What to Read This Summer
Six books from the Paris shelf matched to six very different Julys — beach, porch, long flight, and one ambitious project you'll either finish or frame.
Every June the lists arrive insisting there is such a thing as 'the book of the summer,' as if July were one place and all of us in it. Ours is a matching exercise instead — and this year the whole slate comes from the Paris shelf, because no literature was ever better suited to reading outdoors with a drink you rationed to make last.
For the beach afternoon
The Old Man and the Sea. Obviously — but the obviousness is earned. Start it when the sun is high and you'll finish as it drops, salt-cured and quietly rearranged. The rare masterpiece that fits between two applications of sunscreen.
For the porch, in no hurry
A Moveable Feast. Written in sketches, built for interruption, and best consumed the way its author consumed the cafés — one unhurried sitting at a time. Warning: produces flight searches to Paris. Budget accordingly.
For the long flight
The Sun Also Rises. Short chapters, propulsive dialogue, and an itinerary — Paris to Bayonne to Pamplona — that makes your own travel feel like part of the plot. You'll land wanting a café table and a complicated group of friends.
For the reader whose year needs a jolt
Journey to the End of the Night. Not a light book; an alive one. If the summer finds you tired of polite fiction, Bardamu's voice is the double espresso of the whole catalog. Read the first fifty pages and you'll know — you always know with Céline.
For the ambitious project
The Cantos — attempted honestly, which means Mauberley first as a warm-up, an annotated edition, and permission to treat Canto I and the Pisan sequence as the destination rather than reading every page as penance. One reader in ten finishes. All ten are glad they tried.
Whatever July you're having, the standing rule applies: the right book beats the good book. Full recommendations, with our reasons and our content notes, live on the shelves linked below.


