Southern indie booksellers like their okra, and they love their
southern books. The new list of Okra Picks-- great southern books,
fresh off the vine-- has just been released. A dozen new books that all
have two things in common: They are southern in nature, and there is a
southern indie bookseller that wants everyone to read each one! The
SIBA Okra picks offer a curated reading list for every season.
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Kevin Wylie's crooked boss wants to run him out of
town, and Kevin's long-time girlfriend is ready to take a hike. He
decides that now is the time to leave Miami, visit his father, who he
hasn't seen in 28 years, and get some answers. Heading back to his
hometown, he doesn't realize that he and his dad will become embroiled
in a murder case. The victim, one of the richest and most-hated
corporate criminals in America has been dubbed The Alligator Man since
pieces of his clothing were found in a local swamp. Billy Fuller had
every reason in the world to want Johnson dead and all the evidence
leads right to his doorstep. But legendary trial lawyer Tom Wylie
believes in Billy and he and his son reunite to fight the courtroom
battle for Billy's life. The Alligator Man is a story of greed,
anger, love, redemption and two powerful trial attorneys who fight to
the end-- and risk everything--for the truth. |
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A deeply touching Southern story filled with struggle and hope.
Emmalee Bullard and her new baby are on their own. Or so she thinks,
until Leona Lane, the older seamstress who sat by her side at the local
shirt factory where both women worked as collar makers, insists Emmalee
come and live with her. Just as Emmalee prepares to escape her
hardscrabble life in Red Chert holler, Leona dies tragically.
Grief-stricken, Emmalee decides she'll make Leona's burying dress, but
there are plenty of people who don't think the unmarried Emmalee should
design a dress for a Christian woman - or care for a child on her own.
But with every stitch, Emmalee struggles to do what is right for her
daughter and to honor Leona the best way she can, finding unlikely
support among an indomitable group of seamstresses and the town's
funeral director. In a moving tale exploring Southern spirit and
camaraderie among working women, a young mother will compel a town to
become a community. |
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It is 1936 when orphaned
thirteen-year-old Evalina Toussaint is admitted to Highland Hospital in
Asheville, North Carolina, a mental institution known for its innovative
treatments for nervous disorders and addictions. Taken under the wing
of the hospital's most notable patient, Zelda Fitzgerald, Evalina
witnesses the cascading events leading up to the tragic fire of 1948
that killed nine women in a locked ward, Zelda among them. |
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Presiding over her family
and its legacy of masterpiece Civil War art, North Carolina society
maven Jerene Jarvis Johnston takes increasingly haphazard steps to
protect her grown children from their own heedlessness. |
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A dauntless heroine coming of age at the turn of the
twentieth century confronts the hazards of patriarchy and prejudice, and
discovers the unexpected opportunities of World War I Set in rural
North Carolina between the Civil War and the Great War, "Love and
Lament" chronicles the hardships and misfortunes of the Hartsoe family.
Mary Bet, the youngest of nine children, was born the same year that
the first railroad arrived in their county. As she matures, against the
backdrop of Reconstruction and rapid industrialization, she must learn
to deal with the deaths of her mother and siblings, a deaf and damaged
older brother, and her father's growing insanity and rejection of God.
In the rich tradition of Southern gothic literature, John Milliken
Thompson transports the reader back in time through brilliant
characterizations and historical details, to explore what it means to be
a woman charting her own destiny in a rapidly evolving world dominated
by men. |
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When Helen Honeycutt falls in love with a man who has
recently lost his wife in a tragic accident, their sudden marriage
creates a rift between her new husband and his circle of friends, who
resent her intrusion into their circle. When the newlyweds join them for
a summer at Moonrise, his late wife's family home in the beautiful Blue
Ridge Mountains, it soon becomes clear that someone is trying to drive
her away, in this writer's homage to Rebecca, by Daphne du Maurier.
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Maizee Hurd was an easy target for hard times,
according to Burdy Luttrell, the town healer. Burdy is a Melungeon woman
with striking features and mysterious ways who owns the land the Hurds
leased following their marriage on June 3, 1940. |
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Caring for her family on
their mid-20th-century tobacco farm after the loss of her parents,
15-year-old Ivy connects with Grace County social worker Jane, who
strains her personal and professional relationships with her advocacy of
Ivy's family, whose dark secrets test Jane's resolve against racial
tensions and state-mandated sterilizations. |
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Set in the world of 1960s and ‘70s soul music, Respect Yourself
is a story of epic heroes in a shady industry. It’s about music and
musicians—Isaac Hayes, Otis Redding, Sam and Dave, Wilson Pickett, the
Staple Singers, and Booker T. and the M.G.’s, Stax’s interracial house
band. It’s about a small independent company’s struggle to survive in a
business world of burgeoning conglomerates. And always at the center of
the story is Memphis, Tennessee, an explosive city struggling through
heated, divisive years. Told by one of our leading music chroniclers, Respect Yourself brings to life this treasured cultural institution and the city that created it.
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Someone Else's Love Story is Joshilyn Jackson's funny, charming, and
poignant novel about science and miracles, secrets and truths, faith and
forgiveness; about falling in love and learning that things aren't
always what they seem--or what we hope they will be. It's a story about
discovering what we want and ultimately finding what we need. |
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"The Storied South" features the voices--by turn searching and honest,
coy and scathing--of twenty-six of the most luminous artists and
thinkers in the American cultural firmament, from Eudora Welty, Pete
Seeger, and Alice Walker to William Eggleston, Bobby Rush, and C. Vann
Woodward. Masterfully drawn from one-on-one interviews conducted by
renowned folklorist William Ferris over the past forty years, the book
reveals how storytelling is viscerally tied to southern identity and how
the work of these southern or southern-inspired creators has shaped the
way Americans think and talk about the South.
"The Storied South"
offers a unique, intimate opportunity to sit at the table with these men
and women and learn how they worked and how they perceived their art.
The volume also features 45 of Ferris's striking photographic portraits
of the speakers and a CD and a DVD of original audio and films of the
interviews. |
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Set against the backdrop of the historic flooding of the Mississippi
River, The Tilted World is an extraordinary tale of murder and
moonshine, sandbagging and saboteurs, and a man and a woman who find
unexpected love, from Tom Franklin, the acclaimed author of the New York
Times bestseller Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter, and award-winning poet
Beth Ann Fennelly. The year is 1927. As rains swell the
Mississippi, the mighty river threatens to burst its banks and engulf
everything in its path, including federal revenue agent Ted Ingersoll
and his partner, Ham Johnson. Arriving in the tiny hamlet of Hobnob,
Mississippi, to investigate the disappearance of two fellow agents who'd
been on the trail of a local bootlegger, they are astonished to find a
baby boy abandoned in the middle of a crime scene. |
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Since his mother died earlier this year, Grover Johnston (named after
a character in Thomas Wolfe's Look Homeward Angel) has watched his
family fall to pieces as his father throws himself into his work rather
than dealing with the pain. Left to care for his younger sister, Sudie,
Grover finds solace in creating intricate weavings out of the natural
materials found in the bamboo forest behind his North Carolina home, a
pursuit that his father sees only as a waste of time.
But as tensions mount between father and son, two unlikely forces
conspire to lead the Johnstons on a new path -- a presence that seems to
come to Grover in his darkest moments and new tenants in the rental
house across the street who have come from deep in the Carolina hills
and plopped themselves right into Grover's life. The families seem so
different but become increasingly intertwined, bound together in
unexpected ways. Until one devastating disaster threatens to tear them
apart. |
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