Readers' 54 Most Anticipated Books of Summer > Likes and Comments
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So excited for new thriller, fantasy and romance books!! 😊
I'm sad not to see The Five-Star Weekend on this list, Elin Hilderbrand IS the Queen of the Summer Beach read...
I'm surprised to see that Dead of Winter isn't on here... it was a fantastic bone-chilling read! I highly recommend it to all the thriller-horror readers out there. Be on the lookout July 11th!
The Fox and the Dragon by SK Ehra would be a great beach book, if I hadn't started it and read it cover to cover already. High fantasy set in the Far East with compelling leads and antagonists who see themselves as the real heroes of the land.
Dee. wrote: "Exams on the way but do you see me complaining?!!"
I finally finished school so no more exams for me! More time to read!
Good luck on your exams.
Most excited for Ink Blood Sister Scribe, The Sun and the Void, Pageboy, Silver Nitrate, and Pageboy!
I love seeing all the new books that are available but always seem to migrate back to the familiar authors I've enjoyed reading in the past.
Surprised that 'Be Mine' by Richard Ford, probably the final Frank Bascombe novel, isn't on the list. Easily my most anticipated read this year.
Molly wrote: "Still just holding out for a new book in the ACOTAR series"
Hahah me too! I think Maas has a 7 book contract right now so there's hopefully gonna be a lot of new stuff coming in the next few years but I am so impatient
Amber wrote: "I'm surprised to see that Dead of Winter isn't on here... it was a fantastic bone-chilling read! I highly recommend it to all the thriller-horror readers out there. Be on the lookou..." Very surprised, its book statistics are higher than any of the horror books above
Frankly, until we got to Ali Hazlewood, Riley Sager, none of what was picked is on my want to read list! As other commentators said, where is Elgin Hildebrand book, the new Mark Jimenez Penn Cage book, the new Lincoln Lawyer installment? I honestly think (and I read like 4 books a week (terrible insomnia) the first 30 did not seem like anything I wanted to read. I genuinely mean no disrespect. I read for a living (not in publishing field).
Kenny wrote: "Surprised that 'Be Mine' by Richard Ford, probably the final Frank Bascombe novel, isn't on the list. Easily my most anticipated read this year."
Hear hear!
I'm psyched for a new Ann Patchett. I won't read the description, I'll just buy it and read it!
Also can't wait for this Colson Whitehead sequel.
I didn't see any other "fiction" that interested me. I'm hoping something literary pops up in reviews this summer. I feel like most of these books listed have cliches and predictable tropes mixed together algorithmically to be interesting, and this usually tells me that the writing style and the character motivations (my two musts) won't be special. If a book has a solid genre formula and an interesting twist on an idea, I'll go for it because they're often fun and easy and the writers can play with set conventions.
But I won't buy a book just because it's about something that I already agree with politically; only if the book could stand on its own based on the quality of the writing. Too often I've fallen for the hype around a book that in a rather pedestrian way just tells me what I want to hear.
I have been waiting forever to read Witch King by Martha Wells ever since I first heard about it. I have really enjoyed Wells' other books.
Amber wrote: "I don’t think I’ve ever added as many books to my TBR as I have with this article"
Same!
Yet again another "big books of ____" where I've barely heard of any of them and only read *one*.
Here's my own (current) list of books publishing from June 2023 through August 2023:
The Paris Daughter by Kristin Harmel
Retribution by Robert McCaw
The Broken Hearts Club by Susan Bishop Crispell
Cassandra In Reverse by Holly Smale
The Overlooked Americans by Elizabeth Currid-Halkett
The Bookshop By The Bay by Pamela Kelley
The Drowning Woman by Robyn Harding
War Made Invisible by Norman Solomon
The Belonger by Mary Kathleen Mehuron
Famous In A Small Town by Viola Shipman
You Can Trust Me by Wendy Heard
A Fatal Affair by A.R. Torre
The Girls On Chalk Hill by Alison Belsham
Have You Seen Her by Catherine McKenzie
And Then There Was You by Nancy Naigle
Small Farm Republic by John Klar
Forever Hold Your Peace by Liz Fenton and Lisa Steinke
Hello Stranger by Katherine Center *on GR list above
Play To Win by Jodie Slaughter
Cask Strength by Mike Gerrard
The Girl's Last Cry by Alison Belsham
The Paris Agent by Kelly Rimmer
Hunger: The Complete Trilogy by Jeremy Robinson
Outrage Machine by Tobias Rose-Stockwell
Excluded by Richard D Kahlenberg
Never Back Down by Christopher Swann
What Jesus Intended by Todd D. Hunter
Wasteland by Oliver Franklin-Wallis
The Beauty Of Rain by Jamie Beck
Women Of The Post by Joshunda Sanders
The Bitter Past by Bruce Borgos
Someone Just Like You by Meredith Schorr
To Catch A Storm by Mindy Mejia
Ira Hayes by Tom Holm
The Secret Midwife by Soraya Lane
One Night by Georgina Cross
North of Nowhere by Allison Brennan
In A Quiet Town by Amber Garza
California Golden by Melanie Benjamin
Tides Of Fire by James Rollins
The Stars Don't Lie by Boo Walker
The Ballot And The Bible by Kaitlyn Schiess
Kissing Kosher by Jean Meltzer
Note: Given the cross section of genres and topics, there is very likely something in the above for most any reader. :D
While not included on this list, I was anxious to read “The Covenant of Water” by Abraham Verghese until I saw that Amazon is selling the Kindle version for $32.00!!! Now I’m waiting on Libby.
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christene_littlelibrary
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May 15, 2023 12:45AM
So excited for new thriller, fantasy and romance books!! 😊
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I'm sad not to see The Five-Star Weekend on this list, Elin Hilderbrand IS the Queen of the Summer Beach read...
I'm surprised to see that Dead of Winter isn't on here... it was a fantastic bone-chilling read! I highly recommend it to all the thriller-horror readers out there. Be on the lookout July 11th!
The Fox and the Dragon by SK Ehra would be a great beach book, if I hadn't started it and read it cover to cover already. High fantasy set in the Far East with compelling leads and antagonists who see themselves as the real heroes of the land.
Dee. wrote: "Exams on the way but do you see me complaining?!!"I finally finished school so no more exams for me! More time to read!
Good luck on your exams.
Most excited for Ink Blood Sister Scribe, The Sun and the Void, Pageboy, Silver Nitrate, and Pageboy!
I love seeing all the new books that are available but always seem to migrate back to the familiar authors I've enjoyed reading in the past.
Surprised that 'Be Mine' by Richard Ford, probably the final Frank Bascombe novel, isn't on the list. Easily my most anticipated read this year.
Molly wrote: "Still just holding out for a new book in the ACOTAR series"Hahah me too! I think Maas has a 7 book contract right now so there's hopefully gonna be a lot of new stuff coming in the next few years but I am so impatient
Amber wrote: "I'm surprised to see that Dead of Winter isn't on here... it was a fantastic bone-chilling read! I highly recommend it to all the thriller-horror readers out there. Be on the lookou..." Very surprised, its book statistics are higher than any of the horror books above
Frankly, until we got to Ali Hazlewood, Riley Sager, none of what was picked is on my want to read list! As other commentators said, where is Elgin Hildebrand book, the new Mark Jimenez Penn Cage book, the new Lincoln Lawyer installment? I honestly think (and I read like 4 books a week (terrible insomnia) the first 30 did not seem like anything I wanted to read. I genuinely mean no disrespect. I read for a living (not in publishing field).
Kenny wrote: "Surprised that 'Be Mine' by Richard Ford, probably the final Frank Bascombe novel, isn't on the list. Easily my most anticipated read this year."Hear hear!
I'm psyched for a new Ann Patchett. I won't read the description, I'll just buy it and read it!Also can't wait for this Colson Whitehead sequel.
I didn't see any other "fiction" that interested me. I'm hoping something literary pops up in reviews this summer. I feel like most of these books listed have cliches and predictable tropes mixed together algorithmically to be interesting, and this usually tells me that the writing style and the character motivations (my two musts) won't be special. If a book has a solid genre formula and an interesting twist on an idea, I'll go for it because they're often fun and easy and the writers can play with set conventions.
But I won't buy a book just because it's about something that I already agree with politically; only if the book could stand on its own based on the quality of the writing. Too often I've fallen for the hype around a book that in a rather pedestrian way just tells me what I want to hear.
I have been waiting forever to read Witch King by Martha Wells ever since I first heard about it. I have really enjoyed Wells' other books.
Amber wrote: "I don’t think I’ve ever added as many books to my TBR as I have with this article"Same!
Yet again another "big books of ____" where I've barely heard of any of them and only read *one*.Here's my own (current) list of books publishing from June 2023 through August 2023:
The Paris Daughter by Kristin Harmel
Retribution by Robert McCaw
The Broken Hearts Club by Susan Bishop Crispell
Cassandra In Reverse by Holly Smale
The Overlooked Americans by Elizabeth Currid-Halkett
The Bookshop By The Bay by Pamela Kelley
The Drowning Woman by Robyn Harding
War Made Invisible by Norman Solomon
The Belonger by Mary Kathleen Mehuron
Famous In A Small Town by Viola Shipman
You Can Trust Me by Wendy Heard
A Fatal Affair by A.R. Torre
The Girls On Chalk Hill by Alison Belsham
Have You Seen Her by Catherine McKenzie
And Then There Was You by Nancy Naigle
Small Farm Republic by John Klar
Forever Hold Your Peace by Liz Fenton and Lisa Steinke
Hello Stranger by Katherine Center *on GR list above
Play To Win by Jodie Slaughter
Cask Strength by Mike Gerrard
The Girl's Last Cry by Alison Belsham
The Paris Agent by Kelly Rimmer
Hunger: The Complete Trilogy by Jeremy Robinson
Outrage Machine by Tobias Rose-Stockwell
Excluded by Richard D Kahlenberg
Never Back Down by Christopher Swann
What Jesus Intended by Todd D. Hunter
Wasteland by Oliver Franklin-Wallis
The Beauty Of Rain by Jamie Beck
Women Of The Post by Joshunda Sanders
The Bitter Past by Bruce Borgos
Someone Just Like You by Meredith Schorr
To Catch A Storm by Mindy Mejia
Ira Hayes by Tom Holm
The Secret Midwife by Soraya Lane
One Night by Georgina Cross
North of Nowhere by Allison Brennan
In A Quiet Town by Amber Garza
California Golden by Melanie Benjamin
Tides Of Fire by James Rollins
The Stars Don't Lie by Boo Walker
The Ballot And The Bible by Kaitlyn Schiess
Kissing Kosher by Jean Meltzer
Note: Given the cross section of genres and topics, there is very likely something in the above for most any reader. :D
While not included on this list, I was anxious to read “The Covenant of Water” by Abraham Verghese until I saw that Amazon is selling the Kindle version for $32.00!!! Now I’m waiting on Libby.



























