海角大神

Cool midsummer reads to help you get by in July

July 24, 2025

These are the fiction titles that Monitor reviewers like best this month:

The Greatest Possible Good,听by Ben Brooks

Ben Brooks explores how far a person should be willing to go to help others in this engaging morality tale. When the patriarch of a privileged English family donates the bulk of the clan鈥檚 fortune to charity, it does not sit well with his wife and teenage children 鈥 at least, not initially. 鈥 Heller McAlpin听听Read our听full review.听

Why We Wrote This

Our reviewers鈥 picks this month include novels about an actor-turned-CIA spy and a museum worker who falls through a portal into a Matisse painting. The nonfiction topics involve Amelia Earhart鈥檚 marriage, brazen thefts of Chinese art, and studying seals.

The Winds From Further West,听by Alexander McCall Smith

Alexander McCall Smith鈥檚 uplifting novel has been referred to as 鈥渁 call to arms for a better society.鈥 This philosophical exploration of people, academia, and 鈥渃ancel culture鈥 follows a University of Edinburgh researcher. After disheartening setbacks, he retreats to the isolated, beautiful Isle of Mull, opening his heart to new beginnings.听鈥 Stefanie Milligan

鈥業t鈥檚 everyone鈥檚 business.鈥 In Finland, national security is a shared responsibility.

Pariah,听by Dan Fesperman

Disgraced American actor Hal reluctantly agrees to help the CIA spy on an Eastern European autocrat. The twist: Mr. Despot loves Hal鈥檚 work and has invited him to perform at his presidential palace. What follows is a balancing act 鈥 for Hal, beneath the watch of competing agencies and interests, as well as for author Dan Fesperman, as he unspools a tale of a flawed man鈥檚 transformation.听鈥 Erin Douglass

The Art of Vanishing,听by Morgan Pager

This whimsical tale set in Philadelphia finds museum employee Claire entering a portal into a 1917 Henri Matisse painting. There, she falls deeply in love with the artist鈥檚 son, Jean. The novel offers a bountiful palette of laughter, wisdom, and affection. 鈥 Stefanie Milligan

Slanting Towards the Sea,听by Lidija Hilje

Lesotho makes Trump鈥檚 polo shirts. He could destroy their garment industry.

Ivona 鈥 a late-30s, would-be biologist in a dead-end job 鈥 lives on the Croatian coast with her father ever since her divorce. She grapples with lingering feelings for her ex, while navigating the future of her family鈥檚 land, the attentions of a new suitor, and a heap of regrets. Amid big feelings come wise questions about duty, potential, and connection. 鈥 Erin Douglass

These are the nonfiction titles our reviewers like best this month:

The Place of Tides,听by James Rebanks

James Rebanks, an English farmer, writes about how he found renewal during a stay on the Norwegian island of Fj忙r酶y assisting one of the last 鈥渄uck women.鈥 Anna M氓s酶y not only provides a haven for nesting eider ducks, but also imparts life lessons. 鈥 Heller McAlpin Read our full review.

Monopoly X,听by Philip Orbanes

Written by a former board-game designer, this deep dive into Monopoly鈥檚 role in World War II bursts with resistance fighters, ingenious rescues, and perilous close calls. There鈥檚 a lot to track; still, the book ably showcases the tenacity of people who assisted Allied soldiers and freed prisoners of war. 鈥 Erin Douglass

A Year With the Seals,听by Alix Morris

Science writer Alix Morris spends time with conservationists who have helped seal populations thrive, commercial fishers who blame the marine mammals for diminishing their catches, and surfers and swimmers who complain that seals attract sharks. Her insightful account captures the complexities of human intervention in the natural world. 鈥 Barbara Spindel

The Aviator and the Showman,听by Laurie Gwen Shapiro

Laurie Gwen Shapiro鈥檚 sprawling, cinematic account focuses on the marriage of aviator听Amelia Earhart and publisher George Putnam. The author pierces Earhart鈥檚 mythic image by illuminating not only her bravery but also her recklessness; Earhart鈥檚 less well-known husband is portrayed as a publicity-obsessed con man. 鈥 Barbara Spindel

The Great Chinese Art Heist,听by Ralph Pezzullo

In the last 15 years, several European art museums have fallen prey to carefully planned raids of Chinese antiquities. Almost none of the stolen pieces have been recovered. Ralph Pezzullo traces these robberies to the end of the Second Opium War in 1860 and the destructive looting of the Old Summer Palace in Beijing by British and French troops. But who is stealing these treasures, and where are they going? 鈥 Terry W. Hartle