With so many people reading on Kindles and iPads these days, you may miss out on one of the joys of summer: discovering what everyone is reading while lounging at the beach or pool. Relax! We've covered the waterfront to scope out what some of the hot titles for summer are likely to be.
See also: Teen lit isn't only for teens.
The "Fifty Shades" Trilogy: Fifty Shades of Grey; Fifty Shades Darker; Fifty Shades Freed by E.L. James
$15.95 paperback, $9.99 e-book
You've watched the hard-core "Shades" trilogy dominate the best-seller lists for 15 weeks now, and even that highbrow friend of yours has a copy stashed in her purse. That's why we can almost hear you wondering, Should I submit?
Well, if you do, know what's in store for you: paper-thin characters spouting middle-school dialogue during mechanistic scenes of sex, bondage, sex, punishment, sex, spankings and yet more sex in a "playroom of pain." But if, instead, you're a fan of gripping, well-crafted tales about complex relationships, try Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn or the debut novel Into the Darkest Corner by Elizabeth Haynes.
Calico Joe by John Grisham
$24.95 hardback, $12.99 e-book
John Grisham drops readers into Major League Baseball's summer of 1973, when Willie Mays, Pete Rose and Reggie Jackson played the field, and Yogi Berra paced the dugout. Into their midst in his new novel comes "Calico Joe," a humble rookie from small-town Arkansas with an uncanny ease at swatting home runs for the Chicago Cubs. Sports fans will savor Grisham's re-creation of baseball glory. The rest of us probably won't be able to resist the somewhat syrupy scenes of reckoning among an abused son, his absent father and a national hero. If those prove too rich, you can always simply wait for the film adaptation, which seems fated to cast Robert Redford or Kevin Costner as one of the old-timers.
The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do in Life and Business by Charles Duhigg
$28 hardback, $12.99 e-book
Ever wondered why you smoke? Why you bite your nails or head straight for the praline ice cream when you're feeling blue? Funny, scientists have been wondering the same things — and here comes New York Times science writer Charles Duhigg to tell us what they've learned. More than 40 percent of the actions we perform each day, he reports, aren't conscious decisions; they're habits. That may inspire despair, but Duhigg's overall message is upbeat: Once you understand the cues that trigger a routine and the rewards that result from it, you can modify even the most destructive "habit loop" for the good. So long, margaritas — hello, sun tea!
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