Entertainment

Summer reads: Eight of the best new books to hit the beach with

Still room in your suitcase for a new book or two? Hannah Stephenson leafs through this year's top summer reads.

The summer holidays are here – but which book(s) will you be taking with you?
The summer holidays are here – but which book(s) will you be taking with you?

THERE'S a cracking collection of page-turners to take on your summer holidays this year – from nail-biting thrillers to romantic yarns, and nostalgic tales to award-winning literary gems.

Here are our top choices...

An American Marriage by Tayari Jones (Oneworld, £8.99 paperback; ebook £3.11)

HAILED as a masterpiece by Barack Obama and Oprah Winfrey, this is the one everyone's talking about and the deserved winner of the 2019 Women's Prize for Fiction.

It tells the story of newlyweds Roy and Celestial, a black middle-class couple living the good life in Atlanta, Georgia. But their world is shattered when Roy is arrested for a rape he didn't commit and sentenced to 12 years in prison.

Celestial finds herself struggling to hold on to the love that has been her centre, taking comfort from Andre, the boy next door. As the years move on, they become a couple, but when Roy's conviction is suddenly overturned he returns home ready to resume their life together - and that's where it gets really interesting.

Daisy Jones & The Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid
Daisy Jones & The Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid

Daisy Jones & The Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid (Hutchinson, £12.99 hardback; ebook £7.99)

THE 60s may have been the start of the sex, drugs and rock'n'roll era – but many would argue that the excesses and wild behaviour really escalated in the 70s.

This decade forms the backdrop to the fictional story of the rise of an American rock band, Daisy Jones & The Six, told through a series of interviews with the key members of the band and those around them. All the ups and the downs are relived, the in-fighting, outrageous behaviour and touring mayhem, the record label interference, sexual shenanigans and drug-taking, until the band's final disintegration.

Some have said this fictional story's not that far off the true Fleetwood Mac one – but read it and you can be the judge.

The Truants by Kate Weinberg
The Truants by Kate Weinberg

The Truants by Kate Weinberg (out Aug 8, Bloomsbury, £14.99 hardback; ebook £9.11)

JOJO Moyes and Alain de Botton have been singing the praises of this debut novel, which centres on Jess Walker, the middle child of a middle-class family, who arrives at an East Anglian university where she is soon drawn into a tightly-knit group of rule-breakers, led by a maverick tutor.

As she begins to experiment with a new version of herself, she unwittingly becomes part of a toxic love triangle as the new gang of friends share secrets, lovers and finally a tragedy.

Late In The Day by Tessa Hadley
Late In The Day by Tessa Hadley

Late In The Day by Tessa Hadley (Jonathan Cape, £16.99 hardback; ebook £9.99)

THIS is one of the best literary offerings so far this year, focusing on how an unexpected death upsets the equilibrium of two 50-something couples who met in their 20s and still have strong connections.

When one of the husbands - who was the pivotal force in the foursome – dies suddenly, it's left to the other three to pick up the pieces, which they don't do very well.

Hadley explores the themes of marriage, friendship and grief, taking readers back and forth in time, to show how the past has a bearing on each present moment.

Queenie by Candice Carty-Williams
Queenie by Candice Carty-Williams

Queenie by Candice Carty-Williams (Trapeze, £12.99, ebook £6.99)

BILLED as the 'black Bridget Jones', this amusing debut follows 20-something south Londoner Queenie Jenkins, an aspiring journalist who's just split up from her long-term boyfriend. Meanwhile, her newspaper boss doesn't appreciate her, and her family doesn't listen to her.

You will cry with her and cry for her. Indeed, the book has surprising depth and at times, turning frequently from hilarious to heartfelt.

Big Sky by Kate Atkinson
Big Sky by Kate Atkinson

Big Sky by Kate Atkinson (Doubleday, £20 hardback; ebook £9.99)

AFTER nine years, the prolific York-born writer resurrects Jackson Brodie, her private investigator, now relocated to a seaside village in north Yorkshire where he is looking after his sulky teenage son, Nathan, and Dodo the ancient labrador, both temporarily left with him for the summer by his ex, Julia.

Hired to do a spot of husband-following, Brodie meets a desperate man on a cliff, an encounter that leads him into a sinister labyrinth of murder, abuse and barbed old sins, with an undercurrent of paedophile rings and slavery.

Atkinson presents her story in a challenging, idiosyncratic way that makes for a compelling read.

The Woman In The White Kimono by Ana Johns
The Woman In The White Kimono by Ana Johns

The Woman In The White Kimono by Ana Johns (Legend Press, £8.99 paperback; £4.99 ebook)

INSPIRED by true stories from a devastating and little-known era in Japanese and American History, The Woman In The White Kimono illuminates a searing portrait of one woman torn between her culture and her heart, and another woman on a journey to discover the true meaning of home.

It's inspired by the true story of Ana Johns' father, who as an American US Navy soldier in the 1950s fell in love with a Japanese girl. Their relationship was ultimately stopped by cultural pressures and Johns has done extensive research into the thousands of love stories that were thwarted and babies abandoned.

Platform Seven by Louise Doughty
Platform Seven by Louise Doughty

Platform Seven by Louise Doughty (out Aug 22, Faber & Faber, £14.99 hardback; £12.99 ebook)

THIS is a late-summer read, as it's not out till the end of August, but the hotly-anticipated novel from the bestselling author of Apple Tree Yard is worth waiting for.

Not your average spine-tingler, it's eerie and unusual, as it is narrated by the ghost of a woman who came to a sticky end at the eponymous platform.

As the plot unfolds, the dead woman, who is herself haunted by other ghostly apparitions and trapped in limbo between life and death, reflects on how she got there and how a toxic relationship affected her life. You'll read this in one sitting.