Close
post-featured-image

Start a Discussion With The Lights of Sugarberry Cove Reading Group Guide!

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 69

The Lights of Sugarberry Cove is a charming, delightful story of family, healing, love, and small town Southern charm by USA Today bestselling author Heather Webber.

Sadie Way Scott has been avoiding her family and hometown of Sugarberry Cove, Alabama, since she nearly drowned in the lake just outside her mother’s B&B. Eight years later, Sadie is the host of a much-loved show about southern cooking and family, but despite her success, she wonders why she was saved. What is she supposed to do?

Sadie’s sister, Leala Clare, is still haunted by the guilt she feels over the night her sister almost died. Now, at a crossroads in her marriage, Leala has everything she ever thought she wanted—so why is she so unhappy?

When their mother suffers a minor heart attack just before Sugarberry Cove’s famous water lantern festival, the two sisters come home to run the inn while she recovers. It’s the last place either of them wants to be, but with a little help from the inn’s quirky guests, the sisters may come to terms with their strained relationships, accept the past, and rediscover a little lake magic.

Get your book club discussion started with our reading group guide below!

Webber_Lights of Sugarberry Cove RGG (4)

Order Your Copy of The Lights of Sugarberry Cove—Available Now!

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of amazon- 4

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of bn- 38

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of booksamillion- 98

opens in a new windowibooks2 35

opens in a new windowindiebound

post-featured-image

Forge Your Own Book Club: The Lights of Sugarberry Cove by Heather Webber

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 74

By Ariana Carpentieri

Sadie Way Scott has been avoiding her family and hometown of Sugarberry Cove, Alabama, since she nearly drowned in the lake just outside her mother’s B&B. Eight years later, Sadie is the host of a much-loved show about southern cooking and family, but despite her success, she can’t help but wonder why she was saved.

Sadie’s sister, Leala Clare, is still haunted by the guilt she feels over the night her sister almost died. Now, at a crossroads in her marriage, Leala has everything she ever thought she wanted—so why is she so unhappy?

When their mother suffers a minor heart attack just before Sugarberry Cove’s famous water lantern festival, the two sisters come home to run the inn while she recovers. But in order to make it work, they have to put aside their differences and rediscover the power of a little lake magic. If you’re planning on reading this charming tale with your book club, read on for our recommendations on what beverage, food, and music you should have to accompany your discussion, as well as what to talk about and what to read next!


What to Drink:

We think a southern sweet tea would be a perfect pick to pair with this book! If you’re looking for something boozy to spice up the club, then perhaps this recipe will hit the spot:

Directions

  • Steep 8 black tea bags in 1 cup boiling water for 6 minutes
  • Discard the tea bags
  • Stir in 1 1/2 cups raw sugar and the zest of 1 lemon (in strips)
  • Let cool
  • Strain into a pitcher
  • Add 3/4 cup lemon juice, 2 cups southern comfort, 4 cups ice cubes and 1 sliced lemon
  • Stir to partially melt the ice
  • Pour into glasses and enjoy!

What to Eat:

Reading a book this sweet calls for an equally as sweet treat, and we think that a southern-style banana pudding would make the perfect pair! The author, Heather Webber, put together a delicious recipe card so that you can try making it for yourself!

Image Placeholder of - 85

What to Listen to:

This book is full of southern charm and touches of lake magic, so we think a whimsical, magical song like The Lakes by Taylor Swift would be fitting, relaxing background music for your discussion.


object

What to Discuss:

Download The Lights of Sugarberry Cove Reading Group Guide for insightful questions to get the discussion going.

Webber_Lights of Sugarberry Cove RGG (4)

What to Read Next:

If you’re looking for more stories that are perfect for summer reading, we suggest you check out Heather’s other books, opens in a new windowMidnight at the Blackbird Cafe and opens in a new windowSouth of the Buttonwood Tree! These books are also full of sweet southern charm, touches of magic, and would be excellent picks for your next book club discussion.

Order Your Copy of The Lights of Sugarberry Cove—Available Now!

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of amazon- 48

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of bn -64

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of booksamillion- 35

opens in a new windowibooks2 27

opens in a new windowindiebound

post-featured-image

Heather Webber’s Literary Guest Wish List for Sugarberry Cottage

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 14 opens in a new windowThe Lights of Sugarberry Cove is a delightful story of family, healing, love, and small town Southern charm by USA Today bestselling author Heather Webber. The book features a charming B&B called the Sugarberry Cottage, where a wide array of quirky guests come to stay. Heather shared with us the literary guests she thinks would show up at the B&B, and the stories they would make along the way.


By Heather Webber

On the shores of Lake Laurel in Sugarberry Cove, Alabama, you’ll find the Sugarberry Cottage B&B, run by proprietress Susannah Scott, who in her almost-sixty years has yet to meet a stranger. With her big heart, booming laugh, affinity for storytelling, and flair for the dramatic, her guests are never lacking entertainment as she serves up an abundance of southern charm. The following fictional guests would leave Susannah with plenty of stories to share in the future.

Literary Guest Wish List for the Sugarberry Cottage B&B

  • Jane Austen’s Mr. Bennet

With five daughters and a histrionic wife, this man needs a vacation. Of course, he’s not likely to get much rest at the Sugarberry Cottage when he realizes Susannah’s personality is a touch too similar to his wife’s. His dry, somewhat sarcastic wit will irritate Susannah, but she’ll enjoy his accent so much she’ll let it pass. He’ll spend most of his time under a sun umbrella with his nose buried in a book, trying to ignore her.

“You mistake me, my dear. I have a high respect for your nerves. They are my old friends. I have heard you mention them with consideration these twenty years at least.” –Mr. Bennet, Pride & Prejudice

 

  • Hugh Lofting’s Dr. Doolittle

Susannah will bombard Dr. Doolittle with her near-death anecdotes and pepper him with medical questions while he nods sagely and offers little advice. Other than the time he spends on the cottage’s dock, communicating with the loon that floats on Lake Laurel, he can often be found in his room with the “do not disturb” sign hung on the door knob. His self-imposed isolation is viewed by other guests as a means to escape Susannah’s attentions, however upon his departure it becomes clear that he’d been secretly harboring a vast array of animals in his room. Susannah charges him a steep cleaning fee.

“But I like the animals better than the ‘best people.” –Dr. Doolittle, The Story of Dr. Doolittle

 

  • Anne George’s Patricia Ann (Mouse) and Mary Alice (Sister)

These fun, sassy, snoopy sisters from Birmingham, Alabama, will fit right in at the Sugarberry Cottage like long-lost kin. Patricia Ann will likely fuss about Susannah’s grammar while Mary Alice tries to convince Susannah that the lake needs a floating honky-tonk. Both sisters will agree that the cottage needs a makeover. Sister suggests a vibrant color scheme while Mouse thinks neutrals will be more soothing. By the time the sisters’ stay ends, they’ve all agreed to spend Thanksgiving together, and Susannah plans to bring the brilliant honky-tonk idea before the town council.

“I looked at my sister in amazement. I swear she’s half a bubble out of plumb. In fact, if our mother and father hadn’t sworn that we’d been born at home, I’d have been willing to bet that we had been mixed up somewhere.” –Patricia Anne in Murder Shoots the Bull from the Southern Sisters mystery series

  • Janet Evanovich’s Lula

Susannah will take to Lula like a duck to water, drawn to her loud no-nonsense, bigger-than-life personality. There will be lots of laughing, watching reality TV, and eating (and drinking) their way through the best restaurants and bars in town. By the time Lula checks out of the cottage, Susannah will have ditched her sensible tunic tops in favor of tube tops, and back in New Jersey, Lula will be blessing hearts left and right.

“Lula’s a plus-size black woman in a size seven white world and Lula’s had a lot of practice at pulling attitude.” –To the Nines

 

  • Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot

If anyone has a chance at solving the mystery surrounding the Lady of the Lake it’s Hercule. Plus, everyone in Sugarberry Cove will love his accent. And his mustache. His patent leather shoes, however, might earn him a side eye or two. Susannah will regale him with tales of Lady of the Lake and turn him into a bourbon aficionado before he knows what’s what. He, of course, will have smugly known about Dr. Doolittle’s smuggled pets the whole time. However, it is Dr. Doolittle alone who knows the truth about the Lady in the Lake—because the mysterious loon told him.

“I, Hercule Poirot, am not amused.” –The Hollow

Pre-order The Lights of Sugarberry Cove—available on July 20, 2021!

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of amazon- 24

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of bn- 27

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of booksamillion- 73

opens in a new windowibooks2 41

opens in a new windowindiebound

post-featured-image

Excerpt: The Lights of Sugarberry Cove by Heather Webber

opens in a new windowamazons

opens in a new windowbns

opens in a new windowbooksamillions

opens in a new windowibooks2 47

opens in a new windowindiebounds

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 52

The Lights of Sugarberry Cove is a charming, delightful story of family, healing, love, and small town Southern charm by USA Today bestselling author Heather Webber.

Sadie Way Scott has been avoiding her family and hometown of Sugarberry Cove, Alabama, since she nearly drowned in the lake just outside her mother’s B&B. Eight years later, Sadie is the host of a much-loved show about southern cooking and family, but despite her success, she wonders why she was saved. What is she supposed to do?

Sadie’s sister, Leala Clare, is still haunted by the guilt she feels over the night her sister almost died. Now, at a crossroads in her marriage, Leala has everything she ever thought she wanted—so why is she so unhappy?

When their mother suffers a minor heart attack just before Sugarberry Cove’s famous water lantern festival, the two sisters come home to run the inn while she recovers. It’s the last place either of them wants to be, but with a little help from the inn’s quirky guests, the sisters may come to terms with their strained relationships, accept the past, and rediscover a little lake magic.

opens in a new windowThe Lights of Sugarberry Cove will be available on July 20, 2021. Please enjoy the following excerpt!


Chapter

1

Sadie

 

“Whereabouts are you from, Sadie?” Mrs. Iona Teakes asked as she deftly chopped pecans on a wooden cutting board in her sun-steeped kitchen, the summery afternoon light spilling through a bay window overlooking the Coosa River.

Across the yawning stretch of water, the main street of a small town fluttered with activity as people went about their day. Before coming to Mrs. Teakes’s charming home, I’d  stopped for lunch  at the local burger place, not only for something to appease my grumbling stomach but to also get a feel for the town. Its people. Its mood. Its potential. Its heartbeat.

I’d been looking for a place to call my home for so long now that I was beginning to think I’d never find it.

But Wetumpka, Alabama, had promise.

A revitalization initiative was in full swing, and the heart of the community was evident in the rebuilding that had taken place in the years since a tornado swept through uprooting trees, buildings, lives. Heart was my number one requirement when it came to a hometown.

“I was born and raised about an hour and a half north of here. In Shelby County.”

Curiosity burned in Mrs. Teakes’s watery eyes as her gaze shifted to my hair, then away again, but she was much too polite to ask any prying questions, for which I was grateful. I’d rather not talk about myself at all, but especially not about my hair and the circumstances of how it had come to be this particular color. My mama has often said my glittering silver tresses reminded her of starlight, as though all the stars in Alabama had fallen directly onto my head, leaving me with a sparkly crown, a stunning glow. Time and again, I’d pointed out that Alabama’s famous fallen stars had been meteorites, and if they’d crashed onto my head, I’d be dead. But Mama always argued the fact that I had died the night my hair turned color, and who was to say it hadn’t been the stars that had caused my brief death? 

It hadn’t been the stars. It had been a watery accident. But Mama wasn’t one for accepting small truths, favoring bold exaggerations instead.

Stars bested water, plain and simple.

I’d drowned that summer night nearly eight years ago in Lake Laurel, at just eighteen years old. But I’d been saved. Brought back to life. Brought back to a new life. To a new normal. All these years later, I hadn’t quite figured out who this new Sadie Way Scott was exactly. Or why I had been saved. No matter how far I ran away from my hometown of Sugarberry Cove, Alabama, that particular why haunted me, following my every move, because there had been a reason. I felt it, deep down, like a pulsing bubble of pressure that kept me searching, seeking.

“Is there anything I can do to help, Mrs. Teakes?” I needed a diversion from my thoughts or else I was bound to fall into a deep mudhole of self-pity. I’d already set up my cameras, three  in all, to frame specific shots of the homey kitchen that breathed vintage charm, which was easy to do since it hadn’t been updated in at least sixty years, possibly more. The room was painted a cheerful blue, and the scent of vanilla floated in the air, as if being exhaled by the colorful floral wallpaper that served as a backsplash. The bulbous white fridge, covered in family photos, postcards, and old newspaper clippings, hummed loudly, its long chrome handle gleaming. The wide stove with side-by-side ovens had two storage drawers at the bottom, and I could only imagine the stories it could tell of the meals it had cooked.

But those stories would have to wait. The focus of today’s video was on a dish served cold. Several small glass bowls were lined up along the ceramic tile countertop, each filled with a different ingredient. Shredded coconut. Mandarin oranges. Sour cream. Maraschino cherries. Pineapple chunks. Mini marshmallows. Once the food prep was complete, I’d be the one asking all the questions for the sake of the video, which would be posted the following week on my YouTube channel, A Southern Hankerin’.

The videos were about more than Southern cooking. At their heart were human-interest pieces featuring people across the South willing to share a family recipe and the story behind it. Last week, I’d had an in-depth preliminary phone interview with Mrs. Teakes, and today, I’d film her while she told me how, in the late 1960s, she’d captured the heart of her late husband with her recipe for ambrosia salad.

During the interview I’d be sure to mention how the South proudly labeled some desserts as salad. To those who lived here, this came as no surprise. After all, this was the land where mac and cheese was considered a vegetable. But my audience wasn’t limited to the South. I had viewership that spanned the globe, a fact that amazed me—though it shouldn’t. People tuned in for the heartwarming, relatable stories, which were needed in the world more now than ever.

Mrs. Teakes set down her knife and flexed age-spotted hands. Intelligent brown eyes, framed in an abundance of delicate wrinkles, assessed while their softness begged for more information. “Not much left to do, only these pecans to finish chopping. Whereabouts in Shelby County?”

I fussed with a camera setting that needed no adjustment. “Sugarberry Cove.”

The river water below Mrs. Teakes’s kitchen churned with happiness, white-crested rapids pushing and pulling and racing. Farther down the river, the water calmed, gradually stretching into stillness near a bridge with five arches that created circular reflections on the water’s suddenly smooth, glassy surface.

Still waters that reminded me of what used to be my home. “On Lake Laurel? How wonderful! I’ve been several times for

the water lantern festival. A lovely little town. So enchanting. Do you still live there?”

Much like the rapids, my stomach churned as I glanced at the clock on the countertop microwave, wishing time away. My gaze shifted to a tarnished brass teakettle that rested on a stove eye, then to two teacups that dangled on hooks under a golden oak cabinet, one cup having Mr. stenciled on it, the other Mrs. The former looked pristine in condition, the latter well used, well loved, with its tea-darkened interior and chipped handle. Hung askew on the wall by the fridge was a framed, stained cross-stitched cloth with the words Home Is Where Your Heart Is.

Old wounds ached at the simple words, and I turned to look out the window instead of at the phrase that haunted. Mocked.

“No, ma’am, but I still have family up that way. My older sister, her husband, and their little boy live up there. And my mother owns a bed-and-breakfast cottage on the lake and my great-uncle, who’s more like a granddaddy to me, lives and works at the cottage, too.” I bit my lip to keep from saying any more, from spilling my heart onto the cutting board next to the pecans. Why was I revealing so much?

But I knew why. The water.

I missed Sugarberry Cove. I missed my old home.

The home, the family that I’d had before the watery accident that had changed everything and everyone. Most especially me.

Mrs. Teakes picked up the knife once more. “Where do you live, Sadie?”

I turned my back to the window and on old memories. “Here and there and everywhere. I travel a lot, and I’m still looking for the right place to settle down. This seems like a nice area. Wetumpka, I mean.”

“Indeed it is. I grew up here, and I wholeheartedly recommend it.” She chopped another pecan, the sharp knife slicing nutty, brown flesh into small, pale pieces. “The water lantern festival is coming up soon, if memory serves. The weekend after next? Will you go back for that? Such a special event.”

“No, ma’am.” Truly, it was the last place on earth I wanted to be. Setting the knife down again, she faced me. Slim, graceful fingers fiddled with the top button of her pale-blue cardigan as she said, “No? The lady of the lake, Lady Laurel, might be especially generous this year, granting multiple wishes. You don’t have any

wishes to set afloat?”

The lanterns at the festival carried wishes across the lake, which came true only if Lady Laurel pulled the floating vessel from the surface of the dark water to fill her underwater home with the glowing light created by pure, heartfelt wishes.

Deep lines fanned across her cheeks as Mrs. Teakes smiled, and the warmth in her eyes pulled at my heartstrings, making me want to tell her the whole story, start to finish, about how sometimes during the water lantern festival it was important to be very careful what you wished for.

“The festival will make do without my wishes.” Faking a smile, I picked up the knife to finish chopping the pecans, etiquette be damned. The sooner I could stop talking about myself, the better.

Mrs. Teakes’s gaze slowly drifted to my hair again. “I’ve heard told several stories of Lady Laurel’s kindness, not always having to do with the lanterns. There’ve been rescues, haven’t there? Boaters? Swimmers? Didn’t she save a young woman once from drowning?”

The glimmer in her eyes made me suspect she already knew why my hair was this color. There had been a flurry of media interest after my accident, but it had died down fairly quickly, thankfully. I’d hated the attention. Everyone stared. Whispered. The doctors had been mystified by my hair but ultimately chalked up the startling change in color to a traumatic shock reaction. These days the looks my hair garnered were a sight easier to deal with because most people assumed I purposely dyed it this color. To be edgy or artsy or as a brand, to set myself apart from a zillion other online creators. But back home in Sugarberry Cove, everybody knew its true source: lake magic.

I’d been saved by Lady Laurel, the lady of the lake.

There were many days I cursed the wish I made the night I’d fallen into the water, the wish that had ultimately caused my accident and its aftermath. I’d love nothing more than to go back in time to make a different choice. But there was no going back to what used to be. It was gone, left behind in the lake after I’d been pulled out, floating away on a water lantern carrying a wish that had changed life as I knew it.

In a span of a few short weeks, I’d died, been brought back to life, dropped out of college, shattered people’s belief in me, suffered crushing heartbreak, and began drifting around the state in search of odd jobs to keep afloat until I eventually started making videos to tell other people’s stories. Now I lived out of a suitcase as I traveled the South for A Southern Hankerin’.

Why had I been saved?

Using the blade of the knife to sweep pecans from the chopping board into a glass bowl, I barely noticed as the knife bit painlessly into the side of my thumb. A spot of red blossomed instantly.

I quickly folded my fingers over the wound, pressing tightly.

Mrs. Teakes gasped and set her hand on my arm. “Oh dear. I’ll fetch a bandage.”

“No need. It’s only a nick, and I’m a quick healer.” An understatement, to be sure. “It didn’t even hurt.”

“Nonsense. I’ll be just a moment.”

As Mrs. Teakes hurried out of the room, an incoming text message vibrated the phone in the back pocket of my jeans. I pulled the phone free and saw the message was from my sister, Leala Clare.

Sadie Way, you need to come home. Mother’s okay but had a minor heart attack. She’s at Shelby Baptist.

My stomach lurched into my throat, and my hands shook as

I stared at the screen. At first I was disbelieving that my sister would text me this news, but then I remembered I’d asked her to always text before calling in case I was filming. And even in the face of something so important, she hadn’t ignored my request. Leala was nothing if not a rule follower.

“Sadie, are you all right? You’ve gone ghostly white.”

Mrs. Teakes stood before me, concern flaring in her eyes, bandage in hand.

“I’m okay, but I’m sorry, I need to go. There’s been an emergency.” I quickly gathered my cameras and notes. As I headed out the door, I said, “I’ll call to reschedule our interview.”

“Anytime, dear. Anytime.”

A few minutes later, I turned down the jazz playing on the car radio and backed carefully out of the narrow asphalt driveway. Mrs. Teakes stood on the front porch, waving, the bandage fluttering in her hand like a tiny white flag. My gaze dropped to my thumb on the steering wheel, to the spot where the knife had pierced. The wound had already disappeared, the skin as smooth as it had been before being sliced.

As I headed north toward the home I’d  barely seen in years, I couldn’t help but wish that my emotional wounds could be so easily healed as well.

Copyright © 2021 by Heather Webber

Pre-order The Lights of Sugarberry Cove—available on July 20, 2021!

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of amazon- 63

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of bn- 43

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of booksamillion- 99

opens in a new windowibooks2 9

opens in a new windowindiebound

post-featured-image

Get a Taste of Coffee with Forge

Since we’ve all been at home much more this past year, we decided to give you an insider scoop on the lives of our Forge authors through our Instagram story series, Coffee with Forge!

In case you didn’t get the chance to tune in, we’re recapping our favorite moments from each author’s take over!

Follow us on Instagram to see more Coffee with Forge next year, and click on the screenshots below to watch each author’s take over from this year.


Heather Webber made us cookies…

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 47 opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 76

…while Hank Phillipi Ryan showed off her Emmy’s and gave us the scoop on going undercover as an investigative reporter!

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 38

We met Matt Goldman’s very helpful and cute assistants, Clara and Maisie…

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -26 opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 9

…and Rachel Howzell Hall showed us her step by step writing process!

opens in a new window opens in a new window opens in a new window opens in a new window

Nathan Makaryk brought along on his busy day, showed us his favorite snack (it’s whiskey), and showed us his beautiful rendition of the Lionhearts cover.

opens in a new window opens in a new window

Alex Gilly joined us from Australia, showed us his beautiful office space, and shared some helpful apps for writers!

opens in a new window opens in a new window

Rita Woods channeled all of us by pouring her morning bowl of coffee. We’ve all been there!

opens in a new window opens in a new window

We had a special visitor from Tor Books join us: Alaya Dawn Johnson, author of Trouble the Saints! She showed us her favorite morning cookie, and introduced us to her dog Kisaantom!

opens in a new window opens in a new window

Finally, Shelley Noble showed us her many desks, and showed us her color-coded storyboard!

opens in a new window opens in a new window

 

And that’s all, folks! To watch all the past Coffee with Forge takeovers, opens in a new windowhead to our Instagram profile (@ForgeReads)!

post-featured-image

Books & Cozy Drinks that’ll Bring you Good Cheer for the End of the Year

By Ariana Carpentieri

Everyone knows that when the holidays are upon us, it also means a whole new layer of stress gets added on top of our everyday, regular busyness (and, not to mention, the extra stress of the ongoing Pandemic). But along with all the holiday madness comes something we all know and love: holiday treats and drinks! There’s nothing quite like curling up under a soft blanket near the warmth of a crackling fire with a good book in one hand and a festive drink in the other.

Get into the festive holiday spirit by pairing of our deliciously captivating books with some drinks that’ll pack a punch and warm your heart!


opens in a new windowA Dog’s Perfect Christmas by W. Bruce Cameron

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 36A Dog’s Perfect Christmas is a book about the Goss family; a family that has a hard time communicating with one another, and therefore always seem to be at odds. But they must learn how to get past their differences and bond together—and in the spirit of Christmas, no less. Since it’s a family-oriented book, This Creamy Crock Pot Hot Chocolate is perfect for serving your whole fam and drinking it together while gathered around the tree. It wouldn’t be the whole family without your faithful dog, so you can whip them up this Safe Hot Chocolate Alternative for Dogs so that they can be part of the festivities, too!

opens in a new windowThe Nemesis Manifesto by Eric Van Lustbader

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 58The Nemesis Manifesto an epic and harrowing adventure of predatory forces that are threatening the very fabric of democracy. This book is thick with intrigue, adventure, and action, which we think calls for it to be paired with an equally as thick, rich drink like spiked eggnog! This Holiday Spiked Eggnog recipe suggests to mix Amaretto liqueur with some white rum and then add a dash of nutmeg to the top to really give it that holiday cheer. 

opens in a new windowMidnight at the Blackbird Café by Heather Webber

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 72Midnight at the Blackbird Café is a captivating blend of magic, heartwarming romance, and small-town Southern charm. A book like this calls for some liquid magic! And liquid magic always has a touch of caffeine, right? Also, cafés are known for serving coffee! Try an Eggnog Coffee Latte / Eggnog Chai Latte (for the tea lovers out there), which will give you that touch of magic you’re looking for this holiday season.

opens in a new windowStay Sexy & Don’t Get Murdered by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -78Stay Sexy & Don’t Get Murdered  is Karen and Georgia’s irreverent recount of their biggest mistakes and deepest fears, reflecting on the formative life events that shaped them into two of the most followed voices in the nation today. There’s no better drink to pair with this book than Canned Wine, which we all know is Georgia’s choice of drink when taping My Favorite Murder. But if canned wine isn’t your thing, then we suggest trying a bottle of 19 Crimes Red Blend (because the name literally speaks for itself). And honestly: what would the holidays be without a little wine to liven up the night?

opens in a new windowLionhearts by Nathan Makaryk

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 86Lionhearts is a heroically riveting story of vengeance, redemption, war, and has some Game of Throne vibes. No drinks quite capture the essence of the Renaissance era quite like mead and beer, so those are necessities to pair with this book! Between this Holiday Mead Cocktail recipe or this Stout Hot Chocolate, you’ll definitely feel great tidings of comfort and joy.

opens in a new windowAn Irish Country Christmas by Patrick Taylor

opens in a new windowAn Irish Country Christmas is a cozy tale that takes place in the village of Ballybucklebo. While snow is rare in Ulsterand so are miraclesthat doesn’t mean they never happen! We feel this delightful story would go great with a drink that’s timeless and classic, like a nice Guinness and Pear Cocktail. Everything about this drink and book will warm you up from head to toe!

opens in a new windowA Resolution at Midnight by Shelley Noble

opens in a new windowRoasted chestnuts from vendor’s carts, fresh cut spruce trees lining the sidewalks, extravagant gifts, opulent dinners, carols at St Patrick’s Cathedral, a warm meal and a few minutes shelter from the cold at one of the charitable food lines . . .It’s the holidays in Gilded Age Manhattan! Set on New Year’s Eve, A Resolution at Midnight is a perfect, cozy mystery read for the holiday season. For a book this lavish, we suggest a drink that’s equally as fancy. This Holiday Spiced Mulled Wine is the perfect pair for a story as dazzling as this one!

 

And that’s a wrap! Thank you for reading, and we hope you enjoy treating yourself to these incredible reads and drinks during the upcoming holidays!

post-featured-image

Holiday Treats for Your Holiday Reads

By Julia Bergen

What we all need this holiday season is to sit down with a book and some treats. It’s socially distanced, it’s relaxing, it’s everything you need right now. But what treats go with what book? No worries, friend, we’ve thought this out so you don’t have to. Now get back to decorating that tree/cooking that turkey/ordering that Indian food/living your best pandemic life.


opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 65 opens in a new windowA Resolution at Midnight by Shelley Noble – Champagne Truffles

Even if you’re not reading A Resolution at Midnight on New Year’s Eve, you can still feel like you’re ringing in the New Year with a champagne truffle. This historical mystery is set in Gilded Age Manhattan, right during Christmas season, and Shelley Noble is ready to transport you to the streets of Old New York. Just make sure to hold your pinky out while you eat your truffles; Lady Dunbridge is an aristocrat, after all!

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 45 opens in a new windowA Dog’s Perfect Christmas by W. Bruce Cameron – Peanut Butter Cookies

Bake some for yourself, and some canine-friendly peanut butter treats for your best fluffy friend. Not only are peanut butter cookies perfect for this book because dogs love peanut butter, but also because W. Bruce Cameron books are kind of the peanut butter cookie of your bookshelf. They’re sweet without being saccharine, they’re utterly delightful, and everybody loves them. Another good holiday treat for this book, if you’re into puns, peppermint BARK.

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 16 opens in a new windowAnd Now She’s Gone by Rachel Howzell Hall – Thumbprint Cookies

Since the protagonist of And Now She’s Gone is a PI, thumbprint cookies are the perfect treat for this fast-paced mystery. While the mystery of who left the thumbprint on your cookie is already solved, the mystery of how many thumbprint cookies you’ll eat is still unfolding! You’ll need a generous plate of these, because the last thing you’ll want to do while trying to find out whether Isabel Lincoln is missing or on the run is get up for another plate of cookies.

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -29 opens in a new windowAn Irish Country Welcome by Patrick Taylor – Irish Shortbread Cookies

You’ll want an Irish treat as you immerse yourself in the village life of Ballybucklebo, where cozy stories happen 365 days a year. Preferably alongside a nice cup of tea for dipping. In this particular tale, doctor Barry Laverty and his wife Sue are anxiously awaiting their first child, while a new well-to-do fledgling doctor attempts to fit in with rough and tumble village life. That’s enough coziness to last you through 2022.

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 31 opens in a new windowSouth of the Buttonwood Tree by Heather Webber  – Pecan Pie

Pecan pie is the perfect holiday AND Southern dessert to make your reading experience perfect as you settle in to South of the Buttonwood Tree. Best served with a tall glass of sweet tea! Heather Webber perfectly creates the atmosphere of a small Southern town in Buttonwood, Alabama in this heartwarming story of magic, love, and family.

post-featured-image

Page-Turning Books with a Magical Twist

By Jennifer McClelland-Smith

Do you believe in magic? Summer is the perfect time to escape into a fun read with a magical twist. We’ve got great suggestions no matter what kind of reader you are!


opens in a new windowSouth of the Buttonwood Tree by Heather Webber

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 95Fans of Heather Webber’s book club favorite Midnight at the Blackbird Cafe can tell you, no one does a sweet Southern story with a touch of enchantment like she does. Two women at a crossroads, an abandoned baby girl, and a very special Buttonwood tree that dispenses wisdom make this another heartwarming tale you’ll want to talk about. 

opens in a new windowOther People’s Pets by R.L. Maizes

Poster Placeholder of - 28A family story unlike any you’ve ever read. What to do when you’re an animal empath with an absent mother and criminal father? Rob the houses of pets whose maladies you can sense, naturally! Equal parts quirky and heartwarming, this book explores the very meaning of family and what we choose to hold on to or let go of. 

 

opens in a new windowEmpire of Lies by Raymond Khoury

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 41Thriller fans will not be able to put down Raymond Khoury’s gripping adventure, which dashes across continents and centuries. It’s Paris in 2017: The Ottoman Empire was never defeated in 1683, and Islamic Europe is on the brink of war with the Christian Republic of America. Does a mysterious stranger who appears on the banks of the Seine have all the answers? An international thriller powered by time travel and alternate history, it’s a book that makes you see the world differently.

opens in a new windowOr What You Will by Jo Walton

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -17Get ready for a real mind-bender. In this unforgettable novel, the main character is a character–no, really. He’s a character in the mind of Sylvia, an award-winning author who is nearing the end of her life. He’s been a scholar, a warrior, a lover, and a thief…now all he wants to do is survive. Will he convince her to take the ultimate risk and jump into immortality?  

opens in a new windowRemembrance by Rita Woods

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 26Another compelling read that challenges the limits of time and space. Sweeping from Haiti in 1791 to New Orleans in 1857 to modern-day Ohio, this haunting novel tells the story of a safe haven on the Underground Railroad, the powerful thread that links generations and the magic women conjure when trying to protect their own. Fans of historical fiction and speculative fiction will not be let down by this utterly unique novel.

post-featured-image

Start a Discussion With the South of the Buttonwood Tree Reading Group Guide

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 8USA Today bestselling author Heather Webber’s  opens in a new windowSouth of the Buttonwood Tree is a captivating blend of magical realism, heartwarming romance, and small-town Southern charm.

Blue Bishop has a knack for finding lost things. While growing up in charming small-town Buttonwood, Alabama, she’s happened across lost wallets, jewelry, pets, her wandering neighbor, and sometimes, trouble. No one is more surprised than Blue, however, when she comes across an abandoned newborn baby in the woods, just south of a very special buttonwood tree.

Sarah Grace Landreneau Fulton is at a crossroads. She has always tried so hard to do the right thing, but her own mother would disown her if she ever learned half of Sarah Grace’s secrets.

The unexpected discovery of the newborn baby girl will alter Blue’s and Sarah Grace’s lives forever. Both women must fight for what they truly want in life and for who they love. In doing so, they uncover long-held secrets that reveal exactly who they really are—and what they’re willing to sacrifice in the name of family.

South of the Buttonwood Tree RGG

Order a Copy of South of the Buttonwood Tree

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of amazon- 12 opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of bn- 38 opens in a new windowPlaceholder of booksamillion -25 opens in a new windowibooks2 86 opens in a new windowindiebound

post-featured-image

Listen to the South of the Buttonwood Tree playlist!

opens in a new windowamazons opens in a new windowbns opens in a new windowbooksamillions opens in a new windowibooks2 7 opens in a new windowindiebounds

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 7

Heather Webber, USA Today bestselling author of opens in a new windowMidnight at the Blackbird Café and the upcoming  opens in a new windowSouth of the Buttonwood Treetakes a lot of inspiration from music while she’s writing.

To celebrate the upcoming release of  South of the Buttonwood Tree, Heather is back with another curated Spotify playlist for your listening enjoyment! Grab yourself a cup of tea and get ready to be transported to the charming, small-town Buttonwood, Alabama.

opens in a new windowIf you need more bookish inspired playlists to pass the time, revisit our playlist based on Midnight at the Blackbird Café here!

video soruce

Order Your Copy:

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of amazon -30 opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of bn- 22 opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of booksamillion- 41 opens in a new windowibooks2 20 opens in a new windowindiebound

The owner of this website has made a commitment to accessibility and inclusion, please report any problems that you encounter using the contact form on this website. This site uses the WP ADA Compliance Check plugin to enhance accessibility.