In the UK, summer doesn’t officially end until the 22nd, so even though I’ve been doing plenty of baking with apples and plums and we’ve had squashes delivered in our vegetable box, I’ve taken advantage of that extra time to finish a couple more summery books. This year I’m featuring four novels ranging in location from Rhode Island to Finland. I’ve got all the trappings of summer: a swimming pool, a wedding, a beach retreat, and a summer house.
The Most by Jessica Anthony (2024)
I can’t resist a circadian narrative. This novella takes place in Delaware on one day in early November 1957, but flashbacks and close third-person narration reveal everything we need to know about Virgil and Kathleen Beckett and their marriage. I’m including it in my summer reading because it’s set on an unseasonably warm Sunday and Kathleen decides to spend the entire day in their apartment complex’s pool. The mother of two drifts back in memory to her college tennis-playing days and her first great love, Billy Blasko, a Czech tennis coach who created a signature move called “The Most,” which means “bridge” in his language – the idea is to trap your opponent and then drop a bomb on them. Virgil, who after taking their two boys to church goes golfing with his insurance sales colleagues as is expected of him, loves jazz music and has just been sent the secret gift of a saxophone. Both spouses are harbouring secrets and, as Laika orbits the Earth overhead, they wonder if they can break free from the capsules they’ve built around their hearts and salvage their relationship. The storytelling is tight even as the book loops around the same events from the two perspectives. This was really well done, and a big step up from Enter the Aardvark. (Public library) ![]()
The Wedding People by Alison Espach (2024)
You’ve all heard about this one, right? It’s been a Read with Jenna selection and the holds are stacking up in my library system. No wonder it’s been hailed as a perfect summer read: it’s full of sparkling banter; heartwarming, very funny and quite sexy. And that despite a grim opening situation: Phoebe flies from St. Louis to Newport and checks into a luxury hotel, intending to kill herself. She’s an adjunct professor whose husband left her for their colleague after their IVF attempts failed, and she feels she’ll never finish writing her book, become a mother or find true love again. Little does she know that a Bridezilla type named Lila who’s spent $1 million of her inheritance on a week-long wedding extravaganza (culminating in a ceremony at The Breakers mansion) meant to book out the entire hotel. Phoebe somehow snagged the room with the best view. Lila isn’t about to let anyone ruin her wedding.
What follows is Cinderella-like yet takes into account the realities of bereavement, infidelity, infertility and blended families. Because of the one-week format, Phoebe’s depression is defused more quickly than is plausible, but I was relieved that Espach doesn’t plump for a full-blown happy ending. I did also find the novel unnecessarily crass in places, especially the gag about the car. Still, this has all the wit of Katherine Heiny and Curtis Sittenfeld. I’d recommend it if you enjoyed Dream State or Consider Yourself Kissed, and it’s especially reminiscent of Sorrow and Bliss for the mixture of humour and frank consideration of mental health. It’s as easy to relate to Phoebe’s feelings (“How much of her life had she spent in this moment, waiting for someone else to decide something conclusive about her?”; “It is so much easier to sit in things and wait for someone to save us”) as it is to laugh at the one-liners. “Garys are not wonderful. That’s just not what they are meant to be” particularly tickled me because I know a few Garys in real life. (Public library) ![]()
The Summer I Turned Pretty by Jenny Han (2008)
Every summer Belly and her mother and brother have joined her mother’s best friend Susannah and her sons Conrad and Jeremiah at their beach house. She’s had a crush on Conrad for what’s felt like forever, but she’s only ever been his surrogate little sister, fun for palling around with but never taken seriously. This summer is different, though: Belly is turning 16, it’s Conrad’s last summer before college, and his family seems to be falling apart. The novel kept being requested off me and I puzzled over how it could have eight reservations on it until I realized there’s an Amazon Prime Video adaptation now in its third and final season. I reckon the story will work better on screen because Belly’s narration was the main issue for me. She’s ever so shallow, so caught up in boys that she doesn’t realize Susannah is sick again. Her fixation on the brooding Conrad doesn’t make sense when she could have affable Jeremiah or sweet, geeky Cam, who met her through Latin club and liked her before she grew big boobs. He’s who she’s supposed to be with in this kind of story, right? I think this would appeal to younger, boy-crazy teens, but it just made me feel old and grumpy. (Public library) ![]()
The Summer House by Philip Teir (2017; 2018)
[Translated from Swedish by Tiina Nunnally]
The characters are Finland-Swedish, like the author. Erik and Julia escape Helsinki with their children, Alice and Anton, to spend time at her father’s summer house. Erik has just lost his job in IT for a large department store, but hasn’t told Julia yet. Julia is working on a novel, but distracted by the fact that her childhood friend Marika, the not so secret inspiration for a character in her previous novel, is at another vacation home nearby with Chris, her Scottish partner. These two and their hangers-on have a sort of commune based around free love and extreme environmental realism: the climate crisis will not be solved (“accepting the grief instead of talking about hope all the time”) and the only thing to do is participate in de-civilisation. But like many a cult leader, Chris courts young female attention and isn’t the best role model. Both couples are strained to breaking point.
Meanwhile, Chris and Marika’s son, Leo, has been sneaking off with Alice; and Erik’s brother Anders shows up and starts seeing the widowed therapist neighbour. This was a reasonably likeable book about how we respond to crises personal and global, and how we react to our friends’ successes and problems – Erik is jealous of his college buddy’s superior performance in a tech company. But I thought it was a little aimless, especially in its subplots, and it suffered in comparison with Leave the World Behind, which has quite a similar setup but a more intriguing cosmic/dystopian direction. (Secondhand – Community Furniture Project, Newbury) ![]()
Any final summer books for you this year?
Summer is over here and the kids have gone back to school. I will probably read The Summer I Turned Pretty – I want to watch the show but have a rule that I need to read the book before I see the on screen adaptation.
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I usually do the other way around: watch the adaptation first and then read the book. Otherwise the screen version always disappoints me! And in the book you get added depths.
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I have the Anthony and the Espach, and enjoyed the Teir although I thought The Winter War was better. I’m clinging to summer despite some distinctly autumnal weather.
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We had quite warm weather in Germany but on the day we got back here it was as if a switch had been flipped to autumn — late autumn, even. It’s gotten awfully chilly in the house.
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So pleased that Jessica Anthony is still writing, and pushing herself – I thought Enter the Aardvark was very funny and showed an author with potential for even more, so The Most sounds like good news.
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You’d easily power through it in an afternoon. Most enjoyable.
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I’ve been curious about The Most and The Wedding People and you make them both sound appealing! I laughed at the Gary line too (reminds me of loathsome Gary in The Corrections). The Summer I Turned Pretty, on the other hand – I hate the title too much 🙂
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Yeah, the ‘turning pretty’ thing (which in this case just seemed to mean growing boobs) did annoy me.
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You’re right, I have heard of The Wedding People, though it’s the plot that rang a bell, not the title. I suspect I heard about it on a podcast where they’re not very good at repeating the name of the book, so if I don’t hear it first time, I’m vaguely mystified throughout if I’m out in the garden with my headphones and my phone’s indoors. I have plenty of my summer books to finish, but none of them are particularly summery. In fact, they fit in far better with the autumn. For instance, Kiss of the Spider Woman; how autumnal can you get?
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My autumn reading will mostly be of the mild horror variety for R.I.P., I expect. I’m also reading a few year-challenge or year-in-the-life type of books that will be good for a seasonal roundup in the future.
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The Most sounds interesting. You know I adored The Wedding People. I just bought myself a copy with a gift certificate this weekend so I can reread it. (The first time was a library copy.)
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That’s a sign of a true favorite if you went out and bought a copy! I think Espach has written other novels but I’d not heard of her before this.
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Same!
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An interesting selection, and nice to have something by a Swedish-speaking-Finn in there!
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True, an heir to Tove Jansson in that respect!
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I’m saving The Most for November!
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It’ll be brilliant for NovNov.
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I have to read The Wedding People! Jenny Han’s book didn’t annoy me, but I have def felt “old and grumpy” reading some other YA. heheh
Our spring was extraordinarily long and now our summer too. It was 24-25 this past weekend. So I felt less guilty about only just finishing my last “summer” read last night (the chunky Margaret Walker novel, Jubilee). There are only a few leaves scattered on the ground. When they fall, it will be in a grand swoop.
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We had 25 or so on our last full day in Germany. Coming back to the UK, it felt awfully chilly. The autumn colour is really advancing here.
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[…] four favourites are ones I’ve already covered on the blog (links to my reviews): The Most by Jessica Anthony, Pale Shadows by Dominique Fortier and Three Days in June by Anne Tyler; and, in […]
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[…] for NovNov thanks to the rave reviews by Bookish Bec and […]
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[…] | Jessica Anthony Genre: NovellaI read this because: of NovNov and the rave reviews by Kate and BecOrigin: TBRWhere: at home Memorable Quote: …Kathleen was not ready to get out of the pool. Once […]
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