Stories rooted in Appalachia and the broader American South often center on place as much as plot — where landscape, family history and community expectations shape every choice a character makes. These narratives explore the tension between leaving and staying, the weight of generational memory and the complicated bonds that tie people to home.

Lost in the Holler by Michael West
A Southern Gothic family saga that unfolds like a nesting doll, this atmospheric mystery follows RJ Burnette as he leaves behind his hollow New York career and returns to his Appalachian hometown. There, he uncovers long-buried family secrets and a decades-old murder hidden beneath a culture of loyalty and silence. Rich with mountain life and moral complexity, this slow-burn story explores identity, memory, justice and the suffocating power of home.

Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens
In a quiet North Carolina coastal town, rumors swirl around Kya Clark, the mysterious “Marsh Girl,” when a local man is found dead. But Kya is more than gossip suggests—she is a resilient, sensitive young woman raised by the marsh that sustains her. As she longs for love and connection, suspicion tightens around her. This lyrical novel blends coming-of-age, nature writing and murder mystery into a haunting exploration of isolation and belonging.

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
Set in the racially divided American South, this enduring classic follows young Scout Finch as she witnesses her father, a principled small-town lawyer, defend a Black man falsely accused of a terrible crime. Through a child’s observant eyes, the novel explores moral courage, injustice, compassion and loss of innocence. Both tender and unflinching, it remains a powerful coming-of-age story about confronting prejudice and choosing integrity.

Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver
Set in southern Appalachia, this powerful coming-of-age novel follows a boy born to a teenage mother in a trailer with little beyond his wit and fierce will to survive. Narrated in his sharp, unflinching voice, he navigates foster care, poverty, addiction, love and loss. Inspired by Dickens, the story reimagines a classic for modern America, illuminating resilience, injustice and the struggle to be seen in a forgotten rural world.

Our Southern Highlanders by Horace Kephart

The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek by Kim Michele Richardson
