14 Must-Read Books for Summer 2024

Your ultimate guide to the best reads for the sunny season!

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Summertime and the reading is easy…or at least, it should be! With so many tantalizing new titles hitting bookshelves, choosing your sunny season reads can feel like the literary equivalent of a kid set free in a candy store. Luckily, I’ve curated 14 absolute must-read book list for your summer 2024 reading pleasure. From heartwarming tales of self-discovery to mind-bending speculative fiction, juicy celebrity tell-alls to innovative works challenging gender norms, these unputdownable novels have it all. Get ready to fill your beach tote and binge away those languid summer days with this stellar list of books.

Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus

Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie GarmusA good summer read should be equal parts entertaining and thought-provoking. Garmus’ debut novel “Lessons in Chemistry” qualifies on both fronts, making it a no-brainer for any 2024 must-read list. Set in the socially-turbulent 1960s, this smart, slyly feminist story follows Elizabeth Zott, a trailblazing scientist whose popular cooking show becomes an unlikely platform to impart life lessons on gender equity and female empowerment.

Garmus strikes the perfect balance between sharp social commentary, charming humor, and a deliciously zesty love story featuring one of the most irresistible heroines in recent literary memory. File “Lessons in Chemistry” under the category of breezy summer read that will also make you feel like you’re using your brain.


Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin

Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle ZevinGaming aficionados and nostalgic Gen-Xers, this is the book you’ll be devouring between turns playing the summer’s hottest new release. “Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow” is Zevin’s intricate meditation on the complexities of friendship, creativity, and what it means to devote one’s life to the pursuit of artistic genius.

While ostensibly chronicling the decades-spanning relationship between two visionary video game designers, this emotionally-textured novel illuminates the universally human elements of ambition, rivalry, and the families we make for ourselves through the connections that shape our existence. You’ll laugh, you’ll cry, you’ll long for the endless summer days of coding into the wee hours beside your closest friend. Endlessly absorbing and a prime candidate for the book-to-film treatment.


Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver

Demon Copperhead by Barbara KingsolverTrust me, I know—the summer is a time for sun-soaked escapism, not heavy literary tomes making you contemplate the cruelties of the world. Or so you thought, until Demon Copperhead comes along as a must-read summer books that transcends the usual literary fiction slog. Kingsolver reimagines Charles Dickens’ David Copperfield through a distinctly modern American lens, making pointed sociological observations about systemic poverty and toxic masculinity while still delivering an undeniably gripping coming-of-age story. The titular Demon Copperhead’s resilience and indomitable spirit in overcoming his harsh circumstances make this book for an immensely inspiring and life-affirming summer reading experience. This book could do for southern grit lit what Where the Crawdads Sing did for the bayou gothic genre.


The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid

The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins ReidSometimes the literary refreshment you crave during summer’s sweltering stretches is a deliciously juicy, escapist romp tailor-made for devouring beachside with a cool cocktail in hand. In that case, Taylor Jenkins Reid has the ultimate must-read for your summertime pleasure. “The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo” spins the wildly entertaining tale of a 1950s Hollywood screen siren who finally decides to dish decades’ worth of outrageous showbiz secrets and salacious blind gossip.

While primarily a soapy, voyeuristic thrill ride behind the curtain of Old Hollywood’s golden age, Reid’s mesmerizing tale doubles as a timelessly resonant study of sexuality, ambition, and the sacrifices we make for success. This piquant summer concoction will go down as smoothly as a crisp glass of rosé.


Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng

Book Review - Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste NgAlready a runaway hit as a limited series on Hulu, Celeste Ng’s book “Little Fires Everywhere” has all the makings of quintessential summer reading escapism – juicy suburban drama, dark dysfunctional family secrets, smoldering class commentary, and yes, actual fires. Ng’s masterful story of an idyllic 1990s Ohio planned community upended by the arrival of a nomadic single mother and her rebel teenage daughter hits just the right notes of soapy thrills and keen insights into race, privilege, and societal hypocrisy.

With writing so richly immersive you can practically smell the fresh-cut Ohio lawns, yet as consumably page-turning as the frothiest beach read, “Little Fires Everywhere” is that rare literary work equally stimulating to the intellect and emotions. This combustible tale is the obvious choice for your neighbourhood summer book club—just be prepared for heated debates!


People We Meet on Vacation by Emily Henry

People We Meet on Vacation by Emily HenryCue up the beachy summer romance you’ve been craving! Emily Henry’s sweet yet sultry charmer “People We Meet on Vacation” is the very platonic ideal of modern romantic comedy novels. Friends-to-lovers? Check. Steamy will-they-won’t-they sexual tension? You betcha. Swoonworthy grand romantic gestures? Oh, just you wait. Poppy and Alex’s decade-spanning summer vacations-turned-yearly reunions between two polar opposite travel buddies keep you hooked through fake dating hilarity, painfully relatable friend zone torment, and some of the most swoon-inducing banter since Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal in When Harry Met Sally. Even better, Henry injects real heart and wisdom about the ephemeral nature of relationships beyond just fluffy rom-com shenanigans. As bubbly and moreish as a crisp glass of chilled Whispering Angel on a hot summer afternoon.


The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett

The Vanishing Half by Brit BennettThis enthralling 2020 release was one of the most acclaimed literary novels of recent years, and remains a must-read going into summer 2024. With lyrical, propulsive writing and keen insights into themes of race, identity, and the facades we construct, Bennett’s “The Vanishing Half” makes for a reading experience more immersively transporting than any typical beach read.

The story follows the diverging lives of light-skinned Black twin sisters who take very different paths as adults—one living as a white woman, the other embracing her marginalized identity. Bennett masterfully delineates the complexities of each sister’s existence, be it passing for white or proudly melanated, while leaving readers grappling with thought-provoking questions about human nature and self-determination. After spending summer days luxuriating in the novel’s rich storytelling, you’ll be craving a group discussion to unpack its poignant ambiguities.


The Hotel Nantucket by Elin Hilderbrand

The Hotel Nantucket by Elin HilderbrandAs requisite and refreshing as a pitcher of freshly squeezed lemonade, the mere arrival of a new Elin Hilderbrand beach read instantly signifies summertime bliss for voracious readers everywhere. The hospitality maven’s latest seaworthy offering, “The Hotel Nantucket,” delivers all the soapy delights her fans devour – family drama, romantic foibles, surprise prodigal returns, and enough sandy New England island charm to transport even the most landlocked readers on a whimsical mental vacation.

Hilderbrand is the undisputed queen of the seasonal summer read, crafting page-turners as breezy and effervescent as a salty ocean mist. A shoo-in for beach tote ubiquity once summer 2024 rolls around.


The Atlas Six by Olivie Blake

The Atlas Six by Olivie BlakeFor those who appreciate their summer reads with a dark, esoteric, slightly bonkers bent, allow “The Atlas Six” to enchant you with its deliciously sinister Hogwartsian vibes and insanely addictive page-turning powers. This occult thriller about a group of uniquely skilled millennials recruited to an elite secret society reads like The Secret History meets The Magicians…by way of the Hellfire Club.

Olivie Blake’s sumptuous prose and shadowy atmospherics will cast an inescapable spell from the very first page, seducing readers into a twisted world of black magic, cutthroat power struggles, and an ever-mounting dread that some of these gifted students will not survive their training. If you can’t get enough of dark academia or elevated fantasy, “The Atlas Six” is a goth must-read to slake your unconventional summer reading thirst.


The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune

The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ KluneSometimes after indulging in literary fiction, unsettling thrillers, or whatever hot new beach read has whipped the masses into a frenzy, you crave something more nourishing for the soul. Enter TJ Klune’s poignant fantasy charmer “The House in the Cerulean Sea,” which reads like a warm literary embrace for the pure of heart. Its sweet yet profound fairy tale about an uptight caseworker sent to inspect an orphanage housing magical children and their renegade caretakers beautifully distills timeless messages about acceptance, identity, and finding your chosen family into pure delight.

From the vividly eccentric array of lovable characters to the empowering allegories about marginalized youth, Klune’s boundlessly imaginative world is sure to re-awaken your inner child’s sense of wonder and magic – the perfect soul-reviving antidote after a stressful day doing battle with your e-reader. Read it, and let yourself be transported back to that wistful state when anything seemed possible.


The Summer Place by Jennifer Weiner

The Summer Place by Jennifer WeinerFew authors deliver sun-drenched summer fun quite like Jennifer Weiner. Her latest novel “The Summer Place” promises to be another irresistible entry in Weiner’s oeuvre of witty, warmhearted tales about complex women navigating familial bonds, romantic foibles, and the curveballs life throws their way. This highly anticipated book follows a reunited blended family making an annual summer pilgrimage to their Cape Massacchusetts beach house, where buried resentments, new flames, and decades of inside jokes come bubbling back to the surface.

With her trademark blend of sharp humor and poignant emotional truths, Weiner’s knack for insightful depictions of female relationships across generations makes “The Summer Place” a perfect beach read to devour during lazy days by the ocean. Bonus points if you actually read it in a summer place of your own making.


One Italian Summer by Rebecca Serle

One Italian Summer by Rebecca SerleYou had me at the mere mention of Italy, didn’t you? Serle’s “One Italian Summer” perfectly encapsulates the wanderlust and rose-tinted nostalgia factor we seek in transportive summer reads. When Katy’s mother Carol dies unexpectedly, Katy is left reeling – not only from her profound grief but the looming prospect of embarking alone on their long-awaited mother-daughter trip to the Amalfi Coast town of Positano. But upon arriving in the magical Italian village, Katy experiences the seemingly impossible: her mother appears to her, alive and vibrant…in her 30s.

Over the course of one transcendent Italian summer, Katy gets to know the young, carefree Carol before she became a mother, allowing Katy to reconcile the all-knowing parent she idolized with the footloose woman she once was. Part moving exploration of profound loss and mother-daughter relationships, part romantic odyssey steeped in the sun-kissed splendor of the Amalfi coast, “One Italian Summer” promises to be a tender, transporting tale about second chances and appreciating the loved ones in our lives to the fullest.

As Katy revels in la dolce vita and the delectable cuisine alongside her resurrected younger mother, Serle stirs in just the right amounts of escapist wanderlust, hard-won emotional wisdom, and recognition of life’s bittersweet beauty. An undoubtedly bellissimo summer read to lose yourself in.


Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir - A Whip-Smart, Enormously Propulsive Sci-Fi Thrill RideThe high-concept sci-fi imagination of Andy Weir strikes again! In “Project Hail Mary,” the author of The Martian and Artemis delivers another unputdownable summer page-turner centered on an improbable interstellar survival tale. Ryland Grace awakes millions of miles from Earth with two corpses for company and no memory of his mission – only the slowly dawning realization that he’s humanity’s last hope against an extinction-level crisis.

As Ryland’s fractured recollections begin piecing together, he grasps that he must solve a seemingly impossible scientific mystery to save Earth. The stakes go into total meltdown when the clock starts ticking and Ryland realizes he’s all alone in the depths of space…or is he? Weir balances nail-biting suspense and scientifically grounded authenticity with a surprising degree of heart-on-your-sleeve poignancy. You’ll inhale every painstaking effort as Ryland works against the clock, manages personal setbacks, and forms an unlikely bond with enigmatic alien companions – all while holding humanity’s fate in his hands.

Basically, it’s like The Martian meets Arrival by way of Interstellar. You’ll be holding your breath during these Mars Attacks!-level high stakes while marveling at Weir’s deft juggling of white-knuckle thrills, emotional beats, and existential musings. A summer reading blast-off into cerebral sci-fi nirvana destined to lock many readers in for the long haul.


The Maidens by Alex Michaelides

The Maidens by Alex MichaelidesAfter his smash hit psychological thriller The Silent Patient, Alex Michaelides had big shoes to fill with his sophomore novel – and “The Maidens” delivers another compulsively readable exercise in devious suspense. When a member of a secret society of female students at Cambridge University is murdered, troubled group therapist Mariana Andros becomes obsessed with proving the guilt of the very professor whom all the victims had been infatuated with.

Edward Fosca is a charismatic Greek tragedy instructor adored by staff and students alike, particularly the group known as The Maidens. But Mariana, herself a former student, is convinced that behind Fosca’s idyllic façade lies a sinister darkness – and she’ll stop at nothing to expose him as the killer, even if it costs her everything.

Michaelides’ globe-hopping, serpentine plot barrels ahead at a breathless pace, drawing you deeper into the university’s elite secret societies, pagan rites of maidenhood, and toxic power plays with every salacious revelation. While the premise may strain credulity at times, the author’s flair for misdirection, deeply unsettling atmospherics, and an unlikely heroine increasingly spiraling out of control make “The Maidens” a perfect beach book to sneak off and devour alone. Deliciously depraved summer suspense.


There you have it—14 absolutely unputdownable list of books custom-curated to make your summer reading adventures memorable, thought-provoking, transportive, and above all, thoroughly enjoyable. From frothy beach reads whisking you to distant shores to intellectual heavyweights expanding your perspectives on the human experience, this stacked summer 2024 lineup caters to every literary taste.

So pick a sunny al fresco reading nook, slather on some SPF, and lose yourself in these captivating new tales while soaking up all the glorious Vitamin D. Just be sure to slap on those noise-canceling headphones if you simply can’t deal with distracting ambient sounds like pesky ice cream truck jingles rudely disrupting your blissful state of rapt literary immersion. Happy end-of-summer, bookworms!

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