The Peterborough Examiner

BEYOND A SIMPLE DIVERSION

Authors weigh in on the art of the ‘beach read’

- HILLEL ITALIE AND ALICIA RANCILIO Beach House for Rent

For author Elin Hilderbran­d, the art of the beach novel is very much a matter of location. Starting with where she writes. “I write my books in longhand, so I actually work on them at the beach,” says Hilderbran­d, who sets her bestseller­s at home on the Massachuse­tts island of Nantucket. “And all those elements that make for an authentic summer experience, the fetishes that go with summertime — love of that special summer place and the distinctio­n between summer and the rest of the year — these are what I try to depict in my novels.”

The “beach read” is often — but not always — shorthand for a disposable page-turner. But Hilderbran­d and others have long-held standards: strong characters and narratives, and settings that are compelling and accurate. Mary Alice Monroe, whose

comes out in June, sets her work along the South Carolina coast and calls it a “personal pet peeve” when she reads a book that has mistakes in the descriptio­n of the landscape.

She believes the “beach read” can be more than an escape. She likes to combine stories of family, friendship or romance with her advocacy for environmen­talism.

Beach House for Rent tells of two women unexpected­ly sharing a summer home and the plight of shorebirds that helps unite them.

“What encourages me to keep working is that I know I am making a difference through my books,” Monroe says. “My method when I’m writing a book is to do research and become part of the story I tell. When my readers experience something like a wounded pelican on the beach, or when they see a bird fly off, they experience it, too, because it’s authentic to my life.” Hilderbran­d’s next book,

The Identicals, uses the islands of Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard for a family drama about twins who are perhaps more alike than they want to acknowledg­e.

Not many writers, Hilderbran­d included, grow up dreaming of publishing “beach reads.” She attended the prestigiou­s writing school at the University of Iowa and found herself among authors more likely to write the Great American Novel than the Great American Beach Novel.

“So here I am, in the middle of the country with all these hyper-intellectu­als, and I’m so miserable,” Hilderbran­d says. “And I decided, to make myself feel better, that I’m going to write a novel set in Nantucket. So I started writing this book called The

Beach Club based on a local hotel. It wasn’t my intention write a beach novel, per se, but I just went there.

“I imagine they thought I was really silly,” she says of her fellow Iowa students. “I’m laughing all the way to the bank.”

Other books to look for:

 ?? MARK VAN MANEN ?? The “beach read” is often, but not always, a disposable page-turner.
MARK VAN MANEN The “beach read” is often, but not always, a disposable page-turner.

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