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Creating a Salon: The Magic of Conversations that Matter

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A practical and personal exploration of the transformative power of salons–in many cases, a next-level evolution of a book club—with hosting advice tailored for different goals, budgets, and personalities. 
Salons are enjoying a renaissance worldwide. More structured than a hangout or casual dinner party, and oftentimes an evolution of a successful book club, salons can spark lively discussions and help develop a joyful, intentional community. Blending focused and informed advice with heartfelt reflection, book industry professional Linda-Marie Barrett shares her experience hosting salons at her home—the lessons learned as well as the life-changing connections she discovered—and guides readers through the whats, whys, and hows of creating their own salons.
Learn how to cultivate deep conversations and authentic connection using Barrett’s clear guidelines and real-life examples, including helpful suggestions for handling even challenging scenarios. Readers will also hear directly from members of Linda-Marie’s Black Swan Salon, who share their perspectives along with advice for how to build a better salon. As a bonus, this book includes 14 salon starter kits, each on a different theme, to help readers host with confidence.

207 pages, Kindle Edition

Published September 9, 2025

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Linda-Marie Barrett

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Sarah Jensen.
2,092 reviews191 followers
June 27, 2025
Book Review: Creating a Salon: The Magic of Conversations That Matter by Linda-Marie Barrett

Linda-Marie Barrett’s Creating a Salon is a radiant manifesto for reclaiming intentional community in an age of digital detachment. As a woman interested in interpersonal communication, I was struck by how Barrett frames salon-building not as a nostalgic revival of 18th-century literary gatherings, but as a radical act of feminist space-making—one that centers vulnerability, active listening, and collective wisdom. Her personal narrative of overcoming anxiety through salon hosting resonated deeply; the passages describing her Black Swan Salon’s evolution from tentative book club to transformative sanctuary pulsed with an emotional honesty that transcends typical “how-to” guides.

What distinguishes this work is its embodied pedagogy. Barrett’s dual role as book industry professional (Executive Director of SIBA) and salon hostess allows her to merge practical logistics (theme curation, conflict navigation) with profound insights about how women, in particular, can reclaim narrative agency in communal settings. The inclusion of her salon members’ voices creates a polyphonic texture that mirrors the very dialogues she champions. As a reader, I found myself underlining her critique of performative “discussion” culture—her insistence that true salons prioritize depth over debate felt like a quiet revolution against patriarchal discourse norms.

However, the book’s strength—its personal, anecdotal approach—also reveals its limitations. While the 14 starter kits are invaluable, I longed for more rigorous engagement with critical theory about gendered speech patterns (e.g., Deborah Tannen’s work) or the racial/class privilege inherent in historical salon culture. The chapter on handling conflict, though compassionate, could benefit from trauma-informed frameworks for moderating charged discussions. Additionally, the focus on Barrett’s Asheville-based experience occasionally overlooks how socioeconomic barriers might limit salon accessibility in marginalized communities.

Strengths:

-Feminist Praxis: Reimagines salons as spaces for women’s intellectual and emotional liberation.
-Narrative Alchemy: Blends memoir, guidebook, and oral history with seamless grace.
-Actionable Wisdom: Starter kits and member testimonials offer tangible inspiration.

Critiques:

-Theoretical Gaps: Misses opportunities to anchor practices in communication scholarship.
-Inclusivity Blind Spots: Needs deeper acknowledgment of systemic barriers to participation.

Rating: ★★★★☆ (4.25/5) – A luminous, if imperfect, blueprint for cultivating conversations that heal and transform.

Thank you to Ingram Publisher Services and Edelweiss for providing a free advance copy in exchange for an honest review.

Final Thought: Barrett’s greatest gift is making salon-hosting feel both sacred and attainable. By framing dialogue as an act of joyful resistance, she invites us to build not just gatherings, but ecosystems of mutual becoming.
Profile Image for Constance.
Author 7 books79 followers
October 1, 2025
Poignant and inspirational, Creating a Salon is the kind of book that stays with you for a long time. Barrett shares deeply about her personal journey, while providing a very solid plan for how to create your own salon. It's all about meaningful gatherings, thoughtful conversations, strategies for dealing with issues that may arise, and brainstorming creative ideas to encourage meaningful connections. She even provides specific Salon-making 'kits.' This book is exactly what we all need - an antidote to feeling lonely and disconnected. And it's beautifully written, honest and thoughtful.
6 reviews
October 3, 2025
Beautifully written book for this time when we are more isolated than ever. It offers so many wonderful ideas to nurture community and ourselves!
I can’t wait for more books from Linda-Marie Barrett!
Bravissima!
Profile Image for Michael Padden.
93 reviews3 followers
November 22, 2025
This book is dynamite! A practical guide and testament to the importance of community and connection.
75 reviews
January 8, 2026
Inspiring little book, and I admire how she built her Black Swan Salon. I wish jt were a bit more skimmable and easy to dip back into as a reference.
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