When we were kids, summer was graced with the tang of saltwater and possibility, and the fading song of school’s final bell. But for many working adults these days, the season often just kind of feels … the same as the rest of the year. Except with, maybe, a few more bugs and a bit more sweat.
So perhaps our notion of a “beach read,” that quintessential artifact of the season, ought to evolve too. Sure, there will always be room for breezy books, but this week’s publishing highlights at least feel refreshingly different — if only because these books, filled as they are with historic firsts, complex lives and destructive loves, don’t promise too much escapist refreshment at all.
Consider them, instead, as windows on a complicated world that’s always with us, whatever the calendar may say.
‘@UGMan’ by Mark Sarvas
Don’t be fooled by the triumphalist lie trumpeted by those Billy Goats Gruff: The troll never really died, he just traded his underbridge lair for the less literal — and more insidious — darkness of social media. And he has a lot to catch you up on.
In this disquieting novel, Sarvas’ third, a protagonist known better by his online handle (@UGMan, natch) allows readers into the barbed tangle of his thoughts in a multiform monologue that recalls the captivating obsessives created by the late great Thomas Bernhard.
‘I’ll Be Right Here: A Novel’ by Amy Bloom
Half a decade removed from her husband’s decision to pursue assisted suicide — an experience she chronicled in a devastating 2022 memoir, In Love — novelist Amy Bloom is returning to the comparative succor of fiction.