
Here are the summer's most anticipated books
. To subscribe,
.
TODAY'S STARTING POINT
For many Americans, summer means more time for leisure. That means more time to read. And
that
means news outlets publishing lists of books that you might want to consider adding to your list.
The Globe has just released
'We figure there's probably not many single readers who will love all the books, but we hope very much that every reader, every kind of reader, will find something that appeals to them,' Kate told me. The goal is to feed existing appetites while also introducing authors whose work you might not yet have picked up.
Advertisement
The sad truth is that most Americans (myself included!) don't read anywhere close to 75 books in a year, let alone during a summer. Distractions and other ways to spend our time — phones, Netflix — abound. Having kids out of school can increase the demands on parents' time. And as Kate put it, 'a lot of people don't get to take the kind of summer vacations that we all fantasize about' — that is, reading the day away in a hammock. In a December 2023 YouGov poll, nearly half of Americans copped
Advertisement
And when it comes to summer, even the Globe's 75 suggestions are just a taste. Lots of publications have their own lists of the season's most-anticipated books. We found 16 others — from
So to thin out the crowd a bit — and figure out which of this season's new books are truly setting the literary world ablaze — we went through those different publications' lists to find the titles that recurred. Beyond
Advertisement
Here are the 12 books that appeared on at least five different publications' lists, plus a brief description. Think of it as a shortlist guide to the season's most-anticipated titles. Happy reading!
1. 'Atmosphere: A Love Story,' by Taylor Jenkins Reid (on 10 lists)
From the author of 'The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo,' this novel follows an astronomy professor training with the first female astronauts. (Out June 3 from
2. 'King of Ashes' by S.A. Cosby (10 lists)
Cosby's novels explore the modern American South. This mob thriller features gangsters, troubled siblings, and a car crash that was no accident. (June 10,
3. 'Flashlight' by Susan Choi (9 lists)
Choi, whose last novel won the National Book Award, returns with this 'propulsive story about family secrets and displacement,' reviewer Wadzanai Mhute writes in the Globe. (June 3,
4. 'Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil' by V.E. Schwab (8 lists)
This gothic novel follows three female vampires across centuries and continents. (June 10,
5. 'Great Black Hope' by Rob Franklin (7 lists)
This debut novel — the only one on our shortlist — centers on Smith, a queer Black Stanford graduate who bounces between New York and his hometown of Atlanta. Things go wrong. (June 10,
6. 'Katabasis' by R.F. Kuang (7 lists)
With shades of Dante's 'Inferno,' a student of Magick partners with a rival to retrieve her academic adviser's soul — and a letter of recommendation — from hell. (Aug. 26,
Advertisement
7. 'The Dry Season: A Memoir of Pleasure in a Year Without Sex' by Melissa Febos (7 lists)
Febos's memoir, the only purely nonfiction book on our shortlist, chronicles her journey to remain celibate after a bad breakup. As Kate Tuttle writes, it explores 'the jagged borders between freedom and intimacy.' (June 3,
8. 'Don't Let Him In' by Lisa Jewell (5 lists)
Globe reviewer Daneet Steffens calls this 'whiplash-inducing' psychological thriller a 'perfectly plotted, sinister tale' of charisma and deceit. (June 24,
9. 'Meet Me at the Crossroads' by Megan Giddings (5 lists)
An apparent portal into another dimension tests the kinship of two midwestern teenagers. (June 3,
10. 'So Far Gone' by Jess Walter (5 lists)
In this novel, a reclusive former journalist must rescue his estranged daughter and grandchildren from a cultlike militia. (June 10,
11. 'The Möbius Book' by Catherine Lacey (5 lists)
Fiction and memoir merge in this unique narrative mashup that explores relationships and memory. (June 17,
12. 'Vera, or Faith' by Gary Shteyngart (5 lists)
Shteyngart's latest novel tells the story of Vera, a girl whose blended Russian, Jewish, Korean, and New England WASP family is falling apart. (July 8,
🧩
4 Down:
74°
POINTS OF INTEREST
Part of the stage at Fenway Park after Shakira's concert was canceled.
Danielle Parhizkaran/Globe Staff
Boston and Massachusetts
Karen Read retrial:
The prosecution
Helping hand:
Mayor Michelle Wu will
Under investigation:
A state grand jury
Guilty:
A federal jury
Stage fright:
A problem with the stage caused Live Nation to
Back home:
The remains of a World War II airman from Somerville whose plane was shot down in Germany were
Trump administration
Chilling effect:
ICE raids on Nantucket this week have left local immigrants
Citations needed:
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s 'Make America Healthy Again' report included erroneous footnotes, including fake studies. The White House blamed 'formatting issues' and posted a revised version. (
Independent:
Trump met with Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, whom he has hectored to lower interest rates. The Fed said Trump requested the meeting and pledged to keep monetary policy 'non-political.' (
Not her:
Someone impersonated Susie Wiles, Trump chief of staff, in messages to top Republicans and business leaders. Federal authorities are investigating. (
MIT minus DEI:
The university became the latest institution to
The Nation
Practice makes perfect:
Faizan Zaki, 13, won the Scripps National Spelling Bee. Last year's runner up, he nearly blew it again last night. (
Plane dealing:
JetBlue and United announced a partnership that will let passengers on both airlines
Correction:
In an item yesterday about recovered images of enslaved people in the US, we mistakenly referred to a descendant as an 'ancestor.'
Advertisement
VIEWPOINTS
Massachusetts subsidizes horse racing to the tune of $20 million per year. As evidence grows that the industry harms horses,
Conservatives debate Trump vs. Harvard
Yes, Harvard can be out of touch and inhospitable to the right, Austin Taylor, a 2021 graduate, writes in a Globe Ideas essay. The administration's pressure campaign
Ilya Shapiro, another conservative Ivy League grad, says the school's progressive rot goes so deep that
BESIDE THE POINT
By Teresa Hanafin
📺
What to stream this weekend:
The latest 'Captain America,' a new British detective mystery, a bunch of Hitchcock hits,
🥣
Let them eat oats:
Many breakfast cereals for kids have more fat, salt, and sugar than a decade ago and less protein and fiber. Dr. Leana Wen has ideas for alternatives. (
👩❤️👨
Dinner with Cupid:
This couple on a blind date have so much in common that ... well,
🍹
New spots in R.I.:
Oysters on Block Island, an eight-course tasting menu in Providence, a bar focused on unique cocktails. Here are
💗 Love is in the air...plane?
Travel opens up one's heart, experts say, which may explain why so many people find their special someone while on a trip. (
🐙
Travel tip:
If you have visited Portugal, it's likely been in the south. But Christopher Muther argues that the best part of the country is
🎬
The Girls from Boston:
They were the movie reviewers for five Boston newspapers starting in the 1930s: Women who were some of the nation's best-known film critics. This is their forgotten story. (
Advertisement
🖼️
Galleries of family life:
In a world of digitized photographs,
👩🍼
Too much mom?
A new study shows that there has been a significant drop in the mental health of mothers. One psychologist thinks it may be due to
Thanks for reading Starting Point. NOTE: The
🎁
emoji that we've started using indicates a gift link. A
$
will flag a subscription site that does not offer gift links.
This newsletter was edited by
❓ Have a question for the team? Email us at
✍🏼 If someone sent you this newsletter, you can
📬 Delivered Monday through Friday.
Ian Prasad Philbrick can be reached at
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
41 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
This week's TV: Jason Momoa in ‘Chief of War,' a Marc Maron comedy special, a Leanne Morgan sitcom, and more
'Adaptive,' Today on Peacock: From the 2020 Tokyo Paralympics to the 2024 Paris Paralympics, the three-episode sports docuseries homes in on the dedicated athletes with disabilities overcoming physical and emotional hurdles to achieve victory. Among the series' standouts are one-legged Ezra Frech, who suffered from a congenital limb impairment at birth. Frech competes in both the high and long jumps. In 2024, he garnered two gold medals. Swimmer Jamal Hill has battled the degenerative Charcot-Marie-Tooth disorder while pursuing his athletic dreams. Meanwhile, Josie Aslakson won a silver medal in 2024 as a member of the US women's national wheelchair basketball team. Next stop? The 2026 Paralympics Games in Milan-Cortina. Advertisement 'Dope Girls,' Today on Hulu: 'Hacks'' Dance Mom Advertisement 'Conversations with a Killer: The Son of Sam Tapes,' Wednesday on Netflix. Like the never-ending stories of Charles Manson and his circle, New York's 'Leanne,' Thursday on Netflix: Sitcom king Chuck Lorre ('The Big Bang Theory,' 'Mom') fashions a sitcom around stand-up Leanne Morgan. The Southerner's protagonist is trying to remake herself in her 60s after her husband of 33 years leaves to follow his bliss. With the help of her sister (Kristen Johnson) and mother (Celia Weston), Leanne's going to make it as a single senior after all — but the humor lies in the epic fails along the way. All 16 episodes drop at once. 'Marc Maron: Panicked,' Friday on HBO Max: The mustached Boston University alum, stand-up comic, Advertisement Thelma Adams is a cultural critic and the author of the best-selling historical novel 'The Last Woman Standing,' about Josephine Marcus, the Jewish wife of Wyatt Earp.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
How Happy Gilmore 2 subtly honors Adam Sandler's late co-star Cameron Boyce
Adam Sandler managed to sneak in a subtle, yet heartwarming, tribute to his late Grown Ups co-star Cameron Boyce in the new Happy Gilmore sequel. Happy Gilmore 2, out now on Netflix, follows Sandler's titular retired golfer, Happy Gilmore, as he returns to the sport in order to pay for his daughter to attend a Parisian ballet school. It comes nearly 30 years after the original 1996 classic sports comedy. In one scene, Happy is seen walking up to a golf course check-in booth with a bag of clubs on his shoulder. As he nears the desk, the attendants inside are watching what appears to be an episode of Disney Channel's sitcom Jessie. The screen quickly flashes to show Boyce's character Luke Ross, whom he played throughout the show's entire 2011 to 2015 run. The brief nod to Boyce — who starred as Sandler's on-screen son in the 2010 family comedy Grown Ups and its 2013 sequel before his sudden death in 2019 — has left fans overcome with emotion. 'Adam Sandler honoring Cameron Boyce in Happy Gilmore 2 melts my heart,' one said on X, while a second added: 'Excuse me while I sob.' A third commented: 'Adam Sandler subtly including Cameron Boyce in this scene from #HappyGilmore2 hits different.' 'Happy Gilmore 2 was great,' another praised. 'The honoring of Cameron Boyce was such a cute and awesome Easter egg. Bottom right of the screen they're watching them on TV. Adam Sandler you killed it. Family is very happy.' Someone else on TikTok wrote that the tribute 'is hurting and healing my heart at the same time.' Boyce was only 20 when he died after experiencing a seizure in his sleep. At the time, his family released a statement, explaining the seizure 'was a result of an ongoing medical condition for which he was being treated.' 'The world is now undoubtedly without one of its brightest lights, but his spirit will live on through the kindness and compassion of all who knew and loved him. We are utterly heartbroken,' they added. Sandler was among many celebrities to honor Boyce after his death, posting on X: 'Loved that kid. Cared so much about his family. Cared so much about the world. Thank you, Cameron, for all you gave to us. So much more was on the way. All our hearts are broken.' Boyce isn't the only celebrity to make a surprise cameo in the new movie. Dozens of other cameo appearances from professional golfers, athletes and celebrities — some of which were announced when the film was in production — are also featured. Happy Gilmore 2 is streaming now on Netflix.


Miami Herald
2 hours ago
- Miami Herald
What happens behind the scenes in WWE? This SMU alum shows you exclusively on Netflix
Did you ever wonder what happens behind the scenes in WWE? WWE (World Wrestling Entertainmant) is the top pro wrestling / sports entertainment company in the world. The financial success of this long-running organization has other pro sports groups taking notice. There's the athletic side of WWE and also the entertainment side. Yes, fans know results are predetermined, but who and how it's determined who will win are part of the company's mystique. It's a process, a very interesting process. SMU alum Chris Weaver will give you a first-hand look at what occurs there as the director of the new docuseries 'WWE: UnReal,' which premieres July 29 on Netflix. From Monday Night RAW to WrestleMania, 'WWE: UnReal' goes backstage with WWE Superstars and staff as they bring the company's major spectacles to life. Season 1 covers from January to WrestleMania in April. So, WWE's biggest battles aren't always in the ring. 'WWE: Unreal' dives into the writers' room where legends — and feuds — are made. Paul Levesque, a 14-time WWE World Champion best known in the ring as Triple H and WWE's chief content officer since 2022, serves as the narrator of the docuseries. Weaver, who has a degree in Communication Arts: Cinema with a minor in English from Southern Methodist University (SMU) in Dallas, is a senior producer for NFL Films, including the successful NFL reality docuseries 'Hard Knocks' on HBO. He is in his 22nd year working with NFL Films. Prior, he was an intern in the Broadcast Department for the Dallas Cowboys. During his teens years, Weaver gradauted from Mesquite High School in 1998 outside Dallas. Here is my video interview with 'WWE: UnReal' Director Chris Weaver. Weaver is a 9-time Emmy winning filmmaker. He has been instrumental in developing and launching new series such as 'Quarterback' for Netflix, 'Hard Knocks: in Season' for HBO, 'Peyton's Places' for ESPN+, 'All or Nothing' for Amazon, 'NFL Icons' for MGM+, 'NFL Films Drawn' for Youtube, and now 'WWE: UnReal: for Netflix. He has produced numerous features for 'Hard Knocks: Training Camp' for HBO, 'NFL Films Presents' for FS1, 'NFL Gameday All Access' for Youtube, 'Inside the NFL' for CW, 'Hey Rookie: Welcome to the NFL' for ESPN, 'A Football Life' for NFL Network and many more. His current focus is on story producing, lead editing, writing, and field directing. In an unprecedented turn, 'WWE: UnReal' takes you behind the scenes - into the writer's room and the homes of WWE's greatest Superstars - to show the year-round work it takes to execute one of the most secretive shows in the world week over week. And when the curtain falls down, the business of getting a show to air is just as compelling as the Main Event. Trailer: NETFLIX: JULY 29, 2025 EPISODES: 5 episodes x 50 Minutes EPISODE TITLES: Episode 1 - New EraEpisode 2 - PushEpisode 3 - Worth The WaitEpisode 4 - Heel TurnEpisode 5 - Wrestlemania THOSE FEATURED: Triple H, Cody Rhodes, John Cena, Rhea Ripley, CM Punk, Jey Uso, Bianca Belair, Chelsea Green, Charlotte Flair, and Xavier Woods. Logline: For the first time ever, step into the WWE writer's room and outside the ring with your favorite WWE Superstars, where the drama is just as intense offstage as it is under the spotlight. Director: Chris Weaver Showrunner: Erik Powers Executive Producers: Peyton Manning, Jamie Horowitz, Ross Ketover, Keith Cossrow, Ken Rodgers, Jessica Boddy, Lee Fitting, Ben Houser, Marc Pomarico Production Companies: Omaha Productions, NFL Films, Skydance Sports, WWE Visit: