Entertainment

24 Books We Can't Wait to Take to the Beach This Summer

Here are the new titles that we're throwing in our beach bags.

Grace Han/Thrillist
Grace Han/Thrillist
Grace Han/Thrillist

We ask you, once again, to consider the Beach Read: What is it? No one is lugging all 1,200-plus pages of The Power Broker (except me, one time) out onto the sandy shores of their favorite spot; they need to be relatively slim, immensely engrossing, but breezy enough to put down when your friend drags you into the water for a dip, and, generally speaking, not a bummer. We’ve picked 24 new titles to complement a day spent outdoors, maybe with a cold one nearby, because no beachside excursion is complete without a good book to block out the sun.

READ MORE: The Best Books of 2021 (So Far)

Finding the Mother Tree: Discovering the Wisdom of the Forest by Suzanne Simard

May 4
If you’ve been keeping up with the swiftly growing biological field of plant communication (and who isn’t???) you’ve probably heard of Suzanne Simard, whose work studying the inner lives of trees has captured the attention of millions of TED viewers, been the subject of a beautiful New York Times profile, and inspired James Cameron’s Avatar. Simard’s first book introduces us further to a complex interdependent world that exists below our feet and above our heads, challenging preconceived notions of how plants live, grow, and communicate.
 

Great Circle by Maggie Shipstead

May 4
After escaping a sinking ocean liner in 1914, young Marian Graves discovers a love for flying planes, embarking on a lifelong quest, Amelia Earhart-like, to circumnavigate the globe. A century later, actress Hadley Baxter is cast to portray Marian in a film about her mid-flight disappearance, and the parallel narratives of the women weave themselves together into an epic tale spanning a hundred years.
 

Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

May 4
Andy Weir took us all to space and back with The Martian, and he’s set to do it all again with his latest book, which follows an amnesiac astronaut who wakes up from cryogenic sleep, his fellow crew members dead, knowing he has an apocalyptic mystery to solve far in the outer reaches of space whose answer will affect the survival of humanity.
 

The Siren by Katherine St John

May 4
Summer, a tropical Caribbean island, a film set, and some of Hollywood’s most notorious and alluring stars already sounds like a recipe for a steamy, intriguing plot, but when you add a publicly unstable actress, a producer fleeing scandal, and a manipulative personal assistant to the mix, as well as a hurricane brewing offshore that traps the entire film crew on the island, you’ve got yourself a beach read that’ll keep the pages flipping long after sunset.
 

The Plot by Jean Hanff Korelitz

May 11
If Stephen King tells you something is “insanely readable,” you listen. In this crime thriller, a professor and novelist plagued with writer’s block becomes intrigued by his arrogant student’s idea for a book. Years later, he learns that his student had died and steals the idea for his own, publishing a book that turns into a hit-except someone seems to know that the plot was plagiarized, taunting him while he digs into his former student’s identity.
 

Tokyo Ever After by Emiko Jean

May 18
In the first book in Emiko Jean’s new series, Japanese American teen Izumi doesn’t feel quite at home in her tiny, mostly white, Northern California town; to make things more confusing, she learns that her father is the Crown Prince of Japan and visits the country to meet him, only to feel not totally welcomed there either, overwhelmed by the million things she’s expected to learn practically overnight to “prove” that she’s “Japanese enough” to wear her princess crown.
 

The Housewives: The Real Story Behind the Real Housewives by Brian Moylan

May 25
For those already obsessed with the Real Housewives universe, Brian Moylan’s saga of the reality TV show’s history and behind-the-scenes curios is a no-brainer. For those who don’t understand what all the fuss is about, picking up this critical text might just be the thing that gets you hooked.
 

The Other Black Girl by Zakiya Dalila Harris

June 1
Nella is the only Black woman at the (of course) overwhelmingly white publishing house where she works, until finally another Black woman, Hazel, gets a job there too. At first thinking they could be friends, bond, and commiserate with each other, Nella becomes the target of a threatening, shadowy campaign to get her to leave, but the full picture of what’s really going on isn’t revealed until the final twist of this novel by Zakiya Dalila Harris, a former editorial staffer at Knopf/Doubleday.
 

Rememberings by Sinéad O’Connor

June 1
This memoir from the Irish singer who became infamous (and blacklisted) after tearing up the pope’s photo on Saturday Night Live is as characteristically unfettered as they come. As time has passed, the broad cultural judgment about O’Connor has been revised, positioning 2021 as the perfect time to hear from Sinéad herself about her troubled youth in Dublin, rise to fame, and fallout for taking a controversial political stance on national TV.
 

With Teeth by Kristen Arnett

June 1
A play on the sinister energy of We Need to Talk About Kevin, Arnett’s followup to 2019’s Mostly Dead Things tracks a mother working from home who lives in fear of her worrisome young son, who transforms over the years from an ill-tempered boy into a vicious teen. Resentful of her absent wife, she attempts to keep things together by herself until her son’s bad temperament erupts into violence, tearing a rift in their idyllic queer life.
 

Walking on Cowrie Shells by Nana Nkweti

June 1
One of the stories in Nana Nkweti’s debut, genre-blending short story collection is about a zombie outbreak in West Africa and the weary public relations person who tries to spin it into something less sinister. From this, to mermaids and more realistic tales of a graphic novelist or a pregnant woman, Walking on Cowrie Shells will constantly surprise you with its cleverness.
 

Slipping by Mohamed Kheir

June 8
In this fictionalized travelogue of Egypt with a splatter of magical realism, journalist Seif visits the secretly surreal destinations of the country in a post-Arab spring world, guided by a man with exhaustive knowledge of these special locations. Together, they witness unbelievable phenomenons, like giant corpse flowers raining from the sky and a section of the Nile River where one can walk on water.
 

The Maidens by Alex Michaelides

June 15
Edward Fosca is Cambridge University’s handsome and charismatic professor of Greek tragedies, the muse of a secret society of female students known as the Maidens. Therapist Mariana Andros is also convinced that Fosca is a murderer, after one of the Maidens is found dead on campus. Fans of dark academia and Donna Tartt’s The Secret History will be drawn to Mariana’s obsessive attempt to prove Fosca’s guilt, even at the cost of her own life.
 

Questland by Carrie Vaughn

June 22
When literature professor Dr. Addie Cox is contacted by an eccentric billionaire to lead a mercenary strike team to infiltrate his high-tech Dungeons & Dragons-inspired theme park island, she’s puzzled to say the least. That is, until she learns that all communication into the island has been blocked off by a force shield, believed to have been activated by the project’s head designer-who happens to be Addie’s ex-boyfriend.
 

Survive the Night by Riley Sager

June 29
College students Charlie Jordan and Josh Baxter don’t know each other-they met at the campus ride board looking to carpool on the long road home to Ohio. Josh claims he’s traveling back to visit his sick father, but his increasingly shady demeanor and refusal to let Charlie peek into his trunk cause her to believe she might be sharing a ride with the notorious serial murderer known as the Campus Killer.
 

The Brilliant Abyss by Helen Scales

July 6
Helen Scales’ latest work of nonfiction-The Brilliant Abyss: Exploring the Majestic Hidden Life of the Deep Ocean, and the Looming Threat That Imperils It is the full title-defogs the marine life hidden in the the deepest and darkest parts of the ocean, making the case that these rarely seen creatures and ecosystems affect us surface dwellers more than we think. Those curious about a book about oceanic conservation while you’re at the ocean, this will definitely do the trick.
 

Bubble by Jordan Morris; Sarah Morgan

July 13
For something more engaging than page after page of big blocks of text, try a graphic novel. Bubble, based on the fictional comedy podcast, satirizes the modern gig economy in an alt-universe where wild monsters threaten humans in the titular Bubble, society’s safe zone, and an app crops up for people to sign up to hunt them down-for cash, of course.
 

She Who Became the Sun by Shelley Parker Chan

July 20
After Zhu, a young girl in 1300s China, becomes orphaned and alone, she adopts her late brother’s identity to take over his destined “greatness,” something not afforded to her being born a woman. If this sounds sort of like Mulan, you’re on the right track; this literary fantasy reimagines the rise of the Ming Dynasty’s founding emperor through a queer, feminist lens.
 

Nightbitch by Rachel Yoder

July 20
Already one of our favorite books of the year, Rachel Yoder’s debut novel is about a mother, simply known as Nightbitch, who starts succumbing to ferality and believes she’s quite literally turning into a dog two years after putting her art career on hold to take care of her son, who joins in her “doggy games,” while her husband travels during the work week. It would be a shame to reveal much more than this about the plot, but join the Nightbitch bandwagon now: It’s being developed as a star vehicle for Amy Adams to go fully unhinged.
 

Virtue by Hermione Hoby

July 20
When Luca becomes disillusioned with an internship at an elite magazine whose heyday is long over, he becomes infatuated with a wealthy white couple who invite him along to their beach house over the summer. He revels in insinuating himself into their lives, but when tragedy strikes back in the city, Luca is forced to reckon with his own privilege, the dangers of complacency, and his place in a rapidly changing world.
 

The Bachelor by Andrew Palmer

July 20
When he returns to his hometown to house-sit for a friend, the narrator of Andrew Palmer’s novel gains an unlikely obsession: ABC’s The Bachelor, which he catches one night while flicking through channels on the TV. Recovering from heartbreak and dipping multiple toes back into the dating pool texting women and going on weird group outings, his life gradually starts to resemble a reality dating show until he’s not sure where reality stops and “reality” begins.
 

Once There Were Wolves by Charlotte McConaghy

August 3
From the author of 2020’s gorgeous Migrations comes a similarly earth-shattering tale of humanity’s influence on the natural world. When two twin sisters arrive in the Scottish highlands determined to reintroduce a pack of gray wolves onto what was once their native soil, the sisters, the wolves, and the land appear to be thriving. But when a farmer is found dead, they know where the citizens of the nearest town will lay blame-and they also know that it was no wolf that killed him, but a human.
 

Afterparties by Anthony Veasna So

August 3
Anthony Veasna So’s debut (and tragically posthumous) story collection traces the lives of Cambodian-American refugees in Southern California after escaping the devastating genocidal reign of Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge, but by no means has Afterparties been deemed a bummer. Early reviews have celebrated just how funny, insightful, and sharp these short stories are, from a young writer whose gift will be remembered through these pages.
 

A Slow Fire Burning by Paula Hawkins

August 30
The Girl on the Train author is back with her first novel in four years. When three women are drawn into the murder investigation of a man they all have mysterious connections to-a grief-stricken aunt, a suspiciously nosy neighbor, and a one-night-stand who was the last person to see the victim alive-they all appear to have the motive to do this man harm. But which of them, if any, did it, and how far would each of them go to enact revenge?Want more Thrillist? Follow us on InstagramTwitterPinterestYouTubeTikTok, and Snapchat.

Entertainment

Where to Celebrate Lunar New Year 2023 in Australia

And what it means to be in the year of the Rabbit.

where to celebrate lunar new year australia

Starting with the new moon on Sunday, January 22, this Lunar New Year ushers in the year of the Rabbit. We’ve put together a guide on celebrating the Lunar New Year in Australia.

What is special about the year of the Rabbit?

As you might know, each year has an animal sign in the Chinese Zodiac, which is based on the moon and has a 12-year cycle. This year, we celebrate the year of the rabbit, known to be the luckiest out of all twelve animals. It symbolises mercy, elegance, and beauty.

What celebrations are taking place and how can I get involved?

There are plenty of festivals happening all around the country which you can get involved with. Here they are per state.

New South Wales

Darling Harbour Fireworks
When: Every year, Sydney puts on a fireworks show, and this year, you can catch it on January 28 and February 4 at 9 pm in Darling Harbour.

Dragon Boat Races
When: Witness three days of dragon boat races and entertainment on Cockle Bay to usher in the Lunar New Year. The races will commence on January 27 and finish on January 29.

Lion Dances
When: Catch a traditional Lion Dance moving to the beat of a vigorous drum bringing good luck and fortune for the Lunar New Year. The dance performances will happen across Darling Harbour on Saturday, January 21, Sunday, January 22, and Sunday, February 4 and 5, around 6 pm and 9 pm.

Lunar New Year at Cirrus Dining
When: Barangaroo’s waterfront seafood restaurant, Cirrus, is celebrating the Year of the Rabbit with a special feast menu. Cirrus’ LNY menu is $128pp with optional wine pairing and is available from Saturday, January 21, to Sunday, February 5.

Auntie Philter
When: Hello Auntie’s owner and executive chef, Cuong Nguyen will be dishing out some of the most classic Vietnamese street foods with his mum, Linda. All of Philter’s favourites will be on offer, as well as Raspberry Pash Beer Slushies and other cocktails being served at the Philter Brewing rooftop bar on Sunday, January 22 and Sunday, January 29.

Victoria

Lunar New Year Festival
When: Ring in the Lunar New Year with food, music, arts, and more on Sunday, January 22, from 10 am to 9 pm.

Lunar New Year at the National Gallery of Victoria
When: Celebrate the year of the rabbit at the National Gallery of Victoria’s festival of art, food, and art-making activities for everyone from 10 am-5 pm.

Queensland

BriAsia Festival
When: From February 1-19, Brisbane will come alive with performances, including lion dances and martial arts displays. There will be street food, workshops, comedy and more.

South Australia

Chinatown Adelaide Street Party
When: Adelaide is set to hose a fun-filled day celebrating the Chinese New Year on Saturday, January 28, from 12 pm to 9 pm.

Western Australia

Crown Perth
When: Across January and February, Crown Perth hosts free live entertainment, including colourful lion dances, roving mascots, and drumming performances. The restaurants will also throw banquets and menus dedicated to the Lunar New Year.

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