惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

E
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
月光博客
月光博客
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
爱范儿
爱范儿
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
罗磊的独立博客
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
Jina AI
Jina AI
V
V2EX
博客园 - Franky
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
博客园 - 叶小钗
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
博客园_首页
P
Proofpoint News Feed
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
李成银的技术随笔
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
IT之家
IT之家
Latest news
Latest news
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
博客园 - 【当耐特】
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
P
Privacy International News Feed
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
小众软件
小众软件
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
F
Full Disclosure
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
P
Proofpoint News Feed
G
Google Developers Blog
博客园 - 聂微东
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
The Cloudflare Blog
T
ThreatConnect
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA

Vogue

The 8 Best Dressed Stars From the 2026 Cannes Film Festival Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Take Tips From Kylie and Timothée’s Courtside Style From the Archives: The Romantic Englishwoman, Helena Bonham Carter The Very Best Travel Sneakers, According to Vogue Editors 12 of the Best ’90s Movies to Lose Yourself in This Weekend Beauty Marks: The Best Beauty Looks of the Week All the Winners From Cannes 2026 2026 Palme d’Or Winner ‘Fjord,’ Starring Renate Reinsve, Is a Gripping, Urgent Watch Miley Cyrus Celebrates Her Hollywood Walk of Fame Star in a ‘Fierce and Fabulous’ Naked Dress American Ballet Theatre’s Stylish Spring Gala Honored Katie Holmes A History of Kristen Stewart’s Rebellious Red Carpet Sneakers Anya Taylor-Joy Presents Naked Dressing’s Next Stage: The Naked Shoe Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Navigate a Fashion Minimalist-Maximalist Relationship How to Beat a Wet Memorial Day? Don’t Forget to Pack a Trench School Drop-Offs, Coppélia, and Other Final Acts for Retiring Ballerina Megan Fairchild I Saw 24 Movies at the 2026 Cannes Film Festival. These Five Were the Best Gnome More Rules: A Day at Chelsea Flower Show With the Unbanned Garden Gnomes 9 Summer Sneaker Outfits to Wear All Season Long Peptide Lip Liners Are Quietly Taking Over For Men, It’s Going to Be a Big Shorts Summer A Beginner’s Guide to Undetectable Men’s Makeup Poppy Liu on the Fashion, Fun, and Anti-Capitalist Heart of ‘I Love Boosters’ Jordyn Woods Has Pretty Much Perfected Her Knicks Game-Day Routine These Iconic Resortwear Labels Have Defined Summer Style for Decades—And You Can Still Shop Them How to Use Earthy Color Palettes to Make Your Home a Calm, Cozy Retreat The Real Budgets of Vogue Weddings Lanvin’s Peter Copping on the Enduring Appeal of the 1920s Renate Reinsve and Stellan Skarsgård Know the Sentimental Value of Sharing Clothes These Rarely-Seen Photos of Marilyn Monroe Capture Her Remarkable Relationship With the Camera 24 Best Weekender Bags for Women in 2026 The Vogue Awards—2026 Cannes Film Festival Edition Collagen or Biotin for Hair Growth: Which Is Better? Princess Diana’s Iconic Icy Blue Dress Lives on at the 2026 Cannes Film Festival Lessons from the Vogue Business Global Summit: Chantilly Not Even Timothée Chalamet Can Resist the Siren Song of Mini Uggs. Shein Finally Confirms Everlane Sale Radiant Cut Engagement Rings: What to Know About the Sparkling Stone Behind the scenes at the Vogue Business Global Summit: Chantilly How Celebrities Style Burberry’s Iconic Check Print Missoni Group Completes Ownership Restructure Has Demi Moore Finally Chopped Her Famous Hair? Richemont Jewelry Sales Rise 16% in Q4 The Vogue-Approved Guide to the Best Memorial Day Clothing Sales The Paris Fashion Week Men’s Calendar for Spring 2027 Is Here My Packing Style: Brother Vellies Founder Aurora James ‘Tuner’ Star Leo Woodall Is Just Cracking On Harry Styles Wears a Zoë Kravitz Fave for a Night Out With Rosalía Upscale Deodorant Brand To My Ships Smells the Future The Scoop With Gab Waller: Working on Her First Book About Sourcing Charli xcx’s “SS26” Music Video Is a Who’s Who of the Fashion Industry Five of the Most Memorable Moments on ‘The Late Show With Stephen Colbert’ Here’s Everything Coming to Netflix in June 2026 Can Brand Management Groups Be… a Good Thing for Luxury? Merger No More: Puig and The Estée Lauder Companies End Talks ‘Emily in Paris’ Season 6 Will Be Its Last Lizzo Just Wore a Nipple Necklace in Cannes We Shopped Bad Bunny’s Zara Collection Before Anyone Else—Here’s What We Bought Léa Seydoux on Her Cannes Fashion, Best Red Carpet Tip, and Friendship With Adèle Exarchopoulos Khaite Handbags 101: A Close Look at Their Most-Wanted Styles, From the Olivia to the Lotus 20+ Best Jeans for Women (at Every Price): Denim to Shop in 2026 The Gordon Parks Foundation Made History at its 20th Anniversary Gala 4 Key Takeaways From the 2026 Cannes Film Festival Rising Star Anna Lambe Documents Her First Fashion Show Ella Bright and Belmont Cameli Talk ‘Summer House’ and Sleep Avoidance in the Latest ‘Off the Cuff’ Ralph Lauren Beats Expectations on 12% Revenue Rise MENA Panorama: A Regional Open Call by PhotoVogue Three's a Trend: Gucci, Dior, and Louis Vuitton Lean Deeply Into Art for Their Resort Collections Chiffon Nails Are The New Celebrity Go-To The 8 Medium-Length Hairstyles Women Over 50, As Seen on Celebrities The Mind-Expanding Power of Trying Something New How a 1984 Keith Haring-Graffitied Suitcase Inspired Louis Vuitton’s Resort 2027 Collection On the Podcast: Nicolas Ghesquière on His Women Collaborators, the Advice Jean Paul Gaultier Gave Him, and the Enduring Attraction of NYC Best Bedding 2026: Shop Our Favorite Sheets, Shams, and More Margot Robbie Meets ‘1536’ Writer Ava Pickett Katie Holmes Saw the Peplum Comeback and Did It Her Way Zendaya Loved Louis Vuitton Resort 2027 So Much, She Left Wearing It Nara Smith Cooks Herself up a New Hair Color Harris Tapper Hits the US Forget Euro Summer. Brands Are Having a Wet, Hot American Summer Thailand Honeymoon Guide: How to Plan the Perfect Romantic Trip All the Cool Girls Came Out to Welcome Harris Tapper to Moda Operandi For Calvin Klein and Maxfield, a Very L.A. Love Story Every World Cup Song Since 1990, Ranked Louis Vuitton Resort 2027 Collection 10 Stylish Summer Weekend Getaways From NYC Can This Spray Tan Fix Me? Roberto Cavalli to be Acquired by Marquee Brands Blurred Skin: This Soft-Focus Makeup Trend Suits Every Skin Type and Texture Textile Art Is Having a Moment—Here’s How to Style it Like an Interior Designer Mature Style Steals the Spotlight at the 2026 Cannes Film Festival Will This Be My Cher Summer? Supply Chain: Shein, Everlane and the Power of Owning Your Supply Chain Bella Hadid Isn’t Letting Cannes’ No-Nudity Rule Stop Her Google Just Changed How We’re Going to Shop Bella Hadid Continues Her High-Octane Vintage Streak in Cannes Olivia Wilde Keeps Boho Nostalgia Alive Meet the Vogue & Condé Nast PhotoVogue Committee What You Need to Know About the Australian Fashion Week Resort 2027 Collections Mahaut Drama by Anaïs Kugel Saint Laurent Pre-Fall 2026 Collection
37 of the Best Beach Reads to Lose Yourself in This Summer
Chloe Schama · 2026-05-24 · via Vogue

best beach reads

What makes a book rank among the best beach reads of all time? A book that keeps you glued to its pages while the ocean beckons.Photo: Getty Images

What makes a book one of the best beach reads of all time? Is it the bright colors on the cover? A picture of a bathing-suit clad body, sitting in on the beach? Similar to “chick-lit,” the label implies an un-seriousness that belies the utter joy of the beach reads we’ve gathered below: an unconventional but supremely thoughtful—thanks to help from Zibby Owens of Zibby’s Bookshop in Santa Monica and Briana Parker, co-owner of Lofty Pigeon Books in Brooklyn—list of books that are genuinely, fantastically engrossing. After all, that is the true marker of a beach read, a book that can thoroughly transport you, even if you’re sitting already in an idyllic setting. As we look forward to the official start of summer, here are some books—new and old—that we think fit the bill.

Bad Summer People by Emma Rosenblum

Bad Summer People

Emma Rosenblum's Bad Summer People is set on New York’s Upper East Side and Fire Island—and very much filled with the milieu you’d expect: dads who speak in financial terms even when they’re discussing their wives’ performance on the slopes of Aspen, moms whose ability to express genuine emotion is limited by how much time has passed since they last had their Botox touchup. It’s a novel of family and romantic foibles, with a murder mystery thrown in to boot—juicy in more ways than one. And if you like this one, Rosenblum has another installment (Very Bad Company) in the “bad people” canon out this year. —Chloe Schama

The Beach by Alex Garland

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Person, Advertisement, Poster, and Novel

The Beach

This 1996 classic—which follows a young backpacker’s search for a secret yet legendary island paradise untouched by Thailand’s many tourists—is largely responsible for at least two generations hoping to do exactly the same thing. There’s a high chance you’ve already seen the 2000 Danny Boyle film adaptation starring a young Leonardo DiCaprio, but if not, then read this first. —Daisy Jones

Beautiful Ruins by Jess Walter

Image may contain: Book, Publication, and Novel

Beautiful Ruins: A Novel

Okay, this one does have a classic summerscape on the cover, specifically, Cinque Terre, the five Italian villages, linked by hiking trails on the Ligurian Coast, which is the setting for Jess Walter’s sunniest, most glamorous novel. (I’ve been a fan of his gritty, realist, Pacific Coast–set fiction for decades, but this shimmering novel is in a different and delightful register.) The novel circles the filming of the 1963 film Cleopatra starring Elizabeth Taylor, animating the (real-life) romance that emerged from that film between Taylor and her costar Richard Burton. Even if this kind of high Hollywood romance doesn’t seem like your cup of tea, this book has a magnetic, transporting appeal that completely consumed me when I first read it. Highly recommended for your summer reading, whatever coastal landscape you’re visiting. —C.S.

Beautiful World, Where Are You by Sally Rooney

Image may contain: Jack Kamen, Book, Publication, Novel, and Person

Beautiful World, Where Are You: A Novel

Probably Sally Rooney’s most hopeful novel, though still tinged with her trademark melancholy, Beautiful World Where Are You follows two separate love stories but the heart of it is the friendship and philosophical missives exchanged between the two protagonists. Or as my friend described it, “Ireland, existentialism, and hotness!” What more could you ask for? (Also of note: It is probably the beachiest of Rooney’s books, even if the sandscapes are of the slightly chilly Irish variety.) —Briana Parker, co-owner, Lofty Pigeon Books

Bonjour Tristesse by François Sagan

Image may contain: Clothing, Footwear, Shoe, Book, Publication, Person, Advertisement, Poster, Face, and Head

Bonjour Tristesse

When it was published 70 years ago, François Sagan’s novel was both celebrated and deemed immoral. Bonjour Tristesse tells the story of Cécile, a teenage girl summering in the south of France with her libertine father. While her dad is caught in something of a love triangle between his younger girlfriend and the friend of a deceased wife, Cécile is pursuing her own love interests with an older law student. Suffused in the “haze of high summer,” as the Guardian put it in a 60th-anniversary appreciation, the story indulges the senses while enveloping you in delectably complex romantic dynamics. (Sagan, who plucked her pseudonym from Proust, wrote the book when she was a teen herself.) A slim book, you could arguably read the entire thing in a single, sun-soaked day. For years, I carried around a journal with a quote inscribed: “I lay full length on the sand, took up a handful and let it run through my fingers in soft yellow streams. I told myself that it ran out like time. It was an idle thought, and it was pleasant to have idle thoughts, for it was summer.” A beach read if ever there was one. —C.S.

Call Me By Your Name by André Aciman

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Novel, and Person

Call Me By Your Name

Did you know that before Timothée Chalamet did unspeakable things to a peach, Call Me by Your Name was just a glorious coming-of-age novel written by Italian-American writer André Aciman? Released in 2007 but set in the 1980s, Call Me by Your Name follows a teenage boy, Elio, embarking on an age-gap romance with a guest at his parents’ cliffside mansion on the Italian Riviera. I don’t know what it is about books set in Italy, but this one will transport you right to the glittering, rugged, color-splashed coastal strip. —D.J.

Case Histories by Kate Atkinson

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Novel, Bicycle, Transportation, Vehicle, Machine, Wheel, Architecture, and Building

Case Histories

Kate Atkinson has gained fame in recent years for her sometimes experimental historical fiction, but I first fell in love with this author when I read my first Jackson Brodie novel. I’m a sucker for a mystery story that is really more of a social-realist drama, and this series about a Edinburgh-based detective checks the boxes, providing a loving depiction of Scottish society while also dispatching the detective to explain some of the iniquities at its core. In a review of her more recent work, a New Yorker piece described this series (there, are—joyfully—sever Brodie novels) as “ strictly rooted in pleasure,” and I agree. —C.S.

Close to Home by Michael Magee

Image may contain: Body Part, Mouth, Person, Teeth, Head, Face, Happy, Smile, and Laughing

Close to Home

Sean is home—back to West Belfast. Where the embers of the Troubles are said to be stilled, yet lives of family and mates stagnate in poverty, addiction, and trauma. He had done everything right: He worked hard and got into college in England. But there’s no jobs for English graduates—no jobs at all—and his split-second decision to punch another guy at a party propels life elsewhere. While dealing with such heaviness—and via casual violence, keys of coke, days-long comedowns, and happy hardcore tunes—Magee’s debut is gripping, immersive, and bold, deft in how he captures the oppressive social conditions that bind his characters, their dark humor, and fierce, complex love for each other. I didn’t want to leave Sean, Mairéad, or the others in Twinbrook. —Anna Cafolla

The Color of Water: A Black Man’s Tribute to His White Mother by James McBride

Image may contain: Advertisement, Poster, Business Card, Paper, Text, Animal, and Bird

The Color of Water: A Black Man's Tribute to His White Mother

James McBride’s story is the ultimate gift to mothers. In his masterful prose, he shares the story of his mother’s life and how he grew up in poverty, one of 12 children raised in Brooklyn’s Red Hook neighborhood. Though she fled persecution and the pogroms Poland in 1921, settling in Virginia before making her way to New York, where she married a Black minister, Ruth McBride Jordan refused to admit she was white—claiming instead to be “light-skinned.” McBride layers his own experiences upon those of his mother in this beautiful, heartfelt story about love, identity, and home. —Zibby Owens

Consider Yourself Kissed by Jessica Stanley

Image may contain: Animal, Bird, Jay, Book, Publication, and Advertisement

Consider Yourself Kissed: A Novel

This just-released novel is a pitch-perfect love-story-that’s-not-a-romance. It covers a decade of Aussie Coralie’s life in the UK, from meeting her eventual partner through all the ups and downs of their lives, loves, and family, all set against the backdrop of the tumultuous period of British politics from Brexit through the pandemic. It has a cast of fully realized, imperfect but relatable characters and infuses its unflinching look at the burdens of womanhood with warmth, compassion, and humor (get ready to laugh out loud!). —B.P.

Death Valley by Melissa Broder

Image may contain: Book, Publication, and Plant

Death Valley

Every single one of Melissa Broder’s books is completely different and quite batshit. She’s an excellent writer: The Pisces made me laugh out loud multiple times; Milk Fed had me thinking about it for weeks; and Death Valley, released in 2023, is like nothing I’ve read before. Possibly autofictional, Death Valley follows an LA writer attempting to seek creative inspiration in a desert town. Imaginative and surreal, Death Valley will relate to anyone searching for themselves. —D.J.

Evenings and Weekends by Oisín McKenna

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Novel, and Person

Evenings and Weekends

If you’re a 30-something Londoner just trying to make the right choices, prepare to feel extremely seen by Oisín McKenna’s propulsive and incredibly vivid Evenings and Weekends, released back in 2024. Following multiple interlinked characters over one sweat-soaked London summer, McKenna deftly explores themes of belonging, becoming, and how our inner lives interact with the facades we present to the world. It’s also mostly set around London Fields and Dalston, which is fun if you’re familiar with those areas. —D.J.

Famesick by Lena Dunham

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Clothing, Footwear, Shoe, Adult, Person, and Hosiery

Lena Dunham

Famesick: A Memoir

The only reason you might not have read Lena Dunham’s best-selling second memoir Famesick yet is because you’re saving it for vacation, to which I say: excellent idea. It’s the sort of book you’ll try to slow your reading down for, lest you gobble it up too quickly. Beautifully written and spiked with Dunham’s recognizable humor, Famesick is a story of fame, chronic illness, complex friendships, inadvisable romances, and making a defining piece of art when everything else feels like it’s falling apart. Unmissable! —D.J.

Free Food for Millionaires by Min Jin Lee

Image may contain: Advertisement, Poster, Person, Clothing, Hat, Adult, Face, and Head

Free Food for Millionaires

Casey Han is a young Korean American woman navigating filial, romantic, and professional responsibilities as she tries to find her place between her immigrant family in Queens and the rarified Manhattan society she lands in after graduating from Princeton in Free Food for Millionaires. Min Jin Lee (also the author of Pachinko) called her first book an “emotionally accurate autobiographical novel,” and the effortless prose and immediacy of the story belies the decade Lee spent working on it. Despite the differing subject matter, similar to her later Pachinko you’ll find yourself unable and unwilling to leave the compelling characters or the story behind even 500+ pages in. —B.P.

Getting Lost by Annie Ernaux

Image may contain: Annie Ernaux, Advertisement, Poster, Adult, Person, Clothing, Coat, Face, Head, Photography, and Portrait

Getting Lost

In Getting Lost, we find French Nobel prize winner Annie Ernaux in the passion-fraught, soul-absorbing affair she’s having with a Russian diplomat. Keeping a diary across a year and a half of her trysts with this younger married man, Ernaux writes intoxicatingly: Of teenage-like kisses and scorching sex multiple times an hour, bare skin as worship and resurrection. And then, of those long, torrid times where she is alone, gored by her own desires. While Ernaux fictionalized the same affair in her other book, Simple Passion, Getting Lost brings us closer to her oblivion. And, fantastic lines like such: “I realized that I’d lost a contact lens. I found it on his penis.” —A.C.

Ghosts by Dolly Alderton

Image may contain: Advertisement, Poster, Art, Floral Design, Graphics, Pattern, Flower, Petal, Plant, and Flower Arrangement

Ghosts

The action in Ghosts, an astonishingly assured debut from the journalist Dolly Alderton, takes place after Nina George Dean turns 32. She’s a food writer with a London flat that she adores (not least because she owns it), a second book mere moments from going to press, two well-meaning parents in the suburbs, and a wide circle of close friends, including an ex with whom she’s stayed unproblematically close. When Nina meets the doting and superhero-handsome Max through a dating app—the culture surrounding which Alderton renders in all its mortifying (and hilarious) inanity—she can’t believe her luck. But her house of cards soon starts to cave in. True to its title, Ghosts teems with them—the shades of past loves and old selves, especially—besides interrogating the Internet-era phenomenon of being “ghosted,” and resorting to stalking a man’s LinkedIn profile for signs of life. Deftly observed and deeply funny, Ghosts considers where we find, and how we hold onto love with what might well be described as haunting precision. —Marley Marius

I Want You More by Swan Huntley

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Advertisement, Food, and Ketchup

I Want You More

Think War of the Roses meets Single White Female—LGBTQ+ edition. This East Hampton–based novel shows what happens when a ghostwriter is asked to spend the summer living with a celebrity chef who wants to write a memoir, and what happens when their identities merge. Dark, bitterly funny, and a peek inside not only the lives of the rich and famous but the role of the ghostwriter, I Want You More (which will be published May 21) will be the book on everyone’s beach towels this summer. Just watch who rubs lotion onto your back. A juicy read. —Z.O.

I Want You to Be Happy by Jem Calder

Image may contain: Advertisement, Book, Publication, Poster, and Paper

I Want You to Be Happy

British Vogue’s fashion writer Olivia Allen, upon reading Jem Calder’s much-hyped new novel I Want You To Be Happy, remarked, “I have never had an original experience.” Indeed, you’ll likely recognize the world of this sort-of romance, which is one of, as the cover suggests, natural wine, overnight oats, overdraft alerts, small plates, Nalgene water bottles, and rental bikes. The book follows Chuck and Joey, who are in their mid-30s and early-20s respectively, as they attempt to find meaning and connection in modern times that often lack both. Not one for escapism, perhaps, but an enjoyable holiday read nonetheless. —D.J.

In the Woods by Tana French

Image may contain: Book, Publication, and Novel

In the Woods

You could do worse than making your way through the entire Dublin Murder Squad series, the set of novels about an Irish police force that established Tana French as the thinking person’s mystery writer, but maybe start here, with her debut. French writes a kind of psychological Irish noir, sidling up to darker episodes of history writ large and small, all while keeping the plot churning in the present. As Hillary Kelly put it in an essay in The Atlantic, French’s protagonists aren’t just “detectives; they’re close readers of the human psyche.” —C.S.

Leave the World Behind by Rumaan Alam

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Advertisement, Poster, and Novel

Leave the World Behind

This is a novel of escape gone wrong, so it scratches two summery itches. The book, which became a Netflix series starring Julia Roberts (among others), is the story of an upper-middle-class New York City family that rents a house on Long Island, only to have the owners show up, claiming they need refuge. Something is going very wrong in the “real world” that the vacationers have left behind, and the gradual unfolding of that nightmare is the eerie backdrop for this delightfully skittish novel of suspense. —C.S.

Less by Andrew Sean Greer

Image may contain: Advertisement, Poster, Book, Publication, Person, Face, and Head

Less

The hapless failed novelist Arthur Less decides to travel the world on various invitations to literary events in order to avoid the wedding of his former lover. His hilarious misadventures are a worthy companion for any vacationer, but the poignancy and insight of his reflections on life and love and send-up of the tragic queer archetype make this one stick with you. —B.P.

Little Bee: A Novel by Chris Cleave

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Advertisement, Poster, Novel, and Person

Little Bee: A Novel

This novel came out 15 years ago, but I can still feel the sand in my feet as I sat reading it. In Little Bee, we follow the life of a Nigerian 16-year-old orphan who has just been released from a UK refugee center. She has nowhere to go in the UK except to visit a British couple she once met at the beach. When she arrives, the husband’s funeral is taking place. Little Bee and the widow Sarah form an unlikely alliance as both of them come-of-age at different parts of their life, until the threat of a rift arises. You won’t be able to tear yourself away. —Z.O.

Lovers and Writers by Lily King

Image may contain: Book, Publication, and Advertisement

Lovers and Writers: A Novel

Lovers and Writers is the story of a 31-year-old woman determined to be an artist at a time of life when most of her friends and peers are settling into more practical pursuits. The protagonist is poised at that pivot point between youthful idealism and a more mature practicality, and the two men she falls in love with—an older man with children of his own and a more mercurial artist type—mirror the dimensions of her dilemma: to what extent do you sacrifice for art and love? King has a lovely, light touch, and this novel is an effervescent read, a page-turner with real heart. —C.S.

Malibu Rising by Taylor Jenkins Reid

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Person, Water, and Novel

Malibu Rising

If you’re in the mood for something a little pulpy and page-turner-y, then look no further than Taylor Jenkins Reid’s Malibu Rising, which follows four famous siblings—Nina, Jay, Hud, and Kit Riva—over 24 hours in August 1983 as they gear up to throw the summer party to end all summer parties. I actually think that Reid is this generation’s Jackie Collins—which is a compliment, by the way, coming from someone who has read every single Jackie novel. In other words, Reid knows how to write a fun book with a tight, propulsive plot—you won’t be able to put this one down. —D.J.

Marjorie Morningstar: A Novel by Herman Wouk

Image may contain: Accessories, Bag, Handbag, Book, Publication, Person, Clothing, and Dress

Marjorie Morningstar

Written in 1955, Marjorie Morningstar, is the story of a 17-year-old Jewish girl who leaves the posh setting of her Upper West Side life and tries to become an actress. Despite some blaring warning signs, she falls headlong in love with a powerful man. (One warning sign, he tells the titular character: “I eat little girls like you.”) In its depiction of her search for identity in a world not set up for her success, Marjorie Morningstar has become a (somewhat controversial) feminist classic. Less controversial: It is extremely readable. —Z.O.

Mrs. Caliban by Rachel Ingalls

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Advertisement, Poster, Electronics, and Speaker

Mrs. Caliban

Mrs. Caliban is a wacky, weird, water-dwelling monster story first published in 1982 and republished in 2017 by the wonderful Faber Editions—just in time for my beach holiday in Croatia, where I devoured this compact little novella in one languorous sitting like a rapidly dehydrating amphibian myself. Dorothy, a suburban California housewife, begins an affair with Larry, a frog-like man—a green-tinged, muscular, very dangerous, and quite the magnetic creature. Is he a figment of her imagination or the electrifying respite she needs from her grief, loss, and hopeless marriage? Sly, subversive, stylish erotica-maybe-fantasy. —A.C.

My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante

Image may contain: Clothing, Dress, Child, Person, Adult, Formal Wear, Wedding, Advertisement, Poster, Fashion, and Gown

My Brilliant Friend

Any Elena Ferrante novel is worth a read—2002’s The Days of Abandonment is my personal favorite, though perhaps a bit dark for a summer reading list. If you’re new to Ferrante, though, then best start with her most classic and beloved, My Brilliant Friend, which follows a complicated yet relatable lifelong friendship between Elena Greco and Lila Cerullo in the sun-scorched streets of Naples, Italy. It starts in the 1950s, though there’s a total timelessness to every Ferrante book—and, luckily for us, this is the first in a four-part series, known as the Neapolitan Novels.

Open: A Memoir by Andre Agassi

Image may contain: Andre Agassi, Publication, Book, Adult, Person, Head, and Face

Open: An Autobiography

Propulsive. Evocative. Sensory. Andre Agassi’s memoir, ghostwritten by J.R. Moehringer, is one of my favorite memoirs ever. (Yes, I was a tennis fan in the 1980s and remember when Andre burst onto the scene with acid-washed jeans and his crazy hair.) But the memoir is something else: a reckoning with an unwanted gift, the pressures of perfection, the grind of the professional tennis world, the power of mentors, the ability of the body to withstand more and growing up. (For those of you who have read my essay for Vogue, you’ll see why this book might hold some personal significance.) —Z.O.

The Project by Annie Lord

Image may contain: Advertisement, Poster, Balloon, Adult, and Person

The Project

Here we have another upcoming release (it’s out July 16, just in time for any late-summer getaway). The Project, a delicious rom-com from former British Vogue dating columnist Annie Lord, isn’t a beach read in the sense that it’s set at some far-flung locale—it’s London-based—though it’s the sort of sticky, summery book you’ll want to curl up with. Funny, tender, and insightful, The Project cracks open the dynamics and dilemmas inherent to modern heterosexual dating and will have you pondering deeply as well as laughing. —D.J.

The Pumpkin Eater by Penelope Mortimer

Image may contain: Art, Painting, Business Card, Paper, Text, Machine, Wheel, Carriage, Transportation, Vehicle, and Person

The Pumpkin Eater

Penelope Mortimer wrote her semi-autobiographical novel The Pumpkin Eater in a flash spring of 1961, and it was made into a film in 1964. Her Mrs. Armitage, a married woman four times over, with her rich, insufferable, and unfaithful partner, and her legion of children, is one of the most compelling characters I’ve ever read. We meet her amid a breakdown in the linen department of Harrod’s, crushed to collapse under the weight of the facts that another child and another marriage might not be the salve for her domestic and emotional sordidness. She is unhinged, a drain, and screaming funny. I have read it several times over in quick gulps, and get that same jolt of energy from Mortimer’s unbridled, perilous prose that captured the stifling social conditions of women before The Feminine Mystique gave it a name. —A.C.

Seating Arrangements: A Novel by Maggie Shipstead

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Novel, Mortar Shell, and Weapon

Seating Arrangements

When I read Seating Arrangements in the summer of 2012, I was absolutely hooked. Who was this author? I wondered. Shipstead went on to write the acclaimed novel The Great Circle, but this is my favorite Shipstead novel. A family wedding draws home a cast of characters to the New England island of Waskeke where the patriarch, Winn Van Meter, and his wife, Biddy, host their daughter Daphne’s wedding. I can still hear the screen door slamming and the boards creaking in their kitchen. Daphne, her sister, her bridesmaid, the groom, the best man; everyone is up to something unexpected in this weekend-long escape. The perfect houseguest gift. —Z.O.

Slow Horses by Mick Heron

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Novel, Advertisement, Poster, Car, Transportation, and Vehicle

Slow Horses

I dubiously bought this a few years back, when I asked a British bookseller to tell me about a book that he loved that was unknown to Americans. I am not the conventional mystery type, but, like Atkinson and French’s, this delightful book is a thriller packed with nuanced characters. Nominally the story of a band of misfit, burnt-out, washed up, or otherwise problematic former MI-5 employees who have been banished to “Slough House”—a kind of holding pen for officers and agents who are no longer useful to the security service, but who cannot, for various reasons, be released into civilian society. The hero is an officer who suspects he has been sidelined for nefarious reasons, and sees in an unfolding disaster an opportunity to redeem himself. This story became the basis for an excellent Apple TV+ series, but read the book first. You won’t regret it! —C.S.

Sunburn by Chloe Michelle Howarth

Image may contain: Advertisement, Poster, Barefoot, Person, Publication, and Book

Sunburn

Plenty of novelists have attempted to capture the euphoria and insanity of first love, but few as engrossingly as Chloe Michelle Howarth. Queer readers especially will relate to all the knotty, complex, and exciting yet anxiety-laden feelings folded throughout this coming-of-age book, which follows schoolgirl Lucy and her all-consuming love for Susannah, primarily set in the 1990s in a conservative small town over one sticky summer. —D.J.

Tender at the Bone: Growing Up at the Table by Ruth Reichl

Image may contain: Person, Advertisement, Poster, Book, and Publication

Tender at the Bone: Growing Up at the Table

You might know Ruth Reichl as the former editor of Gourmet magazine or perhaps as the current New York Times bestselling author of The Paris Novel. But I fell in love with Reichl when I read her debut memoir back in 2010. Reichl takes us back to her childhood and invites us to the table at her Berkeley commune where she started her own restaurant and wrote her first cookbook. Her voice is witty, delicious, soulful, and unique. The perfect read for anyone who loves to eat and loves to hear stories. Isn’t that all of us?! —Z.O.

This Is Where I Leave You: A Novel by Jonathan Tropper

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Advertisement, Poster, and Text

This Is Where I Leave You: A Novel

I read this years ago for a UJA-sponsored book club event at which the author would be speaking. I couldn’t put it down. After Judd Foxman’s dad passes away, the whole family converges for the first time in a while to sit shiva, a Jewish custom in which families mourn the loss of a loved one by welcoming visitors in for seven days. Judd’s wife has just cheated on him so he’s mourning both relationships at once. A story about family dysfunction, love, betrayal, and ultimately humor, this is one of the funniest novels about loss. —Z.O.

You Are Here by David Nicholls

Image may contain: Book, Publication, Novel, and Person

You Are Here: A Novel

Two somewhat unremarkable (but fully realized) middle-aged people take a long hike across the somewhat unremarkable (but beautifully described) English countryside, and somehow it’s impossible to put it down. Maybe it’s the dry-witted and frequently hilarious prose (I still think about the image one of the protagonists conjures when describing his ex-wife moving out during the pandemic as “seizing her opportunity between lockdowns as if rolling under a descending metal shutter”), the honesty of its characters, the romantic and narrative tension that slowly builds, or the quiet reflections on life that are all the more effective for their simplicity. —B.P.

Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald by Therese Anne Fowler

Image may contain: Advertisement, Poster, Book, Publication, Adult, Person, and Wedding

Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald

I was so into Z when it came out in 2013 that I would prop Fowler’s novel up against my breast pump. When Zelda falls for F. Scott Fitzgerald, she’s only 17 years old and the darling of a country club dance in Alabama. “Scott” isn’t exactly what her father deems an appropriate match. But he’s convinced he’ll be a successful writer soon. (If only every author were that confident.) When Scott’s first novel sells, Zelda marries him, and the two are thrust into the spotlight like the Taylor and Travis of their time. As the couple jets between the south of France and the Hamptons, Paris, and LA, this novel explores what Zelda was really going through behind the scenes—and it wasn’t always this side of paradise. —Z.O.