Julie Isgrigg Is NAIBA's Kristin Keith Sales Rep of the Year
Hachette rep Julie Isgrigg has been named the New Atlantic Independent Booksellers Association's 2026 Kristin Keith Sales Rep of the Year. She will receive the award at the NVNR awards dinner on August 4 in Baltimore, Md.
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Isgrigg wrote, "Technically, I started in books in 1976, but I started getting paid for it in 1999. I began at the Borders corporate headquarters in Ann Arbor, Mich., where I spent nearly 12 years and where, among other lessons, I learned the most important one that has lasted throughout my career: Book people are the best people. I moved to Charlotte in 2011 to join the team at Baker & Taylor, where I ultimately managed the indie bookstore telephone sales crew and learned so much about indies and how they do business. In 2019, Hachette hired me to serve the territory previously held by 2018 NAIBA Rep of the Year winner Judy DeBerry. In a career that has always been satisfying, I discovered that even more richness awaited.
"I feel most useful when I'm operating as a modern switchboard operator, connecting my stores to my authors, to each other, to my publishers, to the knowledge I've accumulated over my career, and naturally, to books. I also can't overlook my own connections with the colleagues inside and outside of Hachette who bolster me. With each connection, my little heart grows. The work feels sacred. I get to help good people--the best people!--spread more connections all built on books. We know what that can mean in a life. It touches me deeply to be honored in this way by the booksellers--the people I revere--at the stores I've served. Just... thank you."







The 

Following a preview weekend late last month,
Barnes & Noble will open a new store in Atlanta, Ga., this coming Wednesday, July 8. Located at 1205 Caroline St. NE in the Edgewood Retail District, the store will span 15,000 square feet and include a B&N Cafe. Author Tayari Jones will be on hand July 8 to preside over the ribbon cutting and will sign copies of her book Kin (Knopf).

Talya Jankovits (right) celebrated the launch of her debut novel, The Very Unremarkable Life of Mrs. Etty Bloom (Running Wild Press), with her former MFA mentor, author Gayle Brandeis (left), at 
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Keith Stahl's first novel, Dear Future Occupants, relates the poignant, madcap adventures of a dysfunctional but essentially loving family. In March of 1979, Bud Sommer moves his family back to Greenhill, Conn., having inherited his childhood home, a massive, crumbling 17th-century estate. Bud, a sometimes painter and aspiring restaurateur, has also used his wife Rebecca's inheritance to purchase a nearby diner. Joining Bud and Rebecca are their middle-school-aged sons, Victor and Wade; their eldest son, Herman, who has spent recent years hitchhiking around the nation; and the family dog, named The Dog. Victor, who has been bullied at school, begins running around with the "lav rat" kids, who smoke in the restrooms. Meanwhile, his little brother, Wade, a piano prodigy, experiences one accidental injury too many and chooses to wrap himself in bubble wrap around the clock. Long-haired Herman likes to wear women's clothing, to the great distress of his parents. A literal skeleton is discovered in the basement of their dilapidated home, and a local adjunct professor moves in to study it. One absurdity after another plagues this motley household, until it seems that something will have to give.