Books for wherever summer takes you. Beach blanket optional.
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These are the fiction titles our reviewers liked best this month.
Ի,by Maggie O’Farrell (Knopf)
Maggie O’Farrell’s magnificent historical novel “Land” is a powerful epic about a remote Irish peninsula and its beleaguered peoples. Set in the aftermath of the Great Hunger, the narrative focuses on the family of a surveyor and cartographer named Tomás. He has been hired by the British Ordnance Survey to map the territory and record the loss of hundreds of Irish tenant households following the potato blight. Lushly written and heartbreaking, the novel is also a moving paean to perseverance and survival. – Heller McAlpin
Why We Wrote This
Summer reading season is here with shady-chair-ready books that expand imaginations and enrich understanding. In nonfiction, innovation blooms – from the first all-star baseball game to a 1909 cross-country car race to the man who laid the first transatlantic cable.
Green City Wars,by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Tor)
Skotch isn’t merely a raccoon. The world-weary protagonist of “Green City Wars” is a freelance investigator with a job to do – locate and deliver a mouse to his former employer before warring squirrel armies, or the rat gangster boss, or a weasel enforcer grab him first. Sound crazy? Part noir, part “Animal Farm,” the latest from Adrian Tchaikovsky envisions a world where genetically engineered animals provide the (mostly) unseen labor powering humans’ harmonious eco-dreamland. Feathers ruffle and the fur flies as vexing questions about exploitation, addiction, and the privilege of independent thought loom in the shadows. Tchaikovsky’s world-building dazzles.– Erin Douglass
An Artful Dodge,by Karen Odden (Soho Crime)
This unusual historical novel set in Victorian London revolves around a notorious ring of women thieves. Virtuoso cat burglar Kit Jimeson yearns to escape the gang’s dangerous lifestyle and protect her beloved younger sister from joining. When treacherous Maggie O’Connell, leader of the gang, returns from prison, she resents Kit’s standing with the group. “An Artful Dodge” offers a surprisingly moving tale with loyal and courageous characters.– Stefanie Milligan
A Pair of Aces,by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray (Berkley)
In 1930s New York, two women from very different milieus – a prosecutor and a brothel owner – team up to topple mob boss Lucky Luciano. The novel is based on the true story of Eunice Carter, Manhattan’s assistant district attorney (and first Black female prosecutor). While Carter’s collaboration with high-class madam Polly Adler (a real person) is fictional, both women blazed trails in hostile environments.– Stefanie Milligan
Murder at the Spirit Lounge,by Jess Kidd (Atria Books)
In Jess Kidd’s terrific second mystery featuring former nun Nora Breen, a séance for six becomes one unholy mess. A “world-renowned medium” has been murdered while doing the hard (and apparently lucrative) work of “lifting the veil between worlds.” From an alluring actress to a gruff colonel, the gathering’s motley attendees can’t explain what happened – and then, one by one, start meeting inexplicable ends themselves. Ever curious, Nora teams up with Detective Inspector Rideout, himself an attendee, to uncover the truth. The writing is stellar; the message of partnership vanquishing vindictiveness a balm.– Erin Douglass
Leave and Come Back,by Lavanya Lakshmi (Pamela Dorman Books)
Lavanya Lakshmi’s sparkling rom-com finds Simran’s love interest, Leo, unintentionally crashing her cousin’s two-week wedding festivities in New Jersey. Worried that her judgmental Aunt Veema will reject Leo, Simran enlists her cousins’ help in a scheme straight out of a Bollywood movie. Their aim: Make Leo the most helpful and appreciative wedding guest ever, so that he will win Veema over and be accepted into the family. The novel turns grief and misunderstandings into life-affirming renewal.– Stefanie Milligan
Moonlight Murder,by Uzma Jalaluddin (Harper Perennial)
Uzma Jalaluddin’s eloquent sequel to “Detective Aunty” is a bona fide cozy murder mystery hit! South Asian-Canadian detective Aunty Kausar Khan is impelled to investigate another murder in Toronto – this time linked to one of her granddaughters. Double doses of intrigue arise, as clues pile up that inspire Kausar to finally solve who killed her son, Ali, 20 years ago.– Stefanie Milligan
These are the nonfiction titles our reviewers liked best.
Stalin’s Apostles,by Antonia Senior (PublicAffairs)
Antonia Senior’s “Stalin’s Apostles” revisits the infamous Cambridge Five spy ring, a cadre of posh Englishmen who infiltrated the upper ranks of Britain’s clubby midcentury establishment – and funneled mountains of secrets straight to the Kremlin before their unmasking in 1951. The noxious mix of English manners, left-wing idealism, and cold-blooded betrayal has long captivated the public. But Senior’s new account strips the spies of romantic glamor, focusing instead on the devastating human costs of their treachery and how they aided Soviet dictator Josef Stalin in building a brutal empire.– Bryn Stole
The Wreck of the Mentor,by Eric Jay Dolin (Liveright)
An American whaling ship is lost at sea in a fierce storm, and the survivors wash up on a small speck of land in a remote corner of the Pacific. In their bid to survive, they will face unimaginable hardships and challenges, not the least of which include clashes with different groups of Pacific Islanders. More broadly, this is a story of what happened when the economic growth and expansion of the West collided with traditional cultures that were, for good reason, deeply suspicious of newcomers.–Terry W. Hartle
The First All-Star Game,by Randall Sullivan (Atlantic Monthly Press)
In 1933, the United States was reeling from a market crash and an assassination attempt on the president. Baseball, still in its fledgling days, was sinking under the influence of gamblers and gangsters, even as the athleticism of Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig drove the sport to new heights. A Chicago journalist was so dedicated to the idea of bringing all the best players to one game in Comiskey Park that he promised to cover any losses with his own paycheck. The result was the first All-Star Game – a home run for both baseball and a nation yearning for hope.– Kendra Nordin Beato
Lightning Beneath the Sea,by James M. Tabor (W. W. Norton & Company)
Though little known today, New Yorker Cyrus Field became a global celebrity in the 19th century after he assembled a scientific dream team to lay the first transatlantic telegraph cable. The technology allowed messages between continents to travel within minutes. That great leap forward, and the glory and complications it created in its wake, are at the heart of James M. Tabor’s sweeping chronicle of the birth of the global communications age.–Danny Heitman
The Long Revolution,by Nathan Perl-Rosenthal (Basic Books)
Before the Fourth of July became associated with fireworks and barbecues, it was a day for debating the American experiment in self-government: For the nation’s first 100 years, the centerpiece of the annual celebration was a public oration assessing the health of the country’s founding ideals. Using 2,500 surviving speeches as source material – and citing abolitionist Frederick Douglass’ 1852 address as a masterpiece of the form – historian Nathan Perl-Rosenthal presents a compelling vision of a Revolution that early generations of Americans viewed as fragile and incomplete.–Barbara Spindel
The Beasts of the East,by Andrew Moore (Mariner Books)
Environmental journalist Andrew Moore explores citizen-driven efforts to restore the once-verdant ecosystems of the eastern United States and draw near-extinct species back to their native habitats. He examines firsthand the return of buffalo and bison, as well as sandhill cranes to areas once decimated by industrialization and suburban sprawl. And while these initiatives are not without challenges, Moore’s meticulous research, conveyed in engaging prose, also restores a sense of hope.–Joan Gaylord
The Hardest, Longest Race,by Eric Moskowitz (St. Martin's Press)
Automobiles were still a novelty in 1909, and paved roads were something of a rarity, too. That made for a precarious odyssey when the moneyed rake Robert Guggenheim decided to stage a cross-country car race from New York City to Seattle, a contest that author Eric Moskowitz chronicles with voluminous research and wry humor. Fans of great summer road trips will find his story irresistible.– Danny Heitman