Spread the Word ...
del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit StumbleUpon Help
Book reviewers, librarians and others are coming out with their suggestions for some light, summer reads at the beach. Check out these selections and find something right for you.
The Seattle Times offers up a list of books for the summer:
…Last week, we offered up some stellar light fiction in the “chick lit” vein; this week, it’s a more general compilation of books in a wider assortment of genres that still fit into that vague “beach reads” category: Books that are heavy enough to weigh down your beach towel, but not heavy enough to weigh down your spirits. We rate them here with one to four beach umbrellas — four being the best.
“Sparkles
,” by Louise Bagshawe (Plume, $14), Three umbrellas: British bestseller Louise Bagshawe scores with this glittery saga about an heiress to one of Europe’s great jewelry firms. Mild-mannered Sophie Massot, whose charismatic husband, Pierre, left on a trip seven years previously and has never returned, is taking steps to have him declared dead, and surprise everyone around her by taking control of the moribund jewelry business. But has Pierre really expired? Bagshawe throws some surprising twists into a story full of glitz and glamour.
“The Year of Fog
,” by Michelle Richmond (Delacorte Press, $20), Four umbrellas: If you read this one at the beach, you’re going to remain within arm’s length of your youngsters. It’s a harrowing, beautifully written story of a photographer and soon-to-be stepmom whose momentary lapse in attention results in the disappearance of her fiancé’s little girl on a foggy beach in San Francisco. What happened to 6-year-old Emma? The answer, and its implications, will keep you on the edge of your beach chair.
“The Witch of Portobello
,” by Paulo Coelho (HarperCollins, $24.95), Three-and-a-half umbrellas: The Brazilian-born author of “The Alchemist” returns with this masterly novel about Athena, the illegitimate daughter of a Transylvanian gypsy adopted by well-to-do Lebanese parents.
The Salt Lake Tribune gives an extensive list of their choices for Summer reading:
…These titles, almost all published within the past six months, cover genres and subject matter for a variety of tastes. Most are under 350 pages; you won’t pull a muscle carrying them to your hammock. In their own way, they’re all page-turners, offering propulsive narratives about love, or murder, or natural disasters, or high school. Several explore the shattering effects of 9/11. A few are best-sellers, but others are books you may not have heard of. Yet.
Here they are. Hope you find something you like.The Reluctant Fundamentalist
by Mohsin Hamid (Harcourt, $22).
This slender novel is the tale of Changez, a young, Princeton-educated Pakistani who enjoys the high life of a New York City banker until Sept. 11, when he suddenly discovers that America isn’t so welcoming toward a dark-skinned Muslim with a beard. As Changez finds himself under increased scrutiny and subject to physical threats, he grows bitter and resentful of his adopted country. By its end this story, narrated to a nameless American over dinner at a cafe in Pakistan, reads like an all-too-timely thriller.Silent In The Grave (STP - Mira)
by Deanna Raybourn (Mira, $21.95).
“To say that I met Nicholas Brisbane over my husband’s dead body is not entirely accurate. Edward, it should be noted, was still twitching upon the floor.” So begins Raybourn’s clever debut, a Victorian mystery about a London widow investigating the murder of her husband while finding surprising romance with a private detective. Mary Moore of the Davis County Library calls the novel “the librarians’ favorite book this month - the one we recommend to each other.”The White Cascade
by Gary Krist (Henry Holt, $26).
Krist is a novelist who brings his storytelling skills to this nonfiction account of a 1910 avalanche that buried two stranded passenger trains in the Cascade Mountains of Washington. The disaster came two years before the …
Here’s another 15 book recommendations by the Naperville Sun:
…In a sort-of-similar way, there’s reading and then there’s summer reading. The volumes we reach for when it comes time to head for the beach might not inspire our deepest intellectual maneuvers, but that doesn’t mean they don’t make for darn fine reading. Known by the experts at the Naperville Public Library as “beach reads,” these works can include both fiction and nonfiction, but the idea is that they not drain the brain too completely.
Here for your consideration, at the suggestion of the library’s staff and the people at Anderson’s Bookshop in Naperville, are assorted titles to consider for tucking into your beach bag alongside the shades and sunscreen.
Fiction
“The Thirteenth Tale” by Diane Setterfield
Reclusive, factually elusive author Vida Winter hires an unknown and seemingly unqualified Margaret Lea to write her biography. Both women have closets inhabited by ghosts, some of which are revealed as the tale unfolds.“Natural Born Charmer
” by Susan Elizabeth Phillips The Naperville novelist’s newest work describes the encounter between a Chicago football player benched with an injury and the plucky heroine, and the road trip the unlikely pair takes together in the jock’s spunky sports car.
“Abundance: A Novel of Marie Antoinette
” by Sara Jeter Naslund
The musings of the famed young queen and her days in the court are surmised in fictionalized autobiographical style.“Water for Elephants
” by Sara Gruen
A gritty, lavish account of an orphaned young man who runs off and joins the circus…
N.Y. Times Book Reviews
The New Yorker Book Reviews
Publishers Weekly Book Reviews
USA Today Book Reviews
- Sister Souljah rejects any labels on her literary output
- Gordon-Reed's 'Hemingses' wins National Book Award
- Book roundup: Fiction, in brief
- Book buzz: Top sellers, 'Suns' shines, warm 'Christmas'
- Five questions for NPR's Bailey White
- Malcolm Gladwell's 'Success' defines 'outlier' achievement
- Add 'Eleventh Man' to Ivan Doig's best yarns
- Christopher Plummer gets wordy, naughty and nice 'In Spite of Myself'
- Neil Gaiman to design a demise for Batman
- Denis Leary: Why we succumb to being 'Fat, Loud, Lazy and Stupid'
Amazon Daily
- National Book Awards: GalleyCat on the Floor
- Introducing Toy Whimsy
- The Books of the States: Wisconsin (10 electoral votes; Guest: Daphne Beal)
- Happy Birthday, Professor Gordon-Reed: Questions for NBA Winner Annette Gordon-Reed
- National Book Award Winners: Matthiessen, Gordon-Reed, Doty, Blundell
- YA Wednesday: Hours, Days...Oh, the Waiting!
- Four Erins in One (Guest Blogger: Erin Hunter)
- Costa Shortlists Announced
- The Books of the States: Iowa (7 electoral votes)
- Kelly Slater: For the Love
Bookseller Links:
RSS FEEDS
Recent Posts
- Doctor, Scientist, Author - Michael Crichton Will Be Missed
- Book Review: Dead Heat by Joel C. Rosenberg
- From Oregon to DC: Bookish Bed and Breakfasts Provide Novel Vacations
- Book Review: Messiah - The First Judgement: The Chronicles of Brothers by Wendy Alec
- Book Review: Eat This Not That! by David Zinczenko with Matt Goulding
- Book Review: Mountain Top by Robert Whitlow
- Book Review: The 12 Second Sequence by Jorge Cruise
- Book Review: The Shack by William P. Young
- Book Review: Deceptively Delicious by Jessica Seinfeld
- Book Review: How Not To Look Old by Charla Krupp
SF Gate Book Reviews
- 'Somebody': Brando bio discusses actor's pain
- Review: 'Chagall: A Biography' cites innovation
- Nonfiction review: 'Steaks' as cattle showbiz
- Interview with William Least Heat-Moon
- 'Songs for the Missing,' by Stewart O'Nan
- 'Thames: The Biography'
- 'Salmonella Men on Planet Porno'
- 'Outliers,' by Malcolm Gladwell
Author/Book Review Podcasts from NPR
Seattle Times Book Reviews
L.A. Times Book Reviews
Powell's
- From the Rise of Civil Rights to the Debate over Affirmative Action
- On Memory and Fiction: Part Eight
- Book News for Thursday, November 20, 2008
- Taking the Special Bus to the Apocalypse
- Welcome to the Party
- What Would Wilsey Say?
- Report from Wordstock
- Read It Before They Screen It: Vibes and The Lucky One
- Book News for Wednesday, November 19, 2008
- I Heart Nostradamus




Leave a Comment
trackback address