTORM BOOKS
March 18 in Asheville, NC | Edelweiss Collection

March Madness Bookseller SeriesLoren Long is the author and illustrator of the New York Times bestselling Otis picture book series, as well as the #1 New York Times bestselling illustrator of Barack Obama's picture book, Of Thee I Sing, Matt de la Pena’s Love, and Change Sings by Inaugural Poet Amanda Gorman. Angie Tally of The Country Bookshop says of Long's The Yellow Bus that "In the hands of the amazing Loren Long, those stories just might surprise you! Perfect for back-to-school tables and for an anytime read-together"

March Madness Bookseller SeriesMeredith Adamo is a YA author based in hot, humid North Carolina, but she's originally from Rochester, New York, which is her favorite place on the planet. She likes to write about girls who can make you laugh and break your heart—ideally on the same page. Not Like Other Girls is her debut novel and is a Read This Next! book at The Southern Bookseller Review, where Jill Hendrix of Fiction Addition Bookstore says it "pairs the emotional power of Speak with a mystery full of plot twists a la A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder." She thinks it is a great pick for teen book clubs.

March Madness Bookseller SeriesChatham Greenfield is a young adult author born and raised in Florida, which is why their stories often take place in humid seaside towns. After graduating from Sarah Lawrence College in 2020, they were selected as a fellow in the inaugural class of LitUp by Reese’s Book Club. Time and Time Again is their debut novel, a romance that shows identity not as a series of check boxes, but as "experiences that can't be pulled apart, each equally important to who I am and who I'll be."

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

What We're Reading/Listening to/Watching

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, March 7, 2024

Linda-Marie Barrett:
Reading: Just finished We All Want Impossible Things by Catherine Newman, and discovered in our book club discussion that I was an outlier because I found it really funny (and heart-breaking). Have begun The Last Love Song by Kalie Holford, a sweet and moving YA described as a "queer Mamma Mia."
Listening: to the birds and the bees just outside my office. Rumors of bear sightings abound.
Watching: Death in Paradise, and really enjoying it.

Candice Huber:
Reading: Finally finished Everyone On This Train Is A Suspect! It was really fun. Started An Education in Malice by S.T. Gibson, which is much darker.
Listening: To ambient instrumentals of Disney songs as I walk around Disneyland on vacation.
Watching: After watching the new live-action version, I'm now rewatching Avatar the Last Airbender.

Nicki Leone:
Reading: The Weeds by Katy Simpson Smith, The Culture Code by Daniel Coyne (which I have to admit alarms as much as it inspires), and for the book club I'm in with SP, In This House of Brede by Rumer Godden. One of the club members has a thing for novels about nuns.
Listening: Palestinian Walks, Raja Shehadeh, and catching up on my podcasts before everything moves to YouTube.
Watching: Morse (the original) and Endeavor. But Lewis has been spoilt for me, alas.

SP Rankin
Reading: I finished this month's book club book, Rumer Godden's In This House of Brede. Like the place it's about--a cloistered abbey--the inside is much bigger than the outside. I've just started Mary Dearborn's brand new biography: Carson McCullers: A Life.
Listening: Krystle Warren--with and without her backing band, the Faculty. A Kansas City expat in France, she opened for Rufus Wainwright several years ago and I don't know why she isn't a million times more famous. She defies a brief description, but listening to her bend genres will make you think of everyone from Nina Simone to Joan Armatrading to Stevie Wonder to Joni Mitchell to Elvis Costello to Tracy Chapman to Yola, in the best possible way.
Watching: Not really anything except for my sad little habit of HGTV during breakfast, and I'm pretty sure anyone who knows me is sick of hearing about it.

Andrea Richardson
Reading: I just started I Want You More by Swan Huntley to work on my "actually read Winter Institute Books" Storygraph challenge and this thriller already has me tense wondering when this idyllic situation is going to take a very bad turn. I can't wait.
Listening: Vocalist Songwriter Morning, according to my Spotify daylist. I've been on an Ani DiFranco kick lately.
Watching: The wedding episode of Love is Blind - whyyyy do they insist on dragging out the episode releases??

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

This Week at The Southern Bookseller Review

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, March 7, 2024

Current Newsletter: A mix of horror and happiness.

When the Jessamine GrowsBook Buzz Feature: When the Jessamine Grows by Donna Everhart
I set the story during a very familiar timeframe, that of the Civil War, but I feel like it is uniquely different from any other Civil War story.. For one thing, Joetta McBride and her husband Ennis live in Nash County, North Carolina, They are subsistence farmers or “yeoman” farmers. That is where you grow your own food to feed yourself and your livestock. Yeoman farmers made up 65% of the population of North Carolina at that time. They did not own slaves, they were neutral and didn’t want anything to do with the war. The other thing about this book that makes it uniquely different is that it’s not about the War. Instead, I write about the families who are left behind women like Joetta McBride, who are required and compelled to keep food on the table, keep the farms running, keep their families together. The American Iraqi activist Zainab Salbi says if we are to understand War then we need to understand not not only what happens on the front lines but what happens on the back lines as well, where women are in charge of keeping the family going. And that is the essence of what this book is about. ― Donna Everhart, at Malaprop’s Bookstore/Cafe

Decide For Yourself Banned Book Feature: Darius the Great is Not Okay by Adib Khorram

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Southern Indie Bestsellers for March 3, 2024

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, March 7, 2024
southern bestseller list

SOUTHERN INDIE BESTSELLER LIST
For the week ending 3/3/2024

Edelweiss Collections:
(sort by "Catalog Order" to see each list according to rating)

Hardcover Fiction | Hardcover Nonfiction | Trade Paperback Fiction | Trade Paperback Nonfiction | Mass Market | Children's Illustrated | Children's Interest | Children's Series

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Southern Indie Bestsellers for February 25, 2024

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, February 29, 2024
southern bestseller list

SOUTHERN INDIE BESTSELLER LIST
For the week ending 2/25/2024

Edelweiss Collections:
(sort by "Catalog Order" to see each list according to rating)

Hardcover Fiction | Hardcover Nonfiction | Trade Paperback Fiction | Trade Paperback Nonfiction | Mass Market | Children's Illustrated | Children's Interest | Children's Series

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Navigating to NVNR: Have a Goal

Posted By Nicki Leone, Wednesday, February 28, 2024

New Voices New Rooms"One of my goals for NVNR 2023 was to learn how to deal with industry challenges and how to squeeze a little bit out of profit to make my business sustainable while continue my commitment to pay a liveable wage."
--NVNR 2023 Attendee

Attending a conference is a commitment not just of money but of time and resources. For small businesses, it may even require hiring extra staff or simply closing the store for a few days, so it is important to make the most of your opportunities at the event. The NVNR conference can be the most valuable time you spend all year long if you go with a plan and a few clear goals. 

Goals can be as broad as "find new books to stock" and as specific as "open three new accounts with publishers" or "find one new author for an event." If you align your goals for the conference with those you have for your bookstore -- say, "increasing our social media presence" or "expanding our genre fiction sections" -- it will help to focus your time and effort and make your goals easier to realize.

Registration for NVNR opens April 2. 
Click here to be added to the NVNR early notification list and be eligible for earlybird discount prices!

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Forthcoming Changes to SIBA Bylaws

Posted By Nicki Leone, Wednesday, February 28, 2024

SIBA LogoNext week SIBA Bookstores will receive a link to vote on SIBA's revised bylaws. Updating the organization's bylaws has been one of the most important tasks of the SIBA board over the last couple of years.

Most importantly, the bylaws have been updated to expand the definition of what constitutes a "core member bookstore" in order to include the creative business models bookstores have developed over the past few years. The size of the board has also been increased to allow for better representation of SIBA's growing membership.

SIBA will be holding a vote to adopt the revised bylaws the first week of March. Every current member bookstore may vote.

Here is a summary of the major changes. You can view them in the proposed bylaws, highlighted in yellow, here,

1. Updated Definition of Core Member (page 7)

The previous definition is as follows: "Independent, privately-owned, commercially-zoned bookstores with a retail storefront and physical headquarters in the Company’s region are eligible for core membership."

The updated definition was changed to be reflective of the more inclusive and highly creative industry we find ourselves living in today. The new definition is:

"Core membership is open to any independent, privately-owned legal entity actively engaged in the business of bookselling in our region (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MS, NC, SC, TN, VA). The bookselling venue may be physical, online, recurring pop-ups or mobile but physical books (including e-books and audiobook versions) must represent more than 50% of overall revenue. These membership requirements shall be subject to interpretation, in the event of dispute, by the Board of Directors. Only owners and authorized representatives and key staff (with owner permission) may serve as officers or directors of the Company. Core Members are entitled to one vote at meetings or in other official balloting procedures of the Company."

2. An Expanded Board (page 1)

The bylaws expand the option to have a board of seven members rather than five. This will allow the board to have greater representation of the SIBA region serving on the board level.

3. Secretary-Treasurer Officer Added (page 5)

The board officer position of Secretary-Treasurer has been created in order to be compliant with North Carolina law.

These revised bylaws mark a major step forward for SIBA. Every store member is strongly encouraged to read over the changes carefully. Booksellers attending any of the March Madness events are also encouraged to discuss the changes with each other. Booksellers who have any questions or concerns are invited to contact any of the SIBA board members.

Voting will take place over the month of March. A Yes vote of 25% of SIBA's core membership will be considered a quorum for the revised bylaws to be adopted.

3/5/2024 UPDATE:  Voting is now open to approve the revised SIBA Bylaws. All Core Member Bookstores who are current members of SIBA may vote

 

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Spotlight on Baldwin & Co.

Posted By Nicki Leone, Wednesday, February 28, 2024

Spotlight on Baldwin & Co.

Candice HuberBaldwin & Co., a Black-owned bookstore in New Orleans, LA opened in February 2021 and is celebrating their 3-year anniversary this month. Owner DJ Johnson is a native of the neighborhood where the store is located, and his bookstore has had a significant impact in its short tenure. Johnson also owns New Orleans Art Bar, an art gallery and event venue that shares a courtyard with the bookstore, and Baldwin & Co. Manor, a stylish short-term rental property located on the second floor of the bookstore. The profits from Baldwin & Co. Manor are funneled into the Baldwin & Co. Foundation, a nonprofit arm of the bookstore that offers children’s storytime, literacy tutoring, and free community book festivals that include giving away children’s books, live performances, author readings, live music, free food and beverages, and more. Baldwin & Co. also offers a state-of-the-art podcast studio for the community to rent.

Baldwin & Co. is a vibrant community hub, serving as a safe space for kids after school, a tutoring center, and an enjoyable place just to pass a Saturday afternoon. They work hard to create meaningful social change and promote and expand literacy, and their coffee shop offers drinks friendly to dietary restrictions and the BEST lavender lemonade. 

Johnson said that his favorite handsell this year has been Let Us Descend by Jesmyn Ward. He also said that Baldwin & Co.’s top priority this year is community, and his favorite SIBA benefit is the people.

You can learn more about Baldwin & Co. on their website: https://www.baldwinandcobooks.com/ and you can follow them on Facebook and Instagram @baldwinandcompany, and on Twitter @baldwinbooks.


Baldwin Reading BaldwinBaldwin Books & Co.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Who you will meet at March Madness: novel.

Posted By Nicki Leone, Wednesday, February 28, 2024

March Madness Bookseller SeriesNOVEL.
March 6 in Memphis, TN
Edelweiss Collection

The three novelists joining booksellers for lunch at March Madness at novel. in Memphis are all known for blazingly good storytelling.

March Madness Bookseller SeriesJeff Zentner is author of New York Times Notable Books The Serpent King and In the Wild Light, winner of the American Library Association's William C. Morris Award, long-listed for the Carnegie Medal, AND two-time Southern Book Prize finalist. And oh yeah, in an earlier life he was a musician who recorded with Iggy Pop, Nick Cave, and Debbie Harry. His new novel, Colton Gentry's Third Act is a "Read This Next!" SIBA book which Rae Ann Parker of Parnassus Books calls "a laugh-out-loud funny story told in beautiful language, full of heart." (She also calls Zentner "the Southern Emily Henry.")

March Madness Bookseller SeriesNathan Gower's work has been published in Baltimore Review, Birmingham Arts Journal, Louisville Magazine, Louisville Review, New Southerner, Santa Fe Literary Review, Valparaiso Fiction Review and elsewhere. He is Professor of English at Campbellsville University in Kentucky, and The Act of Disappearing is his first novel. Silas House says that it is "a perfectly calibrated balance of propulsive suspense and elegant prose, resulting in a complex and beautifully written debut."

March Madness Bookseller SeriesAce Atkins is an award-winning, New York Times bestselling author who started his writing career as a crime beat reporter in Florida. Don’t Let the Devil Ride is his thirtieth novel. His previous novels include eleven books in the Quinn Colson series and multiple true-crime novels based on infamous crooks and killers. In 2010, he was chosen by Robert B. Parker’s family to continue the iconic Spenser series, adding ten novels to the franchise. Don Winslow calls Atkins "diabolically talented."

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Who you will meet at March Madness: Quail Ridge Books

Posted By Nicki Leone, Wednesday, February 28, 2024

March Madness Bookseller SeriesQUAIL RIDGE BOOKS
March 5 in Raleigh, NC
Edelweiss Collection

The March Madness event at Quail Ridge Books features a wide range of writers -- Children's, Thriller, Memoir, and Politics.

March Madness Bookseller SeriesGillian McDunn is a well known children's author whose books frequently appear on "Best of the Year" lists: case in point, she is the recipient of the 2024 Southern Book Prize for When Sea Becomes Sky. Her new book is Trouble at the Tangerine, which Diane Capriola of Little Shop of Stories in Decatur, GA calls "A fun and engaging whodunit with lots of heart."

March Madness Bookseller SeriesOmar Tyree is a New York Times bestselling author, NAACP Image Award-winner, recipient of the Phillis Wheatley Literary Award, journalist, speaker, entrepreneur, and filmmaker. A graduate of Howard University’s School of Communications, he has written more than twenty books with over two million copies in print. His new novel, Control, is a story of psychological suspense in the Atlanta music scene that calls to mind SA Cosby and Walter Mosley.

March Madness Bookseller SeriesMolly Stillman is the host of the Can I Laugh on Your Shoulder? podcast and a sought-after speaker. The lifestyle blog she started in 2007, Still Being Molly, is a community for women who love ethical style, clean beauty, parenting, funny stories, and serving in their communities. Her memoir If I Don't Laugh, I'll Cry, says novelist Kristin Hannah, "is uplifting and inspirational, with a happy ending that is both hard won and ferociously fought for."

March Madness Bookseller SeriesBill Adair is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, the Knight Professor for the Practice of Journalism and Public Policy at Duke University and the director of the Duke Reporters’ Lab. He is also the founder of the website PolitiFact, the go-to source for fact checking in a world awash with disinformation. His new book, Beyond the Big Lie takes a hard look at the culture of lying in American politics.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Who you will meet at March Madness: M. Judson

Posted By Nicki Leone, Wednesday, February 28, 2024

March Madness Bookseller SeriesM. JUDSON BOOKSELLERS
March 4 in Greenville SC
Edelweiss Collection

Booksellers who attend the March Madness event at M. Judson will get to meet four authors, some new and some familiar and welcome faces!

 

March Madness Bookseller SeriesHeather Frese, who won the Lee Smith Novel Prize for her debut The Baddest Girl on the Planet, returns with her new book The Saddest Girl on the Beach. A freelance writer, Heather worked with Outer Banks publications as well as publishing short fiction, essays, poetry, and interviews in various literary journals. Coastal North Carolina is her longtime love and source of inspiration, her writing deeply influenced by the wild magic and history of the Outer Banks.

March Madness Bookseller SeriesLina Maslo is a children's book author and illustrator working in Anderson, South Carolina. Her new books is Threads: Zlata’s Ukrainian Shirt, inspired by the story of her Ukrainian grandparents. Lina's other books include Free as a Bird: The Story of Malala, which is a Library Guild Selection, CCBC Choice, and the winner of the Living the Dream Book Award, and Through the Wardrobe: How C. S. Lewis Created Narnia

March Madness Bookseller SeriesEven though she currently lives in Oregon Karen Spears Zacharias is a familiar name to Southern readers for both her fiction and nonfiction work, which focuses on women and justice. Jeannette Walls caller her new novel, No Perfect Mothers, "both tragic and triumphant, a stunning reminder that we should learn from the lessons of our past."

March Madness Bookseller SeriesSarah Loudin Thomas is the author of numerous acclaimed novels, including The Finder of Forgotten Things, The Right Kind of Fool, winner of the 2021 Selah Book of the Year, and Miracle in a Dry Season, winner of the 2015 INSPY Award. Her work in public relations for Biltmore Estate informs her new novel, These Tangled Threads, set in the historic Biltmore Plantation of the 1920s. A native of West Virginia, she and her husband now live in western North Carolina.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Southern Indie Bestsellers for 2/22/2024

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, February 22, 2024
southern bestseller list

SOUTHERN INDIE BESTSELLER LIST
For the week ending 2/18/2024

Edelweiss Collections:
(sort by "Catalog Order" to see each list according to rating)

Hardcover Fiction | Hardcover Nonfiction | Trade Paperback Fiction | Trade Paperback Nonfiction | Mass Market | Children's Illustrated | Children's Interest | Children's Series

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Spotlight on Resist Booksellers

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, February 22, 2024

Candice HuberSpotlight on Resist Booksellers

Resist Booksellers in Petersburg, VA has made a tremendous impact on their community in less than 2 years of being open. Petersburg did not have its own literary space previously, and Resist stepped in to fill the void. They work hard to support community needs, including partnering with local schools and the public library to provide resources, literacy programming, and fun. They are currently working to deepen their community partnerships and to build a network of Little Free Libraries across the city.

Owner Demetrius Frazier is the current Chief Learning Officer of a multi-billion dollar manufacturing company and Board President of Black Men Read, a literacy nonprofit he cofounded in 2019. Demetrius loves to read, of course, and he is currently reading Refresh: The Journey to Find Peace by Gary T. Taylor, which he says is “an amazing work that simplifies the work it takes to find peace in your life.” Demetrius said that the best part of being a bookseller is “the pure joy of connecting with book lovers about books and community leaders on improving literacy outcomes in the community.”

You can learn more about Resist Booksellers on their website: https://resistbooksellers.com and you can follow them on Facebook and YouTube @resistbks, Instagram and TikTok @resist_bks, and LinkedIn @resistbooksellers.
Resist BooksellersResist BooksellersResist Booksellers
Resist BooksellersResist Booksellers

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Read This Next! March 2024

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, February 22, 2024
RTNX March

Read This Next!The March 2024 Adult Read This Next! list is a mix of light and dark, horror and happiness.

Read what booksellers have to say here:

RTNext! Bookseller Resources:
Edelweiss Collection | Flyer | Flyer Front (image)

What SIBA Booksellers have to say:

The Werewolf at Dusk: And Other Stories by David Small
David Small's illustrations give life to three short stories about age, identity, and metamorphosis in the vein of Franz Kafka and Alfred Hitchcock. The illustration is dreamlike; and although the stories are short, they are abundant with depth.
– Isabel Agajanian from Oxford Exchange in Tampa, Florida

The Other Side of Disappearing by Kate Clayborn
This is a poignant story about family and all the ways those closest to you can do the most harm. A sweet story of finding family through love.
– Jackie Willey from Fiction Addiction in Greenville, South Carolina

Rabbit Heart: A Mother's Murder, a Daughter's Story by Kristine S. Ervin
Books like this give me hope that beauty can truly overcome even the direst of circumstances. How proud her mother would be of her for pulling together such a triumph of a book: to honor memories of the before, to allow space to heal, and to give voice and power back to those who deserve it.
– Alissa Redmond from South Main Book Company in Salisbury, North Carolina

Like Happiness by Ursula Villarreal-Moura
A searing debut that deftly explores the effects of an unhealthy relationship between a predatory male writer and a young woman on the cusp of adulthood.
– Maggie Robe from Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

James by Percival Everett
A necessary look into the life of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn's Jim, or James, told with Percival Everett's unflinching, poetic, and entertaining prose.
– James Harrod from Malaprop's in Asheville, North Carolina

And don't forget about the March/April Read This Next! Kids List:

RTNext! Kids Bookseller Resources:
Edelweiss Collection | Flyer | Flyer Front (image)

Current Read This Next! books and what SIBA booksellers have to say about them can always be found at The Southern Bookseller Review

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Read This Next! Kids: March/April

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, February 22, 2024

Read This Next! Kids March/April

Read This Next!The books on the March/April Read This Next! Kids List run from the sweet to the scary.

RTNext! Kids Bookseller Resources:
Edelweiss Collection | Flyer | Flyer Front (image)

Here is why Southen indie booksellers love them:

Snail by Minu Kim, Mattho Mandersloot (Trans.)
What a delightful book. I absolutely adore the illustrations, black and white drawing with minimal use of color.
– Keeshia Jacklitch from Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

The Black Girl Survives in This One by Desiree S. Evans (Ed.), Saraciea J. Fennell (Ed.)
I love a horror anthology and a final girl story is even better! This book is a mix of powerhouse authors of color that portray strong black women triumphing over baddies - both human and not. Don't worry, not EVERYONE survives so you'll still get lots of heart pounding terror, thrills, and chills - plus a side of humor in some tales!
– Andrea Richardson from Fountain Books in Richmond, Virginia

Blood City Rollers by V.P. Anderson, Tatiana Hill (Illus.)
Fast moving, silly, with just the right amount of character introspection...Mira's journey is very literal in that she gets injured and can no longer skate, distupting her parents' plans for the Olympics. Luckily, she's kidnapped by a vampire roller derby team who is in desperate need of a "mandatory human member."
– Jamie Kovacs from Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, North Carolina

Not Like Other Girls by Meredith Adamo
This is a teen thriller where the disappearance at the heart of the narrative is simultaneously at the side of the narrative. The true story is that of the main character, Jo-Lynn, and her desperate struggles to regain her footing emotionally, socially, and academically after experiencing sexual trauma. I loved it.
– Kate Snyder from Plaid Elephant Books in Danville, Kentucky

The Book That Can Read Your Mind by Marianna Coppo
Is this a picture book? A magic trick? It's pure fun! You will want to read this over and over again.
– Rae Ann Parker from Parnassus Books in Nashville, Tennessee

Someone Just Like You by Helen Docherty, David Roberts (Illus.)
Very sweet empathy lesson in a bright, gorgeous picture book!
– Alissa Redmond from South Main Book Company in Salisbury, North Carolina

Both lists, with full reviews from SIBA booksellers, will be published at The Southern Bookseller Review on March 1st. Current Read This Next! books can be found here.

And books on past lists make an interesting and unusual "best of the year" reading list for book clubs choosing their picks for the new year.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 
Page 26 of 87
 |<   <<   <  21  |  22  |  23  |  24  |  25  |  26  |  27  |  28  |  29  |  30  |  31  >   >>   >|