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What the Guardian books team are reading on our holidays

In this week’s newsletter: our writers and editors reveal which page-turners they’ll be packing this summer. Plus, Esther Freud shares her recommendations

Lucy Knight Lucy Knight
 

Hello and welcome to Bookmarks.

The weather is hotting up (in the UK at least), and even those of my friends who don’t usually read have been asking me for recommendations of books to read as they bask in the sunshine. In last week’s Saturday magazine, we asked leading authors to pick their books of the summer, but for this week’s newsletter, it’s over to the Guardian books team.

My colleagues and I have each shared which books we’re looking forward to diving into over the coming months – all after this week’s highlights. After that, Esther Freud, who shared her thoughts on writing about her famous family in a piece for us (in print yesterday and available to read online later today), tells us about what she’s loved reading lately.

And it’s over and out from me; this is my final Bookmarks newsletter before I hand over the mantle to Ella Creamer. It’s been a pleasure writing about books for you every week!

The Guardian books team’s summer picks

There’s Always This Year Hanif Abdurraqib (Allen Lane), Spent by Alison Bechdel and My Sister and other Lovers by Esther Freud
camera Photograph: PR

I’ve been saving Esther Freud’s new novel My Sister and Other Lovers to read on holiday. It’s a follow-up to Hideous Kinky, her fictionalised account of her bohemian childhood in Morocco with her mother and sister, which I enjoyed many years back, so I’m looking forward to reuniting with those characters (and picking up where the last book left off). I’m also taking Flesh by David Szalay. I’m always drawn to novels that tell the whole story of a life, and I’m intrigued to follow his Hungarian protagonist István through some of the major events of our era. Charlotte Northedge

As fiction editor, I’m usually reading novels before they come out: in awe, recently, of the huge achievement of Sarah Hall’s millennia-spanning Helm (late August), and relishing the hammock-worthy treat of Mick Herron’s latest Slow Horses instalment Clown Town (early September). But for me, summer reading means a break from fiction, and this year I’ve got some Scandinavian train journeys to fill. Recently, while discussing Richard Lloyd Parry’s brilliant investigation into a young woman’s disappearance in Tokyo, People Who Eat Darkness, a reading buddy gave me another very strong true-crime recommendation. So I’ll be packing the great Australian writer Helen Garner’s story of competing narratives in a murder trial, This House of Grief: a novelist’s take on how reality can be twisted. Justine Jordan

I do like a good story of turmoil and chaos lurking behind seemingly perfect facades, so I’m looking forward to reading Among Friends by Hal Ebbott, in which an “unforgiveable” act shatters a decades-long bond between two rich and successful middle-aged men. I’m obviously intensely curious about what this betrayal might be, but also interested to read a novel that centres friendship rather than a romantic partnership. Ebbott told one interviewer: “American culture tends to privilege romantic and familial relations as the bedrock of a good life, with friendship falling in the category of ‘nice to have’. As someone who believes it ought to garner the same degree of respect and concern, I was drawn to the way this story could do that.” David Shariatmadari

I’ll be taking Brian on holiday with me this year. Jeremy Cooper’s story of a solitary man who finds meaning and friendship through nightly visits to watch films by directors such as Werner Herzog, Agnès Varda and Federico Fellini at the BFI on London’s South Bank sounds appealingly subtle, cinematic and strange. I haven’t read Florence Knapp’s sliding doors novel The Names yet so that’s also going in the case along with Hungry for What, a collection of short stories by Maria Bastarós, largely set in the region of Spain that I’m visiting. Wild and psychologically disturbing (like your average family trip) they should make fun reading on my Galician adventure. Liese Spencer

A road trip novel feels very fitting for summer, especially if it comes in at an easily-transportable 192 pages. Christian Kracht’s Eurotrash – translated from German by Daniel Bowles and longlisted for this year’s International Booker prize – bills itself as a “tragicomic quest”, following a middle-aged writer on a journey through Switzerland with his mother, freshly discharged from a mental institution, as they attempt to give away her wealth amassed through investments in the arms industry. And I have always enjoyed reading about sport more than playing or watching it, so Hanif Abdurraqib’s There’s Always This Year, a poetic meditation on the basketball greats, will also be coming on holiday with me. Ella Creamer

I am a long-time fan of the cartoonist Alison Bechdel, author of Fun Home and known for the feminist “Bechdel test” for films – which started life as a joke in one of her cartoon strips. I recently got my hands on her latest graphic novel, the fictionalised memoir Spent, and it’s another gorgeous volume – as with her last book, The Secret to Superhuman Strength, Bechdel’s drawings have been beautifully coloured by her wife Holly Rae Taylor. Granted, Spent is not the most practical book to take away on holiday, being a fairly bulky hardback, but if it’s even half as wise and joyful as her previous work, then having to lug it around with me will be well worth it. Lucy Knight

 
The Guardian Bookshop

Summer reads at the Guardian Bookshop

Dive into the hottest books to read now, chosen by star authors and Guardian staff, plus stock up with our 2 for £15 offer on selected paperbacks

The Guardian Bookshop
 

Esther Freud recommends

Esther Freud.
camera Esther Freud. Photograph: Eamonn McCabe/The Guardian

There Are Rivers in the Sky by Elif Shafak gives us three stories, connected by water, from an 18th-century child born on the banks of the Thames, to a young Yazidi girl fleeing Isis in 2014, and back to the Thames where a lonely woman has sought sanctuary on a houseboat after the breakdown of her marriage. It is an inspired and inspiring book. Shafak at her very best. Meanwhile in her novel The Glassmaker, Tracy Chevalier takes us through 500 years of Venetian history, bringing every successive era to life with her talent for showing us how worlds are formed through art and craft.

I was alerted to William Maxwell’s late, semi autobiographical novel So Long, See You Tomorrow, by a recommendation from Ann Patchett. Beautifully written and genre defying, it is set in the farmlands of Illinois, and examines loss, jealousy, and the desire for forgiveness.

The Paris Dancer by Nicola Rayner is a novel in two time frames. Miriam, traumatised by the recent loss of a close friend, is on her way from London to New York to act as executor for her great aunt when she meets an unusually handsome and attentive dancer on the plane. Once there she is confronted by a memoir, and as she reads, we are transported to 1940s Paris. There are puzzles and keys that Miriam must unlock, and in every thread of this exquisitely crafted story, there is dance.

• My Sister and Other Lovers by Esther Freud is published by Bloomsbury (£18.99). To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

 

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