November Indie Next List
About Blog Post
Nov 1, 2024
by SCLSNJ Staff
November Indie Next List
Borrowed by Yvonne Selander, collection development librarian
Every month the American Booksellers Association, an organization of independent booksellers, puts together the IndieNext list. I am a HUGE fan of its lists having found many new (and now favorite) authors, great books for discussion, and books that are just darn good. Maybe you’ll find your next great read here?
- No. 1 Pick: “Lost and Lassoed” by Lyla Sage
- “The Author’s Guide to Murder” by Beatriz Williams, Lauren Willig, Karen White
- “Blood Over Bright Haven” by M.L. Wang
- “Blood Test: A Comedy” by Charles Baxter
- “The Bloodless Princes” by Charlotte Bond
- “The Blue Hour” by Paula Hawkins
- “Blue Light Hours” by Bruna Dantas Lobato
- “Didion and Babitz” by Lili Anolik
- “Every Valley: The Desperate Lives and Troubled Times That Made Handel’s Messiah” by Charles King
- “Everyone This Christmas Has a Secret: A Festive Mystery” by Benjamin Stevenson
- “Forest of Noise: Poems” by Mosab Abu Toha
- “How Does That Make You Feel, Magda Eklund?” by Anna Montague
- “If I Stopped Haunting You” by Colby Wilkens
- “An Image of My Name Enters America: Essays” by Lucy Ives
- “Libby Lost and Found” by Stephanie Booth
- “Like Mother, Like Mother” by Susan Rieger
- “Lowest Common Denominator” by Pirkko Saisio, Mia Spangenberg (Transl.)
- “Masquerade” by Mike Fu
- “Metal From Heaven” by August Clarke
- “Pony Confidential” by Christina Lynch
- “Servant of Earth” by Sarah Hawley
- “The Teller of Small Fortunes” by Julie Leong
- “This Will Be Fun” by E.B. Asher
- “Vanishing Treasures: A Bestiary of Extraordinary Endangered Creatures” by Katherine Rundell
- “What the Chicken Knows: A New Appreciation of the World’s Most Familiar Bird” by Sy Montgomery