Refreshing, escapist, absorbing? 


 
The Thread
 
The Thread's Must-Read
FeatherThief
"The View Was Exhausting" by Mikaella Clements and Onjuli Datta
"A Theater for Dreamers" by Polly Samson
"The Other Black Girl" by Zakiya Dalila Harris

Buy these books

I was perusing Amazon’s summer reading guide recently when I ran across a feature that asked the people who write them to define a true beach read.  

These are authors who embrace the idea of publishing novels that skim above the serious and the weighty, to deliver a refreshing, escapist, absorbing book that you can put down and pick up at your leisure.

Writer Alex Michaelides believes a great beach read is “something I can lose myself in, an addictive page turner; but rich and complex enough to occupy my mind in between readings.”

Sally Hepworth believes a beach read is, at its essence, a holiday for your mind.  

Dav Pilkey holds up the beach read as "reading what you love without judgment, from one’s self or from others.”  

Mary Kay Andrews says give her a book with a "topical or tropical" theme “and it won’t matter whether my toes are planted in a sandy beach or just a backyard sandbox.”

So, no matter where your toes are planted this summer, I’ve got a trio of new beach reads to get you started.

Tuck a copy of “The View Was Exhausting” by Mikaella Clements and Onjuli Datta into your beach bag. The novel takes the reader beyond the facade of a made-for-Hollywood romance and asks why aren’t these A-lister stars really together? It’s great, gossipy fun.

I’m creating a trip for adventurous readers about the myths and mysteries of Greece, so my reading list is full of fiction and non-fiction books about the place.

That’s why it was fun to discover Polly Samson’s “A Theater for Dreamers.”

Narrated by a young novelist, the story is set on the island of Hydra in the swinging 60’s, where singer songwriter Leonard Cohen has joined an eclectic group of artists for some sexy summer fun.

That would be enough for a great beach read, but this novel does more, exploring the moral codes and unfulfilled promise of era.  

And my last beach read is a novel in my library queue that everyone is talking about. It's Zakiya Dalila Harris’ “The Other Black Girl.” Nella Rogers is a young editorial assistant in New York’s publishing industry — which means she works long hours and makes no money — when the company finally hires the second Black employee. Nella assumes they’ll quickly find common cause in such a white-dominated business but things get creepy pretty quickly.

My three quintessential beach reads are: Zakiya Dalila Harris’ “The Other Black Girl,” Polly Samson’s “A Theater for Dreamers,” and Mikaella Clements and Onjuli Datta’s “The View Was Exhausting.”

 — Kerri Miller | MPR News
Sponsor
Sponsor
 
This Week on The Thread
Ask a Bookseller: 'The Netanyahus'
"The Netanyahus: An Account of a Minor and Ultimately Even Negligible Episode in the History of a Very Famous Family" by Joshua Cohen
Buy this book

Hal Hlavinka of Community Bookstore in Brooklyn, N.Y., says he's been telling everyone about a new novel by Joshua Cohen, out Tuesday: "The Netanyahus: An Account of a Minor and Ultimately Even Negligible Episode in the History of a Very Famous Family."
Author Michelle Singletary on managing your money during times of crisis
"What to Do With Your Money When Crisis Hits" by Michelle Singletary
Buy this book

Host Angela Davis talked to Michelle Singletary about her new book, “What to Do With Your Money When Crisis Hits.” Together, they responded to listener questions about saving, spending, surviving and thriving during these critical times.
A fresh look at the intent of the Second Amendment
"The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America" by Carol Anderson
Buy this book

Historian Carol Anderson believes the right to bear arms was designed to keep Black people enslaved and powerless. Her new book, “The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America,” lays out the historical context for the Second Amendment’s passage.
Ibram X. Kendi recommends 6 books to help your kids understand race
"Dear Martin" and "Dear Justyce," by Nic Stone
‘Brown Girl Dreaming" by Jacqueline Woodson
"The Poet X" by Elizabeth Acevedo
"I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter" by Erika L. Sánchez
"The Black Friend: On Being a Better White Person" by Frederick Joseph
Buy these books

NPR asked Ibram X. Kendi for book recommendations that kids can read to gain a better understanding of race in America.
You don't have to be a complete nerd to love this novel ... but it helps
"Questland" by Carrie Vaughn
Buy this book

Carrie Vaughn is a veteran science fiction and fantasy author who puts her years in the scene to good use in this rollicking tale about a high-tech fantasy theme park (think “Westworld”) gone wrong.
A woman is committed to an asylum for thinking in 'The Woman They Could Not Silence'
"The Woman They Could Not Silence: One Woman, Her Incredible Fight for Freedom, and the Men Who Tried to Make Her Disappear" by Kate Moore
Buy this book

Author Kate Moore follows the struggles of Elizabeth Packard who, locked up by her husband in 1860 for having opinions and voicing them, finds she's not the only one.
'Light Perpetual' imagines adulthood for 5 fictional kids killed in WWII attack
"Light Perpetual" by Francis Spufford
Buy this book

Out of his contemplative pauses in front of that plaque, Spufford has created a resonant novel about what "might have been" for five young casualties of war, as well as a God's-eye meditation on mutability and loss.
From poverty to Stanford, memoir tells a physicist's remarkable tale
"A Quantum Life: My Unlikely Journey from the Street to the Stars" by Hakeem Oluseyi and Joshua Horwitz
Buy this book

“A Quantum Life” is an important book to help understand the institutional hurdles that have kept science mostly white and male — and how the fire of inquiry can take root in a heart and lift it up.
A Father's Day gift from Meghan to Harry is now a kids' book
“The Bench” by Meghan, The Duchess of Sussex
Buy this book

For Prince Harry's first Father's Day, the Duchess of Sussex, Meghan, got him a bench — and wrote a poem about the moments she hoped her husband and their son would share together there. It’s now the basis for a children's book.
'Widespread Panic' might be the most Ellroy book James Ellroy has ever written
"Widespread Panic" by James Ellroy
Buy this book

The Demon Dog of Crime Fiction is back, with more boocoo bad business, pervs, prowlers and putzo politicians than ever in this story of a real-life cop who knew it all (and had the pictures, too).

Preference CenterUnsubscribe

This email was sent by: Minnesota Public Radio
480 Cedar Street Saint Paul, MN, 55101