Well, yes, you could go do outdoorsy things this summer. Or you could read.
Here are six new books that are good summer reads. Wishing you a season full of good books!
“The Guest” by Emma Cline (Random House, $28)
Emma Cline’s previous novel, “The Girls,” followed a young woman in the throes of a cult led by a Charles Manson-like figure; her latest, “The Guest,” focuses on another young woman, this one entirely on her own, managing solely by her wits. Alex is a grifter who’s perfected the art of “how to draw people in with a vision of themselves, recognizable but turned up ten degrees, amplified into something better. How to allude to her own desires as if they were shared desires.”
The ironically titled “The Guest” lets us tag along on a week in the Hamptons, as Alex, summarily dismissed by the older man at whose beach house she’s been staying (he didn’t like her behavior at a party), decides she’ll wait six days and then see if he’ll take her back. This means she has six days and nights with nowhere to go, and we watch with fascination as Alex joins a group on a house-share weekend (everyone assumes they know her from somewhere), persuades a house manager to let her hang at his employer’s lavish home (Alex is good at finding people whose job it is to be agreeable), latches on to a family at a country club, and charms a lonely teen who knows someone with an empty house.
You read “The Guest” quickly and breathlessly, wondering how long Alex can sustain her act — and realizing it could, if need be, go on forever. And yet Cline, through the dreamy elegance of her writing, makes Alex a poignant figure as the days waft by. Alex, who is “tall enough and skinny enough that people often assumed that she was more beautiful than she was,” sees herself as a ghost, floating through life, attached to nothing and no one, letting shame “become a feeling she considered from a distance.”