Latest News

Shelf Awareness for Thursday, June 18, 2026


Poisoned Pen Press: Little Red Death by Alexandra Benedict

Sleeping Bear Press: Fly, Pajarito, Fly! by Alexandra Alessandri, illustrated by Dana Sanmar

Christy Ottaviano Books-Little Brown and Hachette: Diffy by Brian Lies

 Candlewick Press (MA): Hearts on the Table by Susan Metallo

Feiwel & Friends: Trunk No. 3 by Allie Millington

Quotation of the Day

City Lights' Paul Yamazaki on 'How Did This Book Get Into My Hands'

"One of the great things about being in the book world is that as much as we've both seen a lot of change in the book business, one of the things that hasn't changed is the importance of conversation. We are part of probably one of the most generous businesses where generosity is actually a business model. My whole life as a bookseller has been informed by other booksellers, publisher sales reps taking me by the hand and showing me how to do the ropes, really being able to take any book that you love--and I think this is true for anybody, whether it's a reader, another bookseller--and ask, How did this book get into my hands? And that eventually will take you back to an editor."

--Paul Yamazaki, head buyer at City Lights, San Francisco, Calif., in conversation with Open Road CEO David Steinberger in the latest Open Book Podcast, "How Did This Book Get Into My Hands"

Sourcebooks Casablanca: The Hocus Pocus Handbook by Ann Aguirre


News

Wildwood Bookery & Flower Tattoo Open in Frankfort, Ky. 

Wildwood Bookery, offering romance and fantasy books along with items made by local artists, and Wildwood Flower Tattoo have opened at 400 Ann St. in Frankfort, Ky. The State Journal reported that the bookstore is owned by sisters-in-law Delphia Lamb, who handles the books side of the business, and Andrea Wiseman, who focuses on the tattoo side and also has locations in Richmond and Lexington.

"I have loved tattoos since I was very, very young," said Wiseman. "I've been tattooing since 2012.... She's (Delphia) the expert on books. I don't know anything about it, so it's not something I would have ever done by myself."

Lamb said this is a new experience for her: "I've always been an avid reader for my entire life. I prefer romance and fantasy. I had thoughts that it'd be so great to have my own shop. Once I bounced the idea around with Andrea, it happened pretty quickly."

Noting that she enjoys giving readers book recommendations, Lamb said, "I've had wonderful conversations with people, and they've given me recommendations to put on my own to-be-read lists. I don't want people to just buy the books. I enjoy being able to connect."

The co-owners aim to maintain strong local partnerships and want to make themselves known to the community. "We work with a lot of different local authors, and we plan on announcing an author signing soon in July," said Lamb. "I love that because even for myself I'm connecting with new authors I don't even know. I enjoy trying to support them and get their books on our shelves."

Wiseman added: "We're really interested in doing different author events, but also a lot of Frankfort events as well. We want to involve ourselves with things that are happening downtown." 


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Black Pearl Books, Austin, Tex., Closing Bricks-and-Mortar Store

Black Pearl Books will close its bricks-and-mortar store in Austin, Tex., this weekend, KXAN Austin reported.

"We aren't going away," wrote owner Katrina Brooks in a social media post. "We are still in business and you will continue to see us in the community. In fact, we have author events scheduled this fall that you won't want to miss! We know you have lots of questions. We do too!... While we don't know what the next version of Black Pearl Books will look like, we are walking in obedience and know it'll be exactly what it's supposed to be."

Black Pearl Books is a Black-owned bookstore with a mission of promoting diversity, inclusion, and representation. It has operated a bricks-and-mortar location at 7112 Burnet St. since 2022 but dates back to 2019, when Brooks began selling books out of her home and at pop-up appearances.

This Saturday, June 20, will be the last day of business at the bricks-and-mortar store. Brooks and her team will celebrate Black Pearl's tenure there with a day's worth of festivities including a local author book signing, henna, live illustrations, and refreshments. The City of Austin declared Saturday "Black Pearl Books Day" in honor of the store's impact on education, representation, and free expression.


Authors Against Book Bans Names Katherine Locke Board President 

Katherine Locke will begin a term as president of the Authors Against Book Bans executive board, effective July 1. They succeed Maggie Tokuda-Hall, AABB's co-founder and the board's first president, who is concluding her term but will continue to serve as a board member. In addition, Shaneé Yvette Willis has joined the organization as program and operations manager.

Katherine Locke

Locke is an award-winning author of books for all ages, including This Rebel Heart, The Girl with the Red Balloon, and What Are Your Words? A Book About Pronouns, and is a co-editor and contributor to anthologies This Is Our Rainbow and Athlete Is Agender. They join AABB with more than 14 years of experience in the nonprofit world, including advocacy organizations, community service organizations, and professional associations.

"It is my honor and privilege to step into this role alongside the board members, regional leaders, volunteers, and members who are the strength of Authors Against Book Bans," Locke said. "Book bans threaten the freedom to read at a scale we can't ignore, including at the federal level in bills like HR 7661, HR 2616, and HR 8705. Building on two years of growth, strong leadership, and clear vision, I look forward to fighting alongside my fellow authors to defend the freedom to read everywhere it is threatened."

AABB board member and co-founder David Levithan commented: "Maggie's unwavering commitment to building and growing Authors Against Book Bans has engaged, inspired, and activated so many people, both within the book community and outside of it. AABB would not be such a powerful voice if not for her vision and dedication."

Tokuda-Hall added: "I am thrilled that AABB will be entering its next phase under the leadership of Katherine Locke. They have already proven to be an indispensable member of our board, and their steady hand and expertise will serve AABB well."

Willis's career in libraries and digital communities has included leading community engagement work at the Digital Public Library of America, supporting preservation and professional development initiatives at the HBCU Library Alliance, and stewarding community programs and working groups with the Digital Library Federation.

"We are thrilled that Shaneé has joined us to help write the next chapter of Authors Against Book Bans," Locke said. "We are excited to see the organization grow and expand under her thoughtful, experienced guidance."


Obituary Note: Carlo Ginzburg

Carlo Ginzburg, an Italian scholar "renowned for an approach to history that focused on the mass of humanity that existed outside the political and social elites of the Middle Ages and Renaissance," died June 17, the New York Times reported. He was 87. During the 1960s, when he began his research, most historians focused on leaders and events of the past, not on peasants.

Ginzburg, however, "spent six years figuring out what a 16th-century miller meant when he said that the world was created from rotting cheese. He devoted even more time to unraveling the beliefs of peasants denounced by the Inquisition as witches and werewolves," the Times wrote, noting that "one of his more eccentric efforts involved an attempt to link Oedipus's swollen foot and Cinderella's missing slipper to ancient myths about journeying to the afterworld."

Ginzburg's most celebrated work was The Cheese and the Worms (1976), which told the story of that obscure miller, who was burned at the stake in 1599 for his insistence that God and the universe had been created from rot.

"The more we discover about these people's mental universe, the more we should be shocked by the cultural distance that separates us from them," Ginzburg told the New York Times Magazine in 1991.

During his teaching career, he held positions at the University of Bologna, the University of California, Los Angeles (1988–2006), and the Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa.

"Ginzburg showed that non-intellectuals had an intellectual life--and demonstrated what that life was," said Robert Darnton, author of The Great Cat Massacre. "It was a great feat that inspired lots of other scholars to attempt the same thing."

The influence of "microhistory" and "the history of mentalities," the currents of historiography represented by Ginzburg, "continues to be felt in the wave of academic, biographical and literary attention paid to previously overlooked groups, including women, minorities and the underprivileged," the Times noted.

Ginzburg's first book, published in 1966 and titled The Night Battles in English, was inspired by a visit to Inquisition archives in Venice, where he found an account of the trial of a 16th-century shepherd from a village north of the city. 

In The Judge and the Historian (1991), Ginzburg "sought to defend a close friend, Adriano Sofri, a left-wing journalist who had been convicted of murder in events related to the tangled aftermath of a 1969 terrorist bombing," the Times noted. He published books and essays on a range of subjects, including history, art, literature, mythology, and psychology.

Early in his academic career, Ginzburg was teaching students who cared about history primarily for the lessons it held regarding the mass worker strikes going on at the time. "I shared my students' political concerns," he later said. "But I had to admit that my professional interests had nothing to do with the turmoil around me. I learned in a painful way that history must be studied even when it has no visible relation to contemporary issues."


Notes

Image of the Day: David Beard Visits Park Road Books

David Beard discussed his new book All Summer Long: Conversations with the Beach Boys from Surfin' to SmiLE (Bloomsbury Academic) at Park Road Books in Charlotte, N.C. Pictured: Beard (l.) with Peter Perez, the publisher's associate publicity director.


This Week's Independent Press Top 40 Bestsellers

Click here to see the latest Independent Press Top 40, the weekly bestseller list celebrating the bestselling 40 fiction and 40 nonfiction titles from independent publishers, as sold by independent bookstores across the country. The list is sponsored by the Independent Publishers Caucus and the American Booksellers Association.

This week's debut fiction titles:

2. Harvest Season (The Seasons of Carnage Trilogy #2) by Brynne Weaver (Slowburn)
25. Earth 7: A Novel by Deb Olin Unferth (Graywolf Press) 

This week's debut nonfiction titles:

1. The Book of Birds: A Field Guide to Wonder and Loss by Robert Macfarlane and Jackie Morris (W.W. Norton)
5. Is a River Alive? by Robert Macfarlane (W.W. Norton)
12. The Freedom-Based Business Method: Reset, Systemize, and Realign Your Business to Live a Life of Harmony by Natalie Ellis (Hay House Business)
20. The Fourth Branch: How State Government Can Save Our Union by Daniel Squadron (Zando)
27. How Queer Bookshops Changed the World by A.J. West (Oneworld Publications)
32. What Is Queer Food?: How We Served a Revolution by John Birdsall (W.W. Norton)
36. Queer as Folklore: The Hidden Queer History of Myths and Monsters by Sacha Coward (Manchester University Press)
39. Compassion in Crisis: Building Disaster-Resilient Communities by Kate Rose Weiner and Kailea Rose Loften (Heyday Books)
40. Dad Jokes: Greatest of All Time: The Bestselling Series from the Instagram Sensation @DadSaysJokes by @dadsaysjokes (Hamlyn)


'ReJOYCE! It's Bloomsday!'

Buxton Books

"Happy Bloomsday!!" Noe Valley Books in San Francisco, Calif., posted on Facebook yesterday. "If you have time, make sure to read Ulysses in its entirety today (preferably out loud). You can also don a straw boater hat, enjoy a meal of fried pork kidneys, and/or sip a Guinness. As long as you feel some appreciate or fondness for literary great James Joyce, you're celebrating Bloomsday just right."

Other indies getting in on yesterday's Bloomsday celebration included:

Buxton Books, Charleston, S.C.: "ReJOYCE! It's Bloomsday! And we have a suggestion for how to celebrate.... Expect High Comedy, Irish Music, Theater--all in an hour... from three Charleston originals (Read: eccentrics!).... A P.S. worth mentioning--we have several editions of Ulysses you could purchase in the bookstore--right next door to The Library Society... perhaps you can take a photo with the characters to tuck inside... and ask the performers to inscribe!"

Little City Books

Little City Books, Hoboken, N.J.: "Happy Bloomsday!.... Last week's top 10 sellers // a celebration of Irish writers."

Politics and Prose Bookstore, Washington, D.C.: "Paige Lewis! An explanation of Bloomsday (and how to read Ulysses)! Another episode of So Many Books. Listen at the link in our bio."

Rebound Bookstore, San Rafael, Calif.: "Happy Bloomsday! Yes."

Cherry Valley Bookstore, Cherry Valley, N.Y.: "Let's all celebrate Bloomsday--June 16, 1904."


Personnel Changes at the Random House Publishing Group

At the Random House Publishing Group:

Michael Hoak is promoted to associate director of marketing, in-market for the Random House/Dial/Hogarth/Modern Library imprints.

Marni Folkman is promoted to senior publicist, in-market for the Random House/Dial/Hogarth/Modern Library imprints.

Meghan O'Shaughnessy is promoted to Senior Publicist, In-Market, RH Worlds imprints.

Sabrina Shen is promoted to associate marketing manager, in-market, RH Worlds imprints.



Media and Movies

Media Heat: Percival Everett, Lokelani Alabanza on Today

Tomorrow:
Good Morning America: Wallace "Wallo267" Peeples, author of Yes to You, No to Them: The Discipline of Saying No and the Freedom that Follows (Hay House, $19.99, 9798318605956).

Today: Percival Everett, author of James: A Novel (Vintage, $20, 9780593686867).

Also on Today: Lokelani Alabanza, author of Ice Cream Queen: Flavors from Black America's Past, Present, & Future (W.W. Norton, $29.99, 9780393881646).

The View: Anthony Anderson and Cedric the Entertainer, authors of The Husky and Handsome Guide to Grilling (Simon Element, $30, 9781668075357).


This Weekend on Book TV: Kimberlé Crenshaw on Backtalker

Book TV airs on C-Span 2 this weekend from 8 a.m. Saturday to 8 a.m. Monday and focuses on political and historical books as well as the book industry. The following are highlights for this coming weekend. For more information, go to Book TV's website.

Saturday, June 20
2 p.m. Tom Zoellner, author of The Road Was Full of Thorns: Running Toward Freedom in the American Civil War (The New Press, $34.99, 9798893850086).

Sunday, June 21
9:10 a.m. Matthew Mehan, author of The American Book of Fables (Sophia Institute Press, $39.95, 9798889116912).

11:35 a.m. Virginia Richards, author of The Inner Passage: An Untold Story of Black Resistance Along a Southern Waterway (The MIT Press, $39.95, 9780262051712), at Politics & Prose in Washington, D.C.

12:30 p.m. Brooke N. Newman, author of The Crown's Silence: The Hidden History of the British Monarchy and Slavery in the Americas (Mariner Books, $32.50, 9780063290976).

1:35 p.m. April Ryan, author of Black Women Will Save the World; Mary Frances Berry, author of Slavery After Slavery: Revealing the Legacy of Forced Child Apprenticeships on Black Families, from Emancipation to the Present; Keith Boykin, author of Why Does Everything Have to Be About Race?: 25 Arguments That Won't Go Away; and Michael Eric Dyson, author of Represent: The Unfinished Fight for the Vote, at Politics & Prose.

2:55 p.m. Kimberlé Crenshaw, author Backtalker: An American Memoir (Simon & Schuster, $30, 9781982181000).


Books & Authors

Awards: Sami Rohr Jewish Literature Winner

The Gates of Gaza: A Story of Betrayal, Survival, and Hope in Israel's Borderlands by Amir Tibon (Little, Brown) has won the $100,000 2026 Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature, which is awarded "to an emerging author writing in or translated into English" in association with the National Library of Israel.

Organizers said that in the winning title, "Tibon weaves together personal testimony, historical context and incisive reporting to chronicle the devastating events of October 7 and their impact on Israel's border communities. Through the story of his family and neighbors in Kibbutz Nahal Oz, he offers a powerful account of tragedy, resilience and survival while illuminating the broader realities of life along the Gaza border."

Tibon said in part, "The mission of the Rohr Prize has never been more important, as we confront a rising tide of antisemitism around the globe and its unique ripples within the world of books and literature. I'm grateful to the judging panel for choosing to recognize my work at this crucial moment."


Attainment: New Titles Out Next Week

Selected new titles appearing next Tuesday, June 23:

The God Test: Artificial Intelligence and Our Coming Cosmic Reckoning by Robert Wright (Simon & Schuster, $29.99, 9781668061657) explores the future of AI.

The Lost Founder: James Wilson and the Forgotten Fight for a People's Constitution by Jesse Wegman (Celadon Books, $30, 9781250851079) is the biography of a forgotten Founding Father.

Obstinate Daughters: The Rebels, Writers, and Renegade Women Who Ignited the American Revolution by Denise Kiernan (Dutton, $32, 9780593183434) is by the author of The Girls of Atomic City.

Thrilling Tales of Modern Men: Stories by Danny McBride (Random House, $30, 9780593594759) collects darkly humorous short stories from the creator and star of The Righteous Gemstones and Eastbound & Down.

Green City Wars by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Tor Books, $28.99, 9781250290335) is sci-fi noir starring genetically engineered animals.

It's All River: A Novel by Carla Madeira, trans. by Alison Entrekin (Liveright, $26.99, 9781324098119) is a bestselling Brazilian story about a twisted love triangle.

Retro: A Novel by Jessica M. Goldstein (Ballantine, $30, 9798217091362) follows a tour guide for a luxury time travel company.

Tillinghast: A Novel by Clare Cavenagh (Viking, $29, 9798217060825) is literary horror about a secluded vampire.

All We Hunger For by Anna Mercier (Holt, $20.99, 9781250416681) is a YA romantasy/baking competition that takes place in a fantastical world.

The Monsters We Made by Peyton June (Norton, $18.99, 9781324083436) is a YA mystery inspired by The X-Files

Paperbacks:
The Reverse Centaur's Guide to Life After AI: How to Think About Artificial Intelligence--Before It's Too Late by Cory Doctorow (MCD, $18, 9780374621568).

Slasher Summer: A Novel by E.L. Chen (Crown, $20, 9798217089628).

Abby Offsides: A Novel by Anna McCallie (Dell, $20, 9798217093137).


IndieBound: Other Indie Favorites

From last week's Indie bestseller lists, available at IndieBound.org, here are the recommended titles, which are also Indie Next Great Reads:

Hardcover
Heather: A Novel by Caitlin Mullen (Celadon Books, $28.99, 9781250400574). "In the Pine Barrens of New Jersey a newborn infant is found dead in the woods and two teenagers go missing. Thirty years later, Callie Hauser's return as the Chief of Police brings the decades-old case back and threatens to destroy the lives of everyone she knows." --Karen Shenko, Newtown Bookshop, Newtown, Pa.

Cat Love: A Novel by Tomás Q. Morín (Pantheon, $27, 9780593702048). "Cat Love is a touching exploration of our current cultural obsession with empathy and our ironic talent for prioritizing animal rights over human rights, set in a speculative, near-future dystopia seen through a poet's eyes--rather, a cat's eyes." --Devon Dunn, Book Culture, New York, N.Y.

Paperback
Endling: A Novel by Maria Reva (Vintage, $18, 9781984897596). "Endling is a rich stew of the foreign bride industry, nearly extinct snails, familial disappointment, and war in a scabrous, blistering portrait of contemporary Ukraine that is as eye-opening as it is entertaining." --David Enyeart, Next Chapter Booksellers, St. Paul, Minn.

Ages 4-8
The Outermost Mouse by Lauren Wolk, illus. by Kristen Adam (Dutton Books for Young Readers, $18.99, 9780593407776). "A few pages into this story, I knew I would end up crying. A beautiful story based on a real house in Cape Cod that stood in the sand dunes for half a century, then was taken away by a storm. A tale of the power of mother nature and how fleeting possessions are." --Erika Patoni, Righton Books, St. Simons Island, Ga.

Ages 8-12
A Potion, a Powder, a Little Bit of Magic: Or, Like Lightning in an Umbrella Storm by Philip C. Stead (Neal Porter Books, $18.99, 9780823458097). "I enjoyed this book SO much! Clever, heartwarming, unique and captivating. And funny! I loved the goats--every single one of them. It left me wanting a personal support goat." --Patty Norman, Copperfield's Books, Sebastopol, Calif.

Ages 13+ (Indies Introduce)
Goldenborn by Ama Ofosua Lieb (Scholastic Press, $19.99, 9781546147466). "Akoma lives in a near-future AfricaTown in San Francisco and works with a secret law enforcement division to stop crimes where magic may be involved. She just wants to find out what really happened to put her father in a coma, and a sting gone wrong leads her to a mysterious stranger who may have the answers. Goldenborn is filled with lush, beautiful worldbuilding, African mythology and an Afrofuturist twist." --Fisher Nash, Carmichael's Bookstore, Louisville, Ky.

[Many thanks to IndieBound and the ABA!]


Book Review

Starred Review: Mia

Mia by Leslie Bazzett (Scribner, $29 hardcover, 320p., 9781668227329, August 11, 2026)

When an aspiring writer falls under the spell of a mysterious older woman, it sets in motion a precipitous chain of events in Leslie Bazzett's dazzling debut novel, Mia, an erotically charged suspense drama fueled by one woman's "fantasy of belonging." The narrator recounts an earlier period in her life, when she and her family temporarily relocated from their Minnesota home to a charming town in Mexico.

Sally, her architect husband, Tom, and their young children, Ida and Henry, settle into a gorgeous hillside home in San Miguel, where Tom will oversee construction of an "elaborate community aimed at wealthy Mexican and American retirees." Their house comes with a maid, María, who relieves Sally of all domestic duties. Bazzett captures the seductive novelty of being an outsider in a new town and also the insidious side of leisure, how too much of it can leave a person directionless.

Vignettes of Sally's troubled past reveal a girlhood plagued by neglect and sexual abuse. Abandoned by an unreliable mother, she has "a habit of casting around for older women." When drinking coffee with Louise, a strikingly beautiful woman in her 50s whose leg was damaged in a long-ago accident, Sally is secretly thrilled when the waiter mistakes her for Louise's daughter. Her new friend reminds her of "an old greyhound rescued from the races, its body broken but its pedigree intact." Louise, who has an enigmatic past, intuits Sally's creative desires, gifting her a beautiful notebook. And so begins an intimate bond that leads Sally down an exciting yet risky path. She craves Louise's approval even as Louise lays claims on the younger woman that are increasingly absurd.

Bazzett skillfully evokes languid, sun-drenched afternoons in San Miguel that contrast with "colorless, brutally cold" Minneapolis winters. Similarly, Mia's central character, skilled in the art of self-deception and desperate to erase a painful childhood, performs the role of perfect wife and mother until she is seduced into a wilder, freer version of herself. It is titillating for her to conceal from Tom the thrill of reinvention that he, in "his pedantic way," wouldn't understand. Sally spins elaborate lies in the "purifying sunlight" of their home, even as Louise's ambitions for not only Sally, but also Ida, take on sinister proportions.

A mesmerizing novel infused with a sense of foreboding, Mia invites readers to ponder the costs to authenticity when living in denial of the past. --Shahina Piyarali

Shelf Talker: A young wife and mother temporarily living in Mexico falls under the spell of an enigmatic older woman in this mesmerizing, erotically charged suspense drama.


Deeper Understanding

Robert Gray: ''YES, We Scream During Independent Bookshop Week'

Hardly anyone opens an independent bookshop because they're bored. It is simply too much work to start a small business out of indifference.

--Katie Clapham, Receipt from the Bookshop (June 15) 

The 20th annual Independent Bookshop Week is currently being celebrated across the U.K. and Ireland. The Booksellers Association notes that the campaign "aims to highlight the vital role independent bookshops play in their communities, and to encourage consumers to shop for their summer reads with their local independent." Nearly 800 bookshops registered to participate.

Working with headline sponsor Hachette UK, the BA lines up authors each year to act as Indie Bookshop Week ambassadors. In March, the Bookseller reported that the 2026 ambassadors would be Kit de Waal, Katriona O'Sullivan, and Katie Clapham. Worthy choices all, but I really love Clapham's inclusion because she's also a bookseller.

"As a writer, bookseller, bookshop-owner and overall bookshop enthusiast, I couldn't be more thrilled to be an ambassador," she said upon her appointment. "I truly love independent bookshops; from the chic and glossy to the humble and chaotic; each of them are important to their community and vital to our society, and all of them are completely magnificent to me."

With her mother (aka Business Mum, or BM), Clapham is co-owner of Storytellers, Inc. in Lytham St Annes, England. She is also the author of Receipts from the Bookshop: A Bookseller's Year in an English Seaside Town (to be published in the U.S. by Morrow in September), which has been "described as a love letter to bookshops. Something I'd never get tired of writing!" she observed.

The book is based on her Substack, Receipt from the Bookshop, in which she collects small yet integral--as well as highly readable--moments in a bookseller's day.

I'm a fan. I like visiting her bookshop virtually. Among the many gifts on offer, her diary entries on patrons are sharply observant and often spark comparable memories of my own bookselling years: "Cool customer is browsing in the shop in an excellent coat..."; "A lady tells me about a local poet she recently saw in Blackpool. 'He did a poem about the town, it was called Shithole.' "; "A gentleman comes in to collect a book for his wife. 'I hope I've come to the right place' he says, producing one receipt that says Storytellers, Inc., and another that is for some dry-cleaning."

There are also moments from the job ("It's Friday and I am in the bookshop and I have BEATEN the delivery man (as in I was in here first, not like, GBH."); reality checks ("I feel like this Receipt is really low on actual content from today's business but absolutely nothing is happening!"); family connections ("One of Business Mum's dramatic friends calls in to tell me he's reading my book and that he thinks his wife's shortbread has been mentioned in it. I can't deny it!"), and so much more, including, of course, book recommendations.

In her most recent post, Clapham departed from her diary format after her first Indie Bookshop Week event as an author ambassador was canceled due to low ticket sales ("I am not embarrassed to say this because I understand how difficult it is get an audience for an event, and I understand that I am not a recognized name, with zero profile outside of this small corner of the Internet.").

She deftly turned her personal disappointment into a love letter for indies and call to action for readers, noting: "Bookshops, I love you. I'm saying it straight away because it's the feeling I have the most of when I think about you. I love you. I wouldn't ever want to pick a favorite bookshop, although I know it is not mine. As much as I love owning a bookshop, it does not compare to being a customer in a bookshop. Sometimes that is a drawback of working in a bookshop--there is work to be done and people who need you; things that stop you from simply 'being in a bookshop,' which I think of as a state as close to Nirvana as we can expect on this dry, dry, dry land....

"Plenty of people had no interest in that event at all, and that's fine, but if there were enough who wanted to but just didn't, that could have been the difference between it happening and not. That's sales lost for a shop, event stock that has to be returned and a cumulative nervous weight added to the decision on whether to book the next event. Buying books works the same way; the shop has to have the support and confidence to buy new stock, to stay open. This is just another example of how supporting independent bookshops is an active choice that has to be engaged. It's the extra seconds to remember to choose independent bookshops when convenience makes it easy to do something else. It's ok to have to work at that! Maybe it's muscle memory for you by now (and I know that within my readers, it is) but for plenty of people it's a novelty and we don't want independent bookshops to be novel."

And in the Bookseller on Wednesday, Clapham observed in an Indie Bookshop Week column: "We can't be shy or apologetic about it because, as much as it pains me to say it, the non-bookish world is not talking about bookshops, independent or otherwise, very often. I know this because, sometimes, I hear people noticing my bookshop in genuine disbelief, shocked that an independent bookshop could still exist in the year of our Claude and 2020-AI, 'everything everywhere all at once.' They are slightly mystified by our entire enterprise--a shop, just for books? 'YES, we scream during Independent Bookshop Week...."

--Robert Gray, contributing editor

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