A beach read isn’t just any book you casually flip through while soaking up Vitamin D like a sun-bathing guru. It’s a literary sidekick that turns a lazy beach day into a captivating adventure.
1. Good Material, by Dolly Alderton
Dolly Alderton, a British author with a growing U.S. following, writes a funny book. Her second novel (and third book overall) begins with a breakup. Jen ends things with Andy, which pitches him into a lovelorn fit, searching for the why of it all. Andy, 35, is a stand-up comedian whose agent is ghosting him and who can’t find friends who have time for him. (They’re dedicating all their previous hangout time to raising their young families.) This one is for those who love Nora Ephron, Nick Hornby, and Hugh Grant’s early work.
2. Come and Get It, by Kiley Reid
Kiley Reid’s follow-up to New York Times bestseller Such a Fun Age takes us back to the heady, hazy days of 2017. In Come and Get It, Millie Cousins is a resident assistant at the University of Arkansas who dreams of buying a house after graduation. Agatha Paul is a visiting professor writing a book about weddings. Agatha’s and Millie’s paths cross when the academic heads to the dorms to interview students, ends up fascinated with how the young women talk about money, and ultimately pays Millie to let her eavesdrop from her dorm room. This is a book about how money shapes people’s lives, and it’s for you if you enjoy a character-driven narrative in which everyone introduced comes with an elaborate backstory.
3. Leaving, by Roxana Robinson
Former college flames Warren and Sarah meet at the opera after years (and marriages) have gone by. This second meeting at age 60 sparks something in both of them, but exploring a relationship is not as simple as it once was. Warren is still married, and he and Sarah both have grown children with opinions. Though he seems ready to leave his wife, Sarah feels conflicted, having gone through a difficult divorce herself. Leaving delves beautifully into what families are to each other and what’s owed to them, love in our later years, and how to balance passion and morality.
4. Listen for the Lie, by Amy Tintera
What happens when a wildly popular podcast and its enigmatic, handsome host begin to investigate the mystery of your best friend’s murder—in which you are the prime suspect? The story of Texas sweethearts Savvy and Lucy—one murdered, the other unsure if she did it or not—is one of those totally engrossing reads that will have you looking up from your beach chair every once in a while to say, “Oh, that’s right. I’m at the beach.”
5. Selling the Dream: The Billion-Dollar Industry Bankrupting Americans, by Jane Marie
Jane Marie hosts popular podcast The Dream, an investigation into pyramid schemes and multi-level marketing companies that have been embedded in the United States for decades—and in this nonfiction book, she’s put it all down on paper. Her exploration of MLMs—and how they trap people in working-class communities, enriching those at the top and leaving those at the bottom poorer than they were before—is a wide-reaching, well-researched, look at a business structure most Americans eventually rub up against, either directly, through a friend or family member, or indirectly, through the powerful politicians who’ve built their wealth on MLMs.
6. Kill for Me, Kill for You, by Steve Cavanagh
Kill for Me, Kill for You is about two grieving women, Wendy and Amanda, who meet in New York and realize they have a lot in common. They’ve both suffered unimaginable tragedies, and they’d really like to get revenge on the men who harmed them and their families. Over drinks, they make a pact: Each will kill the other’s tormentor. It’s like Patricia Highsmith’s Strangers on a Train if both parties were into the revenge idea. For readers drawn to white-knuckle plots and unpredictable twists, this one won’t disappoint.
7. Just for the Summer, by Abby Jimenez
Emma Grant meets Justin Dahl thanks to an “Am I the Asshole?” post he wrote on Reddit, in which he described a curious “curse,” under which the women he dates all seem to leave him and then immediately find the loves of their life. Emma has the same problem. The two hatch a plan to break the curse by dating each other: They’ll give it a go for just four dates (the number it usually takes for women to break up with Justin) over the course of a month (the length of time Emma’s relationships typically last), and then split. It won’t surprise you to learn it’s not quite that simple.
8. Sociopath: A Memoir, by Patric Gagne
Consider, for your spring break reading, a different kind of memoir: Patric Gagne realized from an early age that she wasn’t like other girls. She didn’t feel fear or guilt. Empathy eluded her. Eventually, she learned of a diagnosis that explained her lack of certain emotions (and also the behaviors she dabbled in, trying to fill in that void, like stealing cars and lying): She’s a sociopath. But Gagne didn’t like how people like her have been portrayed in the media, nor did she care for the grim prognosis for living a happy life as a sociopath. When an opportunity to love presents itself, she begins to hope that she is more than her diagnosis, and that may be able to change the world’s perception of people like her.
9. One of Us Knows, by Alyssa Cole (April 16)
When Kenetria Nash was diagnosed with dissociative identity disorder (colloquially known as multiple personality disorder), it stalled her career in historic preservation. At the start of this story, Ken has been dormant for six years while her alters fronted for her—and when she wakes up, she’s on a dock with some luggage. She discovers she’s taken a job as a caretaker of a historic home on an island in the Hudson River. As she attempts to piece together how she got there and what has been happening in the world over the last few years, mysteries arise both within Ken and in the house. Then a group comes to stay, one of them ends up murdered, and she is blamed. The unusual premise works well in Cole’s capable hands, and she writes about DID with human nuance. One of Us Knows will certainly keep your heart beating while you’re relaxing by the shore.
10. Funny Story, by Emily Henry (April 23)
The inimitable Emily Henry is back with a story of opposite attraction and fake relationships. Funny Story tells the tale of Daphne, who was engaged to Peter—until they moved to his hometown in Michigan, where he realized he was in love with Petra, his childhood friend. The polished Daphne decides to move in with Petra’s ex, the disorganized and slightly unkempt Miles. Daphne and Miles then fake a relationship until they potentially, maybe, you’ll-have-to-read-to-find-out-if-they make it.
11. This Summer Will Be Different, by Carley Fortune (May 7)
Carly Fortune is a growing voice in the world of perfect beach reads, and This Summer Will Be Different is one of her best so far. In it, she takes her readers to the coastal Northeast—beautiful Prince Edward Island. On vacation there, Lucy discovers her electrifying chemistry with a local man named Felix—before discovering Felix is the brother of her best friend, Bridget. That only makes her subsequent annual visits more complicated. What’s so great about this novel is that it’s a story about friendship as much as it is about a forbidden kind of love. (Your best friend’s brother? Has someone ever been more off-limits?)
12. Last House, by Jessica Shattuck (May 14)
This one is for readers who like to immerse themselves in a decades-long, multigenerational familial saga while their toes dangle in the sand. Over most of a century, Last House explores the American empire after World War II through one man’s pursuit of oil and how his family contends with the legacy made from the stuff. Jessica Shattuck is a best-selling author, and this novel, like her others, both moves and is incredibly moving.
13. Swan Song, by Elin Hilderbrand (June 11)
Elin Hilderbrand is the doyen of the beach read, the queen of all things sun, fun, and intrigue, one of the best to ever do it,and Swan Song is the cleverly titled final installment of her popular Nantucket series. It’s a stranger-comes-to-town tale, and these particular strangers—the Richardsons—are mysterious, wealthy, and mysteriously wealthy. No one seems to know how they made their money. When the lavish summer home they bought for $22 million burns to the ground and a woman goes missing, the town is obviously upset. You’ll see all your old favorite characters from the previous Nantucket novels, and this final act is chock-full of all Hilderbrand’s hallmarks, from family drama to romance.
14. The Midnight Feast, by Lucy Foley (June 18)
The sun may be shining wherever you read this book, but you’ll still feel chills. A locked-door murder mystery from a rising voice in the genre, The Midnight Feast by Lucy Foley has got everything you want in a thriller: a luxurious estate, a summer solstice feast, class battles, an enigmatic founder, an architect, a familiar stranger, pyrotechnics, and a mystery to solve.
15. A Novel Love Story, by Ashley Poston (June 25)
Eileen “Elsy” Merriweather is a woman who loves her a love story. Things already aren’t going so well for Elsy, and then her friends all drop out of their annual book club retreat. So she sets out alone for a cabin in the woods to drown her sorrows in romance novels all weekend. But when her car breaks down, she finds herself in Eloraton, the fictional small town from her favorite romance series. In a setup reminiscent of Apple TV+’s stuck-in-a-musical show Schmigadoon!, Elsy finds that she’s in a story the author of the series never managed to finish, and she believes she must give the town a happy ending if she ever wants to leave. The one thing standing in her way—literally, at times—is a crabby, handsome bookstore owner. Ashley Poston has written another clever, emotional love story—part fantasy, part romcom—perfect for passing a day or three by the pool.
16. The Summer Pact, by Emily Giffin (July 9)
If you need a break from love and crime stories, try The Summer Pact, a novel about friendship. Four friends from vastly different places and with vastly different personalities meet in college. When tragedy strikes before graduation, they make a pact to always be there for one another, no matter what. A decade later, one of them is at a difficult crossroads and calls in a favor. Grief and redemption are big themes of this book. It’s not lighthearted reading, exactly, but it is deeply heartfelt.