You are not logged in

New York Magazine

Skip to content, or skip to search.

Skip to content, or skip to search.

How to Be Bookish on the Beach

Light reading done right


Cocktail-Party Essential
Gotham Diaries, Tonya Lewis Lee, Crystal McCrary Anthony (Hyperion; July 7)
A send-up of Manhattan’s African-American royalty, by the wives of Spike Lee and former Knick Greg Anthony. Eh prose, but A+ gossip.








Top-Shelf Chick Lit
The Big Love, Sarah Dunn (Little, Brown; July 2)
Neon-pink cover, check. Newly dumped singleton newspaper columnist, check. But this Philadelphia tale of girlie woe transcends its genre with 3-D characters and empathy.








Nonfiction Blockbuster
The Last Run, by Todd Lewan (HarperCollins; July 1)
Call it The Perfect Ice Storm. Journalist Lewan turned his reported series on Alaskan long-line fishing into a blizzard rescue story with a criminal undertow. Movie adaptation awaits.








Worthy Experiment
Cloud Atlas, David Mitchell (Random House; August 17)
“His generation’s Pynchon,” according to critics—and therefore, maybe, your beach bag’s Gravity’s Rainbow. A loopy, experimental story cycle, but in a good way.








The Backlist
Bad Haircut: Stories of the Seventies, Tom Perrotta (Berkley Publishing Group)
If you loved Little Children (or the movie adaptation of Election), grab this 1997 short-story collection. Sharp, funny rites of passage from a New Jersey seventies adolescence.








Erudite But Quick
Four Souls, Louise Erdrich (HarperCollins; June 24)
Just over 200 pages, this drama about an Ojibwe woman who entraps the lumber baron who stole her tribal lands is dense but chewy. And set in a cool climate.







See also
How to Be Really Bookish on the Beach: Serious Reading for the Sand


Related:

Advertising

Most Popular Stories

PEOPLE WHO READ THIS ALSO READ…

Advertising