The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Southern beach reads

8 ideas for what to read when you have time to relax this summer.

- By Julie Bookman

What do you want in a “beach book”? Forgettabl­e fluff ? Or something more substantia­l because you’re on vacation and finally have time?

Author Dorothea Benton Frank says she always wants a book from which she’ll learn something — or one “that I wish I had written.”

Here are eight new or coming-soon Southern-tinged titles, all well beyond pure escapism, all good bets for your beach or pool tote.

‘By Invitation Only’ by Dorothea Benton Frank

The queen of the salt-sprayed Lowcountry tale (“Sullivan’s Island,” etc.) has done it again. Reading Frank is like spending time with a favorite friend who’s witty and a bit crass and has got to tell you every tidbit.

Frank is at the top of her game when poking fun at both the subtle and larger difference­s between Northern and Southern folks. She does just that in this, her 19th novel, because the groom was raised on a South Carolina peach farm and the Chicago bride is all privilege and sophistica­tion. Count on at least one family’s life blowing up. Count on a story brimming with snappy dialogue that always rings true. (William Morrow, $27.99)

‘The High Tide Club’ by Mary Kay Andrews

Andrews (“Beach Town,” “The Weekenders”) knows how to tell a beachy saga and smoothly balance many plot threads. In this memorable yarn, richer than a typical breezy read, a 99-yearold heiress summons Brooke, a spunky young lawyer. The ailing heiress owns a 20,000-acre barrier island off the Georgia coast and is desperate for it to remain protected.

There are old scores to settle, old secrets and a long-ago murder in the mix. As one character says, it’s finally time to talk about something that’s “been clawing at my heart all these years.” (St. Martin’s Press, $27.99)

‘Beach House Reunion’ by Mary Alice Monroe

Monroe comes through swimmingly with another title in her “Beach House” series featuring the Rutledge family of Charleston. This story centers on Linnea, out of college but “at sea,” and her Aunt Cara, widowed too soon. They spend a summer together at Primrose Cottage on the Isle of Palms while forging new paths, dealing with family drama and dysfunctio­n. Of course, each woman will take steps toward romance.

As ever, Monroe brings nature into play, astutely and metaphoric­ally connecting it to her plot. Linnea begins working with the Turtle Team that helps sea turtles. Each chapter begins with interestin­g facts about the threatened reptiles. (Gallery Books, $26)

‘Dreams of Falling’ by Karen White

White, among Atlanta’s most prominent authors of historical fiction (more than 20 titles), transports readers to Georgetown, S.C., in the 1950s. Her multilayer­ed and atmospheri­c story, Southern to the core, moves between the ’50s and the present day, always reminding us of the powerful pull of home, true love and the meaning of friendship. It’s steeped in family ties, romance, forgivenes­s, whatifs, dreams, a mysterious fire, a mother’s disappeara­nce and a big, dark secret among other secrets. (Berkley, $26, June)

‘All We Ever Wanted’ by Emily Giffin

Atlanta’s Giffin (“Something Borrowed”) is a worldwide bestsellin­g author because she gets under your skin — by creating relatable characters wrestling within believable situations. Her latest, centered on a scandalous episode involving high school students and cellphone misuse, is destined for greatness.

Giffin crafts an unpredicta­ble page-turner that unfolds in the voices of three superbly distinct characters. You’ll like and root for each: a 16-year-old girl (the victim); her humble and protective single dad; and the mom of the alleged perpetrato­r whose life of wealth and entitlemen­t has spiraled out of control. (Ballantine, $28, June)

‘The Dying of the Light’ by Robert Goolrick

This one’s a swiftly moving saga about the demise of a oncewealth­y Virginia family and the beautiful daughter’s obligation to come to its rescue. Diana Cooke’s mission is to snag a very wealthy husband who’ll save her family’s famous Saratoga, largest and once grandest estate in Virginia.

In 1917, Diana is quickly claimed by the horrible, disgusting and disgusting­ly rich Captain Copperton.

Get set for despair, dangerous sex, tragedy, scandal and forbidden love. Through descriptiv­e prose, Goolrick delivers a multidimen­sional tale spiked with more juicy stuff. (Harper, $26.99, July)

‘Pieces of Her’ by Karin Slaughter

For the worst summer heat (August), with water close by for cooling off, sink down with Atlanta’s Slaughter, one of the world’s top crime writers. Known for two Georgia-set series, in recent years she’s churned out stand-alone titles like last year’s “The Good Daughter” and her forthcomin­g 18th book, a riveting motherdaug­hter tale that pivots back and forth between the present day and 1986.

“Pieces” gets off to a pulseracin­g start with a mall shooting. Andy soon learns that her mother, Laura, is not exactly who she pretends to be. Slaughter, a storytelle­r extraordin­aire, keeps pounding it out while getting better and better. (William Morrow, $27.99, August)

‘Rush’ by Lisa Patton

Pining away for your sorority days? Or maybe you’ve always wondered about sorority life and its secret-society ways. Then here you go. Patton gives readers a ringside seat to the sorority drama at the University of Mississipp­i (“Ole Miss” in Oxford) — but the story is deeper than getting the inside scoop on sorority rush.

Miss Pearl is the housekeepe­r who’s tended to rich girls in the sorority mansion for more than 25 years, yet she herself can barely make ends meet. Patton set out to raise awareness of the poor pay and benefits of workers like Miss Pearl — “the help.” Told with humor and heart, this is a story of right versus wrong, of old traditions pitted against modern ideas and changing times. (St. Martin’s Press, $26.99, August)

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