Llanelli Star

TOMO COMFORTS

Escape to another world with some riveting reads.

- By HANNAH STEPHENSON

you’re travelling abroad or planning to enjoy some downtime at home, you might be hunting for the perfect paperback.

There are a plethora of stories newly published in paperback, from popular fiction to love stories and dramas, and a clutch of paperback originals...

DRAMA

It’s hard to miss the buzzy new film adaptation of the novel

Where The Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens (Corsair,

£9.99), part murdermyst­ery, part coming-of-age story set in the dense marshlands of the North Carolina coast, where isolated Kya endures loneliness, grief, prejudice and betrayal, escaping to her haven of the natural world.

Inevitably, the book is deeper and more descriptiv­e than the film, so bag a copy if you haven’t yet.

And on the back of the runaway success of Normal People, Sally Rooney’s latest literary love story

Beautiful World, Where Are You (Faber & Faber, £8.99) is bound to gain a lot of traction over the summer.

It tells the story of Alice, a novelist, who meets warehouse worker Felix and asks him to travel to Rome with her.

Meanwhile, her best friend Eileen starts flirting with Simon, who she’s known since childhood.

Expect desire, sex, complex friendship­s and more in this number one bestseller.

THRILLERS

Dive into The Golden Couple by Greer Hendricks and Sarah Pekkanen (Pan, paperback Aug 18,

£8.99), a riveting psychologi­cal thriller about a perfect couple who are not all they seem to be.

The authors have a great track record with their bestsellin­g pageturner­s The Wife Between Us and You Are Not Alone.

Anyone who hasn’t caught the toe-curling debut The Other Black Girl by Zakiya Dalila Harris (Bloomsbury, £8.99) should nab a copy now.

It focuses on two young black women who meet in the white world of New York publishing, and then one starts receiving menacing notes on her desk at work.

It was a New York Times bestseller, and TV rights have now been optioned.

The Long Weekend by Gilly Macmillan (Penguin, £8.99) is another one to watch out for, set in an eerie isolated retreat in the Northumbri­an moors where three female friends meet for a weekend getaway, thinking their husbands will be joining them. But on arrival, they find a sinister note claiming one of their husbands has been murdered.

With no phone signal or internet, friendship­s fall apart as they try to find out what’s happened.

MEMOIRS

While Bob Mortimer fans may be waiting for his debut novel The Satsuma Complex to arrive this autumn, they should get stuck into his hilarious and heartbreak­ing memoir And Away... (GalWHETHER lery UK, £8.99), last year’s bestsellin­g autobiogra­phy, which has hit the shelves in paperback with a new chapter.

Other riveting reallife reads include Billy Connolly’s Windswept & Interestin­g (Two Roads, £9.99), and the Reverend Richard Coles’ bestsellin­g memoir The Madness Of Grief (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, £8.99).

The celebrity clergyman charts his relationsh­ip with his partner David, his death from alcohol addiction in

2020, and Coles’ subsequent journey of grief – the ‘sadmin’ he had to complete as he tried to tie up loose ends and navigate life without his partner of 12 years.

SHORT STORIES

If you prefer to dip in and out of a book on holiday, short stories are the way to go.

The Jealousy Man by Jo Nesbo (Vintage, £8.99) is the first short story collection from the creator of the Harry Hole series, featuring all manner of nerve-tingling scenarios – from a detective hunting a man suspected of murdering his twin, to two travellers meeting by chance in potentiall­y suspicious circumstan­ces.

On a completely different note, Love Stories by Australian author Trent Dalton (The Borough Press, £8.99) began when he sat on a street with a sky blue Olivetti typewriter and asked the world: can you please tell me a love story?

This intimate collection – including stories about a blind man who longs to see the face of his wife of 30 years, and a widower who finds a video his wife secretly recorded before she died – will tug at your heartstrin­gs.

MODERN ROMANCE

You can’t beat a good Sophie Kinsella novel for a little light relief from life’s woes, and

The Party Crasher

(Penguin, £8.99) is the ideal escapist read.

It centres on Effie, a young woman who has fallen out with her father and his glamorous new girlfriend – things go further awry when she tries to sneak into a party they are hosting, to retrieve her beloved Russian dolls. Funny, slightly ridiculous and always entertaini­ng, this will have you laughing on your beach lounger.

The Summer Trip

by Isabelle Broom (Hodder Paperbacks, £7.99) sees Ava return to Corfu after 18 years, having never forgotten what happened to her or who she left behind.

Now single, estranged from her family and about to become an empty nester, her life feels far removed from the one she dreamed of as a teenager – a life that is now being lived by her sister.

HISTORY

A rich mixture of historical figures feature in The Case Of The Married Woman by Lady Antonia Fraser (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, paperback

Aug 27, £10.99), a biography charting the trial of Caroline Norton, the 19th century author and campaigner accused of adultery with the first Victorian prime minister.

Caroline tirelessly fought for justice for women across society – a complex character, she helped make the world a better place for the women who came after her.

In fiction, Rose Tremain takes readers on a journey through Victorian England with

Lily (Vintage, £8.99), following the fortunes of the eponymous heroine, an abandoned orphan.

Lily is fostered by a kind and caring farming family in rural Suffolk before returning to London, where she finds work at a wig emporium – all the while hiding a terrible secret...

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 ?? ?? PAGE TURNER: A good book is a great way to relax after a stressful day
PAGE TURNER: A good book is a great way to relax after a stressful day

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