Six May 2024 Books on my Summer TBR

Summer reading is here! Summer reading is here!

I love reading year round, but there is just something about summer reading. Mornings feel more luxurious without needing to hustle a kiddo out the door to school, and I can allow myself extra book time before I start my work-from-home day. I spend many weekend mornings at adult swim at our local pool, which I have really come to love and look forward to. It seems each time I go, everyone there has their nose in a book (or a Kindle!) Last, I just love the summer releases that get me so excited to pick up my library holds – seasonal destinations, rich people behaving badly, scary horror (especially haunted house stories), innovative thrillers that keep me up past my bedtime, and sweet and cozy rom-coms that make my heart happy.

My summer reading list is quickly approaching sixty titles, so to make things a bit more manageable I thought I would break it down into publication month and share a few from each smaller list.

First up, let’s take a look at titles published in May of this year that caught my eye and found their way to my Summer 2024 shelf.

This Summer Will Be Different by Carley Fortune

Lucy vacations at Prince Edward Island and meets local Felix, with whom she has incredible chemistry. But Felix is her best friend’s younger brother and there are many reasons they shouldn’t be together.

I enjoyed Fortune’s previous two summer titles, rating them four stars each.

The Five Year Lie by Sarina Bowen

A woman searches for the truth after receiving a text from her ex who vanished and has been presumed dead for several years.

My search for incredible thrillers continues. I am generally harder on this genre than others, and many thrillers let me down.

When She Was Me by Marlee Bush

Cassie and Lenora are the sole permanent residents of Cabin 2 in an isolated Tennessee campground. When a teenager camping in the neighboring cabin goes missing, they must find out what happened while reliving their own pasts.

In the summer, I will read just about anything set at a camp or campground…especially if it’s in the thriller or horror genres.

The Family Experiment by John Marrs

For those who are desperate to have families, thanks to the wonders of technology a new option exists: a subscription service for a virtual child created from scratch. From this technology emerges a new game show, where families compete to raise their virtual children with the chance to keep their virtual child or risk it all for a real baby.

The One by Marrs is one of my all-time favorite thrillers – I couldn’t put it down. This plot feels very “Black Mirror”, which has me intrigued.

Oye by Melissa Mogollon

Oye is described as a “coming-of-age comedy, telenovela-worthy drama, and a moving family saga”…all things that I love in my reading. I am not sure if I will love the telephone conversation format, but I can’t wait to give it a try.

You had me at telenovela. (And the great cover art!)

The Guncle Abroad by Steven Rowley

(Have already read at time of posting.) I was so completely charmed by The Guncle when I first read it two years ago, I couldn’t wait to spend more time with a literary family I love so much. In the sequel, GUP takes his niece and nephew on a whirlwind European tour before their father’s wedding in Lake Como, Italy.

This is a family I want more, more, more of. The Guncle books have so much heart, and I adore them. Another easy five stars from me.


Are any of these titles on your summer reading list? Come chat with me on Instagram @cozylittlebrownhouse!

July 2023 Reading

This is the first post in a new series focusing on my monthly reads.

Each month’s post will be updated as I finish a book, so check back weekly for updates!

The Celebrants by Steven Rowley

After the sudden death of a friend, a group of college friends makes a pact to call on one another when needed to hold a “funeral” for one another to celebrate the person who is need of a little extra care. The idea? That we shouldn’t wait until the people we love are gone to share the moments made together and the reasons why our loved ones are so important to us. Spanning decades, we revisit the friends at various vulnerable moments in their lives and how they gather to celebrate one another in the face of losing parents, facing cancer, etc.

The Guncle was one of my favorite books of 2022, and I anxiously awaited the publication date of The Celebrants after putting my copy on hold immediately upon its entry into our library’s system. Sadly, this book didn’t have any of the warmth or heart that I loved so very much in The Guncle. The only storyline I cared about was that of Jordy and Jordan, and when the book features an ensemble cast, it’s not good when there are more characters you don’t care about than those you do. Disappointing. ⭐⭐

The Only One Left by Riley Sager

The 1929, the Hope family murders rocked the Maine coast. Most people assumed teenage Lenora was responsible, but she was never proven guilty. Following the incident, she never spoke publicly about it nor left the walls of her home, Hope’s End, the cliffside manor where the crime occurred. In 1983, home-health aide Kit McDeere tends to Lenora after her previous nurse fled. One night, Lenora communicates to Kit that she wants to reveal everything about the massacre, but even as she reveals details, Kit questions her honesty. She is left to wonder if she is safe within the mansion’s walls…and with Lenora.

Since the publication of Final Girls, Sager’s first novel, I have looked forward to his new release each year. The two most recent titles, Survive the Night and The House Across the Lake, let me down a bit. The Only One Left, however, won me over immediately and proved to be a great palette cleanser that revitalized my love and appreciation for Sager’s storytelling. The creepy mansion on the cliff’s edge, mysterious Lenora, and the 1980s vibe all worked for me. Not knowing the direction the story was heading was nice too. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Happy Place by Emily Henry

Harriett and Wynn are known among their friends as the perfect couple, together since college, happy in every way. Except, they aren’t. They have been broken up for six months but haven’t revealed this to the friends they vacation with each summer in Maine. Too afraid to break their friends’ hearts, they keep their secret, and each continues to play the part of loving partner. What happens when you still want each other while pretending you don’t?  

Each Emily Henry novel is better than her last. I love how she writes relationships, but in Happy Place, I really loved the focus on friendship, group dynamics, and the strain that time and maturity places on friends who have known one another for so long and find themselves growing in different directions. It all just felt real and relatable.

The setting of fictional town Knott’s Landing, Maine is the perfect backdrop for a summer read, which is essential to my enjoyment when I read June through August. I want the cute little town with its quaint shops, descriptions of summer foods, morning boat rides hikes, and walks to get morning coffee (from a place with a cute name of course.) Absolutely delightful. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

The Beach Trap by Ali Brady

DNF at 39% – I realized I didn’t care for the characters or the story, so I decided to move on

California Golden by Melanie Benjamin

In 1960’s California, the Donnelly sisters grow up in a household with an absent father and a mother who would rather be out in the waves than at home prepping casseroles. But when Carol introduces daughters Mindy and Ginger to surfing, the girls view it as a way to keep their family together and ignite some mothering instincts in Carol, as they constantly fear she will leave them. The girls grow up, and their paths veer in different directions: Mindy excels in surfing, takes roles in films, attends parties, takes a tour with the USO in Vietnam, and delights in her minor celebrity status. Ginger; however, struggles with finding her identity, and ultimately seeks community and love through a cult. No matter where they are in the world, there are things that tie them together.

When I first requested this ARC, I was pulled in by the description of a surf family’s saga, set against the backdrop of 1960s California with its party scene, drugs, and cults with the Vietnam War happening abroad. I generally enjoyed the story, but there were just too many big themes there and none of them received enough attention. It all felt a bit surface-level, and I wanted to go deeper. More surfing, or more about the cult, or more about the USO tour in Vietnam, rather than a little bit of everything. ⭐⭐⭐ 1/2

Malibu Rising by Taylor Jenkins Reid

⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐

384 pages

publication date: June 1, 2021

family story / beach read

Synopsis: The end-of-summer party at the Riva Malibu mansion is the season’s most anticipated event, making an invitation highly desirable. The four Riva siblings (Nina, Jay, Hud, and Kit) come together at the party, with revelations spilling forth about their present lives and their childhood. The story is told alternating between past and present, beginning with the parents’ love story and concluding with the Malibu mansion erupting in devastating flames, Between the two, we get to know the four Riva children and their parents.

Why You Should Read It: TJR is just a fantastic storyteller, no matter the subjects she takes on. While this one won’t surpass my current favorites of hers, it was still a great read and one I would recommend.

Bottom line: Another solid novel from TJR, but not my favorite. ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐

The Guncle by Steven Rowley

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

336 pages

publication date: May 25, 2021

LGBTQ fiction / beach read


Synopsis: When gay former sitcom star Patrick O’Hara takes on the role of caregiver to his niece and nephew following a family tragedy, he finds himself in over his head with parenting two young children.

“GUP” (Gay Uncle Patrick) dispenses clever advice (“Guncle Rules”) to help the trio navigate their sadness (and really, life in general), finding himself increasingly comfortable and joyful being with and caring for young Maisie and Grant. Between celebrating an early Christmas, filming YouTube videos together, embarking on early-morning bike rides, and lazily lounging in the pool together, as the family bond strengthens readers root harder and harder for this family to land on their feet.

Why You Should Read It: Against the backdrop of sun-soaked Palm Springs, The Guncle cleverly and expertly explores the importance of family, love, and healing together. The tone is perfectly sweet without crossing into saccharine territory. This is what I would consider a perfect summer read: it’s witty and heartwarming, and as you turn pages you fall more in love with each character.

Bottom Line: An absolute delight of a read. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Thank you to Netgalley and G.P. Putnam’s Sons for an advanced reader’s copy in exchange for an honest review.