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The MN summer reading recommendations list 2010: share your top summer reads here

150 replies

GeraldineMumsnet · 27/07/2010 17:19

There have been calls for an Official MN Summer Reading List.

So we're starting one.

Please list your suggestions for suitcase-friendly summer reads on this thread.

Same criteria as book club ie no misery memoirs, sleb biogs, yummy-mummy lit, books with more than 800 pages, or books with no punctuation or capital letters.

Your recommendations can be fiction or non-fiction. And if you agree with other people's picks, please say so, so that we can try to come up with a handy list of your top 10 (or 20) summer reads.

And , a reminder that MN bookclub will be back in September. Details to follow presently.

Thank you.

OP posts:
frasersmummy · 27/07/2010 17:26

too good to be true by Sheila O'flanagan

deaddei · 27/07/2010 17:29

The Little Friend- Donna Tartt

AlaskaNebraska · 27/07/2010 18:32

Non fiction. " nothing to envy" by Sarah someone. About north Korea told in very readable style through about five family stories. Outstanding.

AlaskaNebraska · 27/07/2010 18:34

Also like " the group" reccyed on here , new York womenn in early 1930s. GreAt

ComeWhineWithMe · 27/07/2010 18:35

The Help - Very very good.

RabbitAndCo · 27/07/2010 18:37

Finding Monsieur Right

SparkyMalarky · 27/07/2010 18:37

Gods in Alabama by Joshilyn Jackson

BelligerentGhoul · 27/07/2010 18:41

Hurray!

Yes to The Help - the voices ring so true in it: although it is not perfect, it is well worth reading.

I absolutely loved reading The Moonstone on holiday as it is so mysterious and 'closed in' and gloomy - a good contrast to the sunshine!

I always take at least one Austen with me as a guaranteed read - there's nothing worse than taking a load of books and then not liking ANY of them.

Will be back later for a nosey and with more recs!

LaBellaSantaCatarinadiSienna · 27/07/2010 18:45

Agree with The Help. Also couldn't put Cathedral of the Sea by Ildefonso Falcones down

AlaskaNebraska · 27/07/2010 18:49

Bit isn't the help written in the vernacular? That might put me off

BelligerentGhoul · 27/07/2010 18:51

This is an interesting non-fiction one:

www.amazon.co.uk/Reading-Lolita-Tehran-Memoir-Books/dp/0007289537/ref=sr_1_1?s=books& ie=UTF8&qid=1280253003&sr=1-1 reading Lolita In Tehran]]

BelligerentGhoul · 27/07/2010 18:51

Try again

AlaskaNebraska · 27/07/2010 18:52

Finding Monsieur right is chick lit shit. Read the rules

titferbrains · 27/07/2010 18:53

I've just finished Juliet, Naked by Nick Hornby read on the way to pembrokeshire and back. A very easy read but good fun and lots of witty writing.

I read the help ages ago and thought it was great.

BelligerentGhoul · 27/07/2010 18:56

Alaska - it is very readable but the voices ring true. It's not like The Colour Purple or The Commitments or that sort of thing, where the voices get in the way because you have to work at them so much.

AlaskaNebraska · 27/07/2010 18:56

Ooh and simon millar book on the berlin wall , my Part in it's downfall. Vvvg and readable. Can't link am on phone

AlaskaNebraska · 27/07/2010 18:57

Shudder at memory of color purple

KnottyLocks · 27/07/2010 19:33

'City of Thieves' by David Benioff is a different and enjoyable read. You can tell that the author has also written film scripts.

Fibonacci · 27/07/2010 20:20

I also enjoyed Juliet, Naked.

last good book I read was The Road Home by Rose Tremain.

Careful · 27/07/2010 20:41

yy to The Help.

Brooklyn by Colm Toibin.
The White Tiger by Aravind Adiga.
Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngosi Adichie.
Lustrum by Robert Harris.

alana39 · 27/07/2010 20:52

Oh yes Brooklyn and The White Tiger.

And if you have read Brooklyn already, try Colm Toibin's other books (

alana39 · 27/07/2010 20:54

Can't work this laptop!

Was also about to add Graham Robb's The Discovery of France as non-fiction, especially if you're going there.

AgentProvocateur · 27/07/2010 21:37

Lacuna, by Barbara "poisonwood bible" Kingsolver. A great saga.

ArcticRoll · 27/07/2010 21:55

yy to The Road Home and Half of a Yellow Sun

Also Ladder of Years -an oldish Anne Tyler but a perfect Mumsnet summer read-mother on beach walks along beach and keeps walking.
Also One Day David Nicholls- a light read but well written.
American Wife-a great airport/beach read.

yousaidit · 27/07/2010 22:03

The People's Act of Love ; James Meek. Grim, wintery, creepy.. perfect summer read!