If you’re ever in the small rural county in Georgia where I live, you might find yourself at one of the two traffic lights we have, right along the courthouse square. You’d look at the historic buildings lining the square and wonder about the curious little shops and what all goes on inside once you stood back long enough to take note of the intricate patterns in the old brick facades. There’s a bank, a couple of hair salons, a coffee shop, a donut shop, a few boutiques, a couple of restaurants (every small town in Georgia must have a good barbecue joint), a dentist and an optician’s office, a realty office, a mercantile, a Chamber of Commerce office, and…….{drumroll, please}………my favorite: a bookstore, A Novel Experience. Click here to check it out.
It’s not just another familiar bookstore. This one is magical, with its historic interior brick walls with rustic plaster repairs, a creaky wooden floor, a refrigerator where you can have a free water if you need one (there is wine in there, too, and a coffee bar), a circle of eccentric mismatched comfy chairs by the back door so you can sit and talk or write or knit or….just sit, and the most amazing lineup of books for the monthly book clubs. They have a few different clubs, too, which meet at different times and focus on different interests so that there is a club for everyone.
I got there on their first day of business in 2025, and I saw that they had their books already chosen from their last meeting of 2024. They’ll create cards that readers can take to put on their refrigerators to remind them of which book is scheduled for which club for which month, but I took a snapshot or two of the “rough draft” of the lineup with the cards that tell what the books will be. Some of them have not even come in yet.
This is the place I go when I need the calm reassurance that there is still peace to be found in a place other than my own home. I swear, I think they have some kind of essential oil that is called stress-free small-town down-home-rooted belonging or something. Every bit of hurried pace disappears right when you walk in. Of course, I’ve lived here long enough to know all who work there, and this shop is one of several places that still greet customers by first name. It thrills me when I walk in and Karen throws her hands up and says, “Hi, Kim!” Chris does, too, and they stop to talk to their customers with sincere interest in what is happening in our busy lives.
What are you reading this year? I’ve started the year with Rosamunde Pilcher’s book Winter Solstice, but I’ve already cheated and delved into the movie. I finished The Beautiful and the Wild over the break just as the year turned, and we’ll have our office book club to discuss that one January 21. I started James, and I’m halfway finished. If you have any recommendations, please share. I tend to prefer nonfiction that reads like fiction or that spotlights travel or nature in some fresh and unexpected way. Sy Montgomery is always, always a favorite. I’m looking for a few readers who can recommend some amazing reads, and I hope you’ll be one of them!
If you’re ever here, call me and I’ll run right down to the shop and meet you for coffee or wine and book talk, ’cause that’s how we do things in small towns here in Georgia.
our local bookstore
announced its monthly choices
for each reading club



I wrote all about books today, too, Kim. James is one of the best, but I can’t say enough about Beautyland. (I’m recommending it during our yearly book club selection retreat later this month.) Let me know what you think if you read it. Your book store sounds like the kind of oasis that makes me happy.
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Trish,
I’m glad I saw your comment. I haven’t read Beautyland but will put it on my TBR.
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Glenda, I’ve read the three you mentioned and appreciated each of them for different reasons. This community has a wide-ranging reading life.
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Trish, I’m going to add this to my list. Thank you SO much for sharing a book. I love reading what fellow bloggers recommend. I appreciate your kind words.
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Kim,
This sounds idyllic, like a Hallmark movie. I read “A Well-Trained Wife: My Escape from Christian Patriarchy,” which is excellent memoir. I also read “Wandering Stars,” also superb, and I’m close to finishing “Anita De Monte Laughs Last,” which is a novel that challenges western ideals of art. I’ll be hiding and reading a lot the next four years.
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Glenda, I understand. Thank you for sharing book recommendations with me! I love reading what my friends are reading – – it makes me feel like we are sharing the same space in the world of literature. That first book – – – yes, I want to read that one for sure.
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My mind is spinning with books, but I’m not sure I have just the right recommendation for you (though I, too, love Sy Montgomery). I think I’m distracted by your gorgeous description of the bookstore – makes me dream of being there. Sigh.
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Amanda, thank you for reading. I’m glad we share a love of Sy. She transports me to a world I love. Come to Georgia and visit the bookstore!
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Kim, forgive the delayed response! One of these days I hope to see that bookstore you describe with such affection that I feel I already know it. If ever I do, and you meet me there, it will be A Novel Experience FOR SURE. Maybe An Epic Experience! Now, as for a book recommendation: Not so long ago I read Something in the Woods Loves You by Jarrod K. Anderson. The title alone drew me. It’s about the author’s discovery of healing power in nature with herons, hawks, trees, and so much more. He’s frank about his battles with depression/mental illness and his experiences, his stories, are rich. That’s my plug! Oh and you know how much I love Sy. Sigh, lol. As always you and I speak the same language, sing the same song, share the same lens and so often the same heart. In a word – joy!
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