The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

7 beach reads put sizzle in summer

- By Suzanne Van Atten

Georgia beaches are back in business. For those willing to brave the pandemic, now is the time to stake out a place in the sand and get lost in a fun, fastpaced page-turner that ends happily ever after.

Even if you’re not ready to venture out in public yet, a good beach read is a great way to while away the summer days. Here are a few we recommend.

‘The Book of Lost Friends’

Author of the 2017 New York Times bestsellin­g novel “Before We Were Yours,” Lisa Wingate follows up with this ambitious saga that braids together two narratives.

In one, Benedetta Silver has taken a job teaching at a poor, rural school in 1987 Louisiana.

Along the way, she comes across the history of three fearless women from 1875 Louisiana, who take a perilous journey to Texas during the Reconstruc­tion era. Lavinia was the heir to a plantation now in ruins.

She’s accompanie­d by Juneau June, her illegitima­te Creole half sister, and Hannie, her former slave. (Penguin Random House, out now)

‘Hello, Summer’

If it’s summer, New York Times bestsellin­g author Mary Kay Andrews must have a new book out.

Her 27th novel is set in fictitious Silver Bay, a small town on the Gulf Coast in the Florida Panhandle.

When her career at The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on is unexpected­ly derailed, ambitious reporter Conley Hawkins reluctantl­y returns home to her family’s failing newspaper.

There she uncovers a mystery behind the death of a local congressma­n who has secrets to hide.

In the process, she rekindles a romance with her high school crush. (St. Martin’s Press, out now)

‘How to Bury Your Brother’

In her debut novel, Lindsey Rogers Cook explores how lives are shaped by family secrets.

Eight years after the death of her brother, whom she hadn’t seen since he ran away from home at age 15, Alice is tasked with emptying our her childhood home in Atlanta.

What she finds there changes everything she thought she knew about her brother’s death when she discovers his autopsy report and sealed letters from him, addressed to friends and family.

One by one, Alice delivers the letters and learns about her family’s dark past. (Sourcebook, out now)

‘On Ocean Boulevard’

New York Times bestsellin­g author Mary Alice Monroe returns to her popular Beach House series. Three generation­s of the Rutledge family return to Sullivan’s Island in Charleston, South Carolina. Cara Rutledge is preparing for her second wedding.

Her niece Linnea is back to start a new career.

Linnea’s parents are recovering from a financial loss by building a new home on Ocean Boulevard.

But everything gets put on pause when a family member is struck by a devastatin­g illness. (Gallery Books, out now)

‘The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires’

At the heart of Grady Hendrix’s quirky, ‘90s-era, Gothic romp is a women’s book club for fans of true crime.

Patricia Campbell is a put-upon housewife in Charleston, South Carolina, whose primary source of pleasure is discussing gruesome crimes with her like-minded book lovers.

Her tedious routine is upended when she meets her neighbor’s handsome nephew, James Harris, whose charm belies dark truths. Meanwhile, children start disappeari­ng from the neighborho­od. (Quirk Books, out now)

‘The Lies That Bind’

Nursing a breakup with her longtime boyfriend and questionin­g her future in New York City, Cecily Gardner suddenly finds herself in a new whirlwind romance with a stranger named Grant in the summer of 2001 in Emily Giffin’s new novel.

When terrorists fly airplanes into the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, everything changes and, like many people in those grim days that followed, Grant disappears.

But when Cecily sees a missingper­son poster with Grant’s face on it, she begins to question how well she truly knew him. (Ballantine Books, June 2)

‘The Silent Wife’

GBI investigat­or Will Trent and medical examiner Sara Linton are back together again and on the case of a brutal murder in Karin Slaughter’s new crime novel.

A young coed on an early morning run is attacked with a hammer and left for dead.

When Will Trent is called to the state penitentia­ry to investigat­e a separate case, he encounters a prisoner who claims the MO of the coed’s murder was identical to the one he was wrongly convicted of committing eight years earlier.

If Will and Sara can solve one murder, they will solve them both. (William Morrow, Aug. 4)

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