New Books Publishing Today!
There is something a little magical about the day a new book officially exists in the world. After years of research, interviews, photo archives, and late nights spent chasing down the details that make a story worth telling, today is that day for a fresh batch of local history books from Arcadia Publishing. These are books about places you may have driven through a hundred times without knowing their full story, the kind of reads that make the familiar feel brand new.
Arcadia has spent decades doing one thing exceptionally well: publishing the history that national textbooks leave out. The stories of small towns, overlooked landmarks, complicated industries, and the everyday people who built communities from the ground up. Today's new releases carry on that tradition, covering corners of America that rarely make the headlines but absolutely deserve a place on your shelf. Whether your passion is architectural history, natural landmarks, military mysteries, or the cultural fabric of a region you call home, there is something in today's lineup of local history books that was written with you in mind.
New Local History Books Now Available
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the Florida sponge industry was booming—its waters attracting skilled Bahamian, Cuban, and Greek spongers to harvest the Gulf Coast’s natural treasure. From the shallow waters of Key West, where spongers used glass-bottom buckets and long hooks, to the deep-ocean dives of Tarpon Springs with heavy helmet suits, the quest for sponges created wealth, opportunity, and fierce competition.
When Greek divers introduced advanced deep-water techniques in 1905, Tarpon Springs quickly dominated the market, igniting tensions with Key West spongers over control of the lucrative trade. These escalating disputes—marked by sabotage, threats, and violent confrontations—became known as the Florida Sponge War.
Notorious Tales from Michigan's County Tales
Almost every Michigan county had a jail, and if those walls could talk, they would speak of colorful sheriffs, vigilant turnkeys, and the motley population of prisoners housed in these county-run inns. St. Joseph County's “big house on the hill” nabbed headlines as the jail that held alleged Capone triggerman Fred “Killer” Burke, known as the most dangerous man alive at the time. Teenage robber Ray Rusch slipped away from the Genesee County Jail using a handful of pepper, and Ingham County Jail suffered from numerous infamous escapes in its day. Illegal hangings perpetrated by bloodthirsty mobs stained the pages of local history in Menominee, St. Clair, Shiawassee, and numerous other counties.
Arabia Mountain National Heritage Area
Beginning 20 miles east of Atlanta, the Arabia Mountain National Heritage Area encompasses portions of DeKalb, Henry, and Rockdale Counties, with Arabia Mountain and its lunar-like landscape and the historic city of Lithonia at its heart. Dominated by two granite mountains, Arabia and Panola, the area once contained the nation’s biggest rock quarrying and chicken grit operations. Over time, these businesses, along with agrarian industries, would weave a uniquely diverse cultural tapestry that centered on family, faith, and fortitude. Some of these stories include civil rights heroes from Lithonia like Lucious Sanders and Marcia Glenn Hunter, Trappist monks in Conyers who marched with Dr. King, quarry workers at Arabia who helped build DeKalb’s first public school for Blacks, and a landscape architect who worked at the White House and helped preserve Panola Mountain.
A New Port Richey Historic Walking Tour
As the city celebrates its centennial and experiences a cultural renaissance, this book serves as the perfect companion to the Tides of Time public art installation, offering locals and tourists a deeper look into the city’s fascinating past.
With lush illustrations, archival photographs from the West Pasco Historical Society, and compelling stories of the early settlers, silent film stars, literary legends, and sports heroes who once strolled these very streets, this guidebook brings the Cotee River’s most historic neighborhood to life.
Whether you’re a lifelong resident or visiting Florida’s Gulf Coast for the first time, this book reveals the hidden gems, preserved buildings, and long-lost landmarks that shaped New Port Richey’s unique identity.
English explorer Capt. William Hilton found the island and named Hilton Head after himself in 1663. After the Civil War was over, the island was relatively dormant for almost 100 years. The biggest event of the 20th century was the installation of electricity in 1950. Soon after, tourism to the area started when the Sea Crest Motel opened in 1955. In 1956, the James F. Byrnes Bridge was built, and the first grocery store opened near Coligny Plaza. Developer Charles Fraser visualized an environmentally friendly residential community and named it Sea Pines Plantation. Sea Pines Plantation wrote its first sales contract in 1958, and Fraser’s formula has since been copied around the world. In 1969, the Heritage Classic golf tournament set the island on a path to being nationally known.
After her chicks drift off to sleep, Mother Mockingbird takes flight. From Houston to Amarillo, she visits many of the places that make Texas special. While she attends rodeos, barbecues, and honky-tonks, she thinks about her babies sleeping peacefully in their nest. She knows that we, as Texans, carry the ones we love in our hearts, no matter where we go.
Hannah Bear and Lulu's Southern Sneaux Party
The air is crisp in the Honey Hollow Woods, and the sister cubs are busy getting ready for their big winter party. Excitement is everywhere—but not for everyone. Magnolia, the newest resident of the woods, is feeling homesick and missing her favorite part of the season: sneaux! Determined to make their new friend feel welcome, Hannah and LuLu spring into action with a heartwarming plan—and one magical ingredient that could make all the difference. Will they solve the conundrum and bring a little southern sneaux magic to the celebration?
Roux has never felt so nervous. She's about to begin “kinder-swamp-garten” and she will be the only rougarou in her class. As she walks to school beneath the towering cypress trees, one by one, fellow swamp creatures join in, each one different from the next. With their help, Roux’s jitters melt into joy, and she discovers that what makes us different is also what makes us shine. Rooted in Louisiana’s rich folklore, this gentle, playful story introduces the legendary rougarou in a family-friendly way. Perfect for any little one getting ready for their own big first day, Roux’s tale is a celebration of belonging, courage, and the magic of being yourself.
If You're Looking for New Books to Read, You Found It
Every title releasing today represents years of work by authors who care deeply about the places they write about: local historians, community advocates, and passionate researchers who understood that if they didn't tell these stories, no one else would. That dedication shows on every page.
If something in today's lineup caught your eye, don't wait, scroll through the titles, grab your copy, and get reading. And if today's releases have you curious about what else is out there, browse the full Arcadia catalog to find books about your state, your city, or the slice of American history that's always fascinated you. The story of where you come from is worth knowing, and worth keeping.








