The best books to cool down with in July

01 of 14

Nobody Somebody Anybody, by Kelly McClorey

July books gallery

At a bougie yacht club, a young woman takes a summer gig as a chambermaid while she studies for her EMT exam — and slowly loses her mind as she cleans up after the rich. It's My Year of Rest and Relaxation, but with fewer pills and more boats. (July 6)

02 of 14

Give My Love to the Savages, by Chris Stuck

July books gallery
Amistad

This short-story collection, which traces a man's life through the lens of the different times he's been called the N-word, comes together as a harrowing portrait of race relations in America, as beautiful as it is urgent. (July 6)

03 of 14

People Like Them, by Samira Sedira

July books gallery
Penguin Books

Fraught with class tension, Samira Sedira's delicious page-turner follows the unlikely friendship of two families in a remote French town. (July 6)

04 of 14

Vessel, by Cai Chongda

July books gallery

The debut author traces his rise from a rural childhood to being director of reporting at GQ China in Beijing, and reflects on the family with whom he has increasingly little in common. (July 6)

05 of 14

Embassy Wife, by Katie Crouch

July books gallery
Farrar, Straus and Giroux

A devilishly au courant satire that skewers white privilege and colonialism. The novel's wives live in Namibia — on compounds of varying degrees of luxury — and send their children to the prestigious Windhoek International School. As everyone's dirty laundry gets hung out to dry, it's hard to remember why we'd want it clean. (July 13)

06 of 14

A Touch of Jen, by Beth Morgan

July books gallery
Little, Brown and Company

Remy and Alicia are obsessed with Jen in Beth Morgan's darkly funny novel. When Jen invites them on a trip to the Hamptons, the infatuation turns violent. (July 13)

07 of 14

China Room, by Sunjeev Sahota

July books gallery
Viking

The follow-up to his Booker Prize-shortlisted The Runaways, Sunjeev Sahota's new novel follows characters across generations and continents (from Punjab to rural England) and is equally heart-wrenching. (July 13)

08 of 14

While We Were Dating, by Jasmine Guillory

July books gallery
Berkley

The best-selling romance novelist does it again, this time with a delicious tale of an advertising executive and the movie star he casts in his new campaign. (July 13)

09 of 14

The Startup Wife, by Tahmima Anam

July books gallery

Asha and Cyrus fall madly in love, get married, invent a social media platform that reinvents rituals for modern life, get rich and successful — and then discover it all crumbling down, in this satirical skewering of the startup world. (July 13)

10 of 14

Nightbitch, by Rachel Yoder

July books gallery

The narrator of Rachel Yoder's electric debut novel — which is already slated for an adaptation starring Amy Adams — asks the age-old question: Am I struggling with new motherhood, or am I turning into a dog? (July 20)

11 of 14

Intimacies, by Katie Kitamura

July books gallery
Riverhead Books

A stream-of-consciousness novel centered on a young woman working as a translator at the Hague and attempting to navigate a complicated relationship with an older man. Fans of sparse millennial tales: Run, don't walk. (July 20)

12 of 14

Virtue, by Hermione Hoby

July books gallery
Riverhead Books

Against the backdrop of an intern spending the summer at a wealthy couple's beach house, Hermione Hoby explores the pitfalls of a class-obsessed New York City. (July 20)

13 of 14

They'll Never Catch Us, by Jessica Goodman

July books gallery
Razorbill

EW alum Jessica Goodman's first thriller, They Wish They Were Us, is headed to the big screen (starring Halsey), and her next follows two sisters on a high school cross-country team who become suspects when a teammate goes on a run… and never returns. (July 27)

14 of 14

Landslide, by Michael Wolff

July books gallery
Henry Holt and Co.

After crashing onto the Trump-exposé scene with 2018's Fire and Fury, Michael Wolff turns his poison pen on the final days of the presidency. And, reader, they sound chaotic. (July 27)

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