Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

16 hot books for summer

From thrillers to memoirs to poetry, these titles provide a bit of escape

- By Carolyn Kellogg

THERE are a couple of times of year when colleagues start casually stopping by my office to chat about books. It would happen more often if I weren’t on a different floor than many of them — and also, it’s not just casual talk.

Come June, they’re looking for something good and fun to read when they finally get to take a break — a vacation, a trip with the family, head to the beach or pool or campground or even just the backyard.

Summer is when many of us get a chance to settle in with a book, something that might provide a bit of an escape. Here are 16 books to look forward to — and a few that are already out, if you’re ready to get started on your summer reading.

Fiction

Novelist Anne Tyler — best known for “The Accidental Tourist” — has been publishing moving, best-selling novels for 40 years, and she’s back with “Clock Dance” (Knopf, July), an episodic story of Willa Drake, a woman whose life seems straightfo­rward enough until, in her 60s, she agrees to take care of a stranger’s daughter and dog and gets caught up in their world.

For a literary romance, try “The Verdun Affair”

by Nick Dybeck (Counterpoi­nt, June), a historical fiction that begins in 1950 in Los Angeles, where a Hollywood screenwrit­er runs into someone from his past. Their story stretches back to Europe in the years following the First World War, and the novel unravels a love triangle and its players’ secrets.

On the lighter side, Georgia Clark’s novel “The

Bucket List” (Atria, August) is a witty, sexy take on a well-worn theme. After a buttoned-up 25-year-old woman learns she has the BCRA1 gene mutation and should have a double mastectomy to reduce her risk of breast cancer, she comes up with a to-do list of breast adventures, which she sets out to complete.

Melissa Broder’s acclaimed novel “The

Pisces” (Hogarth, out now) is an engrossing tale of a woman wrestling with her demons — an unfinished Ph.D., therapy for addiction — who comes to Venice, California, and falls in love with a merman. As we saw in “The Shape of Water,” it happens.

Mystery-thriller

Few writers get at the dark corners of the female psyche like Megan Abbott. In her new psychologi­cal thriller, “Give Me Your Hand”

(Little, Brown

& Co., July), two female scientists, who were friends in high school, compete for the same position working for their mentor in groundbrea­king research and become deep rivals.

In“Bearskin” (Ecco, June), the debut novel from James A. McLaughlin, a not-at-all innocent man on the run from a Mexican drug cartel tries to start over with an assumed name and a job at a remote Virginia nature preserve. But when a bear is killed on the grounds, it opens the door to trouble and violence.

Writer Jessica Knoll (“Luckiest Girl Alive”) uses reality TV as the setting for her new thriller, “The

Favorite Sister” (Simon & Schuster, out now). Entreprene­ur competitor­s — all women, two who are sisters — are set up to have camera-ready catfights and the rest. But one ends up dead.

Entertainm­ent

Reality TV is the setting as well for the nonfiction book “Bachelor Nation”

(Dutton, out now) by Times entertainm­ent writer Amy Kaufman. The long-running series that starts with strangers and ends with a happy couple (if all goes as planned) is back for a new season, and Kaufman’s book is a delicious look behind the scenes.

The biggest book

I’m suggesting you bring to the beach is“Bruce Lee: A Life”

by Matthew Polly (Simon & Schuster, June). Sure, it’s 656 pages, but it’s the first authoritat­ive biography of the martial arts teacher and movie star, who died mysterious­ly at 32, but whose films, like “Enter the Dragon,” still thrill decades later.

Poetry

The slimmest book on this list is

“American Sonnets for

My Past and Future

Assassin” by Terrance Hayes (Penguin, June), but that doesn’t mean it’s not powerful. Hayes unleashes 70 poems that are haunted by America’s past and future eras and errors, its dreams and nightmares.

Memoir-essay

Historian Nell Painter was 64 when she stepped down from her job at Princeton to attend the Rhode Island School of Design. She chronicles that experience in her memoir “Old in Art

School” (Counterpoi­nt, June), bringing her fierce intelligen­ce to questions not just of age but also race and what it means to be an artist.

Young writer Michael Arceneaux’s coming-of-age essay collection, “I Can’t Date Jesus: Love, Sex, Family, Race and Other Reasons I’ve Put My Faith in Beyonce” (Atria, July), touches on growing up in Texas, coming out to his mother and embracing his identity.

Nonfiction

As a journalist, KJ Dell’Antonia has wide view of parenthood — and an upclose experience with four

kids of her own. In “How to Be a Happier Parent: Raising a Family, Having a Life, and Loving (Almost) Every

Minute” (Avery, August), she shares her knowledge in a breezy style and bite-size format that’s easy to read between toddler meltdowns.

An ambitious Silicon Valley company, a groundbrea­king product, billions invested and a founder who was hailed as brilliant: It’s the story of our modern technologi­cal age, but for Theranos, it was built on an empty promise. In“Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley

Startup” (Knopf, out now), journalist John Carreyrou gets the inside scoop on the company’s rise and fall.

Nothing lasts forever: In 1930s Shanghai, the noholds-barred gangster scene was run by an American ex-Navyman and a Jewish man who’d fled Vienna. Their milieu — and its end — comes alive in“City of Devils: The Two Men Who Ruled the Underworld of Old

Shanghai” (Picador, July) by Paul French, an Edgar Awardwinni­ng writer.

Michael Pollan is best known for his groundbrea­king writing about food and the environmen­t. But in “How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedeli­cs Teaches Us About Consciousn­ess, Dying, Addiction, Depression and

Transcende­nce” (Penguin Press, out now), he seriously researched — and explored — current uses of mindalteri­ng substances such as LSD and psilocybin, turning gonzo journalism on its head.

 ?? Getty Images ?? Summer is when many of us finally get to take a break — a trip to the beach or pool or even just the backyard — and settle in with a book.
Getty Images Summer is when many of us finally get to take a break — a trip to the beach or pool or even just the backyard — and settle in with a book.
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