

Beach Read by Amazonundefined
Description
FROM THE #1
NEW YORK TIMES
BESTSELLING AUTHOR OF
PEOPLE WE MEET ON VACATION
AND
BOOK LOVERS
!A romance writer who no longer believes in love and a literary writer stuck in a rut engage in a summer-long challenge that may just upend everything they believe about happily ever afters.
Augustus Everett is an acclaimed author of literary fiction. January Andrews writes bestselling romance. When she pens a happily ever after, he kills off his entire cast. Theyre polar opposites. In fact, the only thing they have in common is that for the next three months, they're living in neighboring beach houses, broke, and bogged down with writer's block.Until, one hazy evening, one thing leads to another and they strike a deal designed to force them out of their creative ruts: Augustus will spend the summer writing something happy, and January will pen the next Great American Novel. Shell take him on field trips worthy of any rom-com montage, and hell take her to interview surviving members of a backwoods death cult (obviously). Everyone will finish a book and no one will fall in love. Really.
Recenzja
Once I started
Beach Read
I legit did not put it down.
Betches
One of...
The New York Times Book Review's
Summer Romance Reads
Entertainment Weeklys Hottest Summer Reads of 2020
Oprah Magazine's
Best Beach Reads of Summer 2020
Betches
20 Books to Read in 2020
SheReads
Most Anticipated Books of Summer 2020
Goodreads'
Big Books of Spring
Popsugar's
25 Exciting New Books Coming Out in May
Bustle's
Most Anticipated May Titles
Shondaland's
Five Books to Read in May
TheSkimm's 11 Buzzy Books for Your Imaginary Beach Bag
Good Morning America's
25 Novels You'll Want to Read this Summer
The New York Post's
Required Reading
Good Housekeeping's
25 Best Beach Reads
Huffington Post's
Best Books to Read during QuarantineCNN's Perfect Summer ReadsLitHub's Ultimate Summer 2020 Reading List BookRiot's 6 Captivating New Books
Reader, I swooned!
Beach Read
is a breath of fresh air. My heart ached for January, and Gus is to die fora steamy, smart and perceptive romance. I was engrossed!
Josie Silver
, #1
New York Times
bestselling author of
One Day in December
This is a touching and heartfelt book about love, betrayal, grief, failure, and learning how to love again. I adored going along on Gus and Januarys journey, and I closed this book with a satisfied sigh.
Jasmine Guillory
,
New York Times
Bestselling Author of
The Proposal
Beach Read
is original, sparkling bright, and layered with feeling. Has trying to see the world through your long time crush/rivals eyes ever been this potent and poignant? If whipcrack banter and foggy sexual tension is your catnip, youll adore this book.
Sally Thorne
,
USA Today
bestselling author of
The Hating Game
and
99 Percent MineBeach Read
is exactly the witty, charming, and swoony novel we always want; it also happens to be the unexpected wallop of emotional wisdom and sly social commentary we need right now. I adored it.
Julia Whelan
, author of
My Oxford Year
[It] has everything the title promisesa romping plot, family secrets, and the thrill of falling in love, all set on the sweeping shores of eastern Lake Michigan. I cannot wait to read what Henry writes next.
Amy E. Reichert
, author
The Coincidence of Coconut Cake
and
The Optimists Guide to Letting Go
Delightfully romantic and slyly poignant, Beach Read is brimming with crackling banter and engrossing prose. It has every flavor of booklover catnip: rivalry, creative struggle, family secrets, and the sweet head-over-heels tumble into love. Emily Henry's Beach Read is 2020's perfect anywhere read.
Christina Lauren,
New York Times
bestselling author of
The Unhoneymooners
If you liked Sally Thornes
The Hating Game
and Linda Holmess
Evvie Drake Starts Over
, you will definitely be into this, which feels like their spawn. (No one asked me to say this, by the way. Im just high on that happy-sad feeling of finishing a book I enjoyed, that I wish wasnt over.) Well played.
Heather Cocks and Jessica Morgan
, bestselling authors of
The Royal We
Readers are sure to fall hard for this meta, heartfelt take on the romance genre.
Publishers Weekly
(starred review)
A heartfelt look at taking second chances, in life and in love.
Kirkus Reviews
This will still sweep readers off their feet. Januarys first-person narration is suitably poetic and effervescent, the small-town beach setting is charming, and the romance is achingly swoony.
Booklist
That Henry can manage to both pack a fierce emotional wallop and spear literary posturing in one go is a testament to her immense skill.
Entertainment Weekly
O autorze
Emily Henry
is the #1
New York Times
bestselling author of
People We Meet on Vacation
and
Beach Read
. She studied creative writing at Hope College, and now spends most of her time in Cincinnati, Ohio, and the part of Kentucky just beneath it. Find her on Instagram @emilyhenrywrites.
Fragment książki opublikowany za zgodą wydawcy. Wszelkie prawa zastrzeżone.
9781984806734|excerptHenry / BEACH READ1The HouseI have a fatal flaw.I like to think we all do. Or at least that makes it easier for me when Im writingbuilding my heroines and heroes up around this one self-sabotaging trait, hinging everything that happens to them on a specific characteristic: the thing they learned to do to protect themselves and cant let go of, even when it stops serving them.Maybe, for example, you didnt have much control over your life as a kid. So, to avoid disappointment, you learned never to ask yourself what you truly wanted. And it worked for a long time. Only now, upon realizing you didnt get what you didnt know you wanted, youre barreling down the highway in a midlife-crisis-mobile with a suitcase full of cash and a man named Stan in your trunk.Maybe your fatal flaw is that you dont use turn signals.Or maybe, like me, youre a hopeless romantic. You just cant stop telling yourself the story. The one about your own life, complete with melodramatic soundtrack and golden light lancing through car windows.It started when I was twelve. My parents sat me down to tell me the news. Mom had gotten her first diagnosissuspicious cells in her left breastand she told me not to worry so many times I suspected Id be grounded if she caught me at it. My mom was a do-er, a laugher, an optimist, not a worrier, but I could tell she was terrified, and so I was too, frozen on the couch, unsure how to say anything without making things worse.But then my bookish homebody of a father did something unexpected. He stood and grabbed our handsone of Moms, one of mineand said, You know what we need to get these bad feelings out? We need to dance!Our suburb had no clubs, just a mediocre steak house with a Friday night cover band, but Mom lit up like hed just suggested taking a private jet to the Copacabana.She wore her buttery yellow dress and some hammered metal earrings that twinkled when she moved. Dad ordered twenty-year-old Scotch for them and a Shirley Temple for me, and the three of us twirled and bobbed until we were dizzy, laughing, tripping all over. We laughed until we could barely stand, and my famously reserved father sang along to Brown Eyed Girl like the whole room wasnt watching us.And then, exhausted, we piled into the car and drove home through the quiet, Mom and Dad holding tight to each others hands between the seats, and I tipped my head against the car window and, watching the streetlights flicker across the glass, thought, Its going to be okay. We will always be okay.And that was the moment I realized: when the world felt dark and scary, love could whisk you off to go dancing; laughter could take some of the pain away; beauty could punch holes in your fear. I decided then that my life would be full of all three. Not just for my own benefit, but for Moms, and for everyone else around me.There would be purpose. There would be beauty. There would be candlelight and Fleetwood Mac playing softly in the background.The point is, I started telling myself a beautiful story about my life, about fate and the way things work out, and by twenty-eight years old, my story was perfect.Perfect (cancer-free) parents who called several times a week, tipsy on wine or each others company. Perfect (spontaneous, multilingual, six foot three) boyfriend who worked in the ER and knew how to make coq au vin. Perfect shabby chic apartment in Queens. Perfect job writing romantic novelsinspired by perfect parents and perfect boyfriendfor Sandy Lowe Books.Perfect life.But it was just a story, and when one gaping plot hole appeared, the whole thing unraveled. Thats how stories work.Now, at twenty-nine, I was miserable, broke, semi-homeless, very single, and pulling up to a gorgeous lake house whose very existence nauseated me. Grandly romanticizing my life had stopped serving me, but my fatal flaw was still riding shotgun in my dinged-up Kia Soul, narrating things as they happened:January Andrews stared out the car window at the angry lake beating up on the dusky shore. She tried to convince herself that coming here hadnt been a mistake.It was definitely a mistake, but I had no better option. You didnt turn down free lodging when you were broke.I parked on the street and stared up at the oversized cottages facade, its gleaming windows and fairy tale of a porch, the shaggy beach grass dancing in the warm breeze.I checked the address in my GPS against the handwritten one hanging from the house key. This was it, all right.For a minute, I stalled, like maybe a world-ending asteroid would take me out before I was forced to go inside. Then I took a deep breath and got out, wrestling my overstuffed suitcase from the back seat along with the cardboard box full of gin handles.I pushed a fistful of dark hair out of my eyes to study the cornflower blue shingles and snow-white trim. Just pretend youre at an Airbnb.Immediately, an imaginary Airbnb listing ran through my head: Three-bedroom, three-bath lakeside cottage brimming with charm and proof your father was an asshole and your life has been a lie.I started up the steps cut into the grassy hillside, blood rushing through my ears like fire hoses and legs wobbling, anticipating the moment the hellmouth would open and the world would drop out from under me.That already happened. Last year. And it didnt kill you, so neither will this.On the porch, every sensation in my body heightened. The tingling in my face, the twist in my stomach, the sweat prickling along my neck. I balanced the box of gin against my hip and slipped the key into the lock, a part of me hoping it would jam. That all this would turn out to be an elaborate practical joke Dad had set up for us before he died.Or, better yet, he wasnt actually dead. Hed jump out from behind the bushes and scream, Gotcha! You didnt really think I had a secret second life, did you? You couldnt possibly think I had a second house with some woman other than your mother?The key turned effortlessly. The door swung inward.The house was silent.An ache went through me. The same one Id felt at least once a day since I got Moms call about the stroke and heard her sob those words. Hes gone, Janie.No Dad. Not here. Not anywhere. And then the second pain, the knife twisting: The father you knew never existed anyway.Id never really had him. Just like Id never really had my ex Jacques or his coq au vin.It was just a story Id been telling myself. From now on, it was the ugly truth or nothing. I steeled myself and stepped inside.My first thought was that the ugly truth wasnt super ugly. My dads love nest had an open floor plan: a living room that spilled into a funky, blue-tiled kitchen and homey breakfast nook, the wall of windows just beyond overlooking a dark-stained deck.If Mom had owned this place, everything wouldve been a mix of creamy, calming neutrals. The bohemian room Id stepped into wouldve been more at home in Jacquess and my old place than my parents. I felt a little queasy imagining Dad here, among these things Mom never wouldve picked out: the folksy hand-painted breakfast table, the dark wooden bookshelves, the sunken couch covered in mismatched pillows.There was no sign of the version of him that Id known.My phone rang in my pocket and I set the box on the granite countertop to answer the call.Hello? It came out weak and raspy.How is it? the voice on the other end said immediately. Is there a sex dungeon?Shadi? I guessed. I tucked the phone between my ear and shoulder as I unscrewed the cap from one of my gin bottles, taking a swig to fortify myself.It honestly worries me that Im the only person who might call you to ask that, Shadi answered.Youre the only person who even knows about the Love Shack, I pointed out.I am not the only one who knows about it, Shadi argued.Technically true. While Id found out about my fathers secret lake house at his funeral last year, Mom had been aware much longer. Fine, I said. Youre the only person I told about it. Anyway, give me a second. I just got here.Literally? Shadi was breathing hard, which meant she was walking to a shift at the restaurant. Since we kept such different hours, most of our calls happened when she was on her way into work.Metaphorically, I said. Literally, Ive been here for ten minutes, but I only just feel that I have arrived.So wise, Shadi said. So deep.Shh, I said. Im taking it all in.Check for the sex dungeon! Shadi hurried to say, as if I were hanging up on her.I was not. I was simply holding the phone to my ear, holding my breath, holding my racing heart in my chest, as I scanned my fathers second life.And there, just when I could convince myself Dad couldnt possibly have spent time here, I spotted something framed on the wall. A clipping of a New York Times Best Sellers list from three years ago, the same one hed positioned over the fireplace at home. There I was, at number fifteen, the bottom slot. And there, three slots above mein a sick twist of fatewas my college rival, Gus (though now he went by Augustus, because Serious Man) and his highbrow debut novel The Revelatories. It had stayed on the list for five weeks (not that I was counting (I was absolutely counting)).Well? Shadi prompted. What do you think?I turned and my eyes caught on the mandala tapestry hanging over the couch.Im led to wonder if Dad smoked weed. I spun toward the windows at the side of the house, which aligned almost perfectly with the neighbors, a design flaw Mom would never have overlooked when house shopping.But this wasnt her house, and I could clearly see the floor-to-ceiling bookshelves that lined the neighbors study.Oh, godmaybe its a grow house, not a love shack! Shadi sounded delighted. You shouldve read the letter, January. Its all been a misunderstanding. Your dads leaving you the family business. That Woman was his business partner, not his mistress.How bad was it that I wished she was right?Either way, Id fully intended to read the letter. Id just been waiting for the right time, hoping the worst of my anger would settle and those last words from Dad would be comforting. Instead, a full year had passed and the dread I felt at the thought of opening the envelope grew every day. It was so unfair, that he should get the last word and Id have no way to reply. To scream or cry or demand more answers. Once Id opened it, thered be no going back. That would be it. The final goodbye.So until further notice, the letter was living a happy, if solitary, life in the bottom of the gin box Id brought with me from Queens.Its not a grow house, I told Shadi and slid open the back door to step onto the deck. Unless the weeds in the basement.No way, Shadi argued. Thats where the sex dungeon is.Lets stop talking about my depressing life, I said. Whats new with you?You mean the Haunted Hat, Shadi said. If only she had fewer than four roommates in her shoebox apartment in Chicago, then maybe Id be staying with her now. Not that I was capable of getting anything done when I was with Shadi. And my financial situation was too dire not to get something done. I had to finish my next book in this rent-free hell. Then maybe I could afford my own Jacques-free place.If the Haunted Hat is what you want to talk about, I said, then yes. Spill.Still hasnt spoken to me. Shadi sighed wistfully. But I can, like, sense him looking at me when were both in the kitchen. Because we have a connection.Are you at all worried that your connection isnt with the guy whos wearing the antique porkpie hat, but perhaps with the ghost of the hats original owner? What will you do if you realize youve fallen in love with a ghost?Um. Shadi thought for a minute. I guess Id have to update my Tinder bio.A breeze rippled off the water at the bottom of the hill, ruffling my brown waves across my shoulders, and the setting sun shot golden spears of light over everything, so bright and hot I had to squint to see the wash of oranges and reds it cast across the beach. If this were just some house Id rented, it would be the perfect place to write the adorable love story Id been promising Sandy Lowe Books for months.Shadi, I realized, had been talking. More about the Haunted Hat. His name was Ricky, but we never called him that. We always spoke of Shadis love life in code. There was the older man who ran the amazing seafood restaurant (the Fish Lord), and then there was some guy wed called Mark because he looked like some other, famous Mark, and now there was this new coworker, a bartender who wore a hat every day that Shadi loathed and yet could not resist.I snapped back into the conversation as Shadi was saying, Fourth of July weekend? Can I visit then?Thats more than a month away. I wanted to argue that I wouldnt even be here by then, but I knew it wasnt true. It would take me at least all summer to write a book, empty the house, and sell both, so I could (hopefully) be catapulted back into relative comfort. Not in New York, but somewhere less expensive.I imagined Duluth was affordable. Mom would never visit me there, but we hadnt done much visiting this past year anyway, apart from my three-day trip home for Christmas. Shed dragged me to four yoga classes, three crowded juice bars, and a Nutcracker performance starring some kid I didnt know, like if we were alone for even a second, the topic of Dad would arise and wed burst into flames.All my life, my friends had been jealous of my relationship with her. How often and freely (or so I thought) we talked, how much fun we had together. Now our relationship was the worlds least competitive game of phone tag.Id gone from having two loving parents and a live-in boyfriend to basically just having Shadi, my much-too-long-distance best friend. The one blessing of moving from New York to North Bear Shores, Michigan, was that I was closer to her place in Chicago.Fourth of Julys too far off, I complained. Youre only three hours away.Yeah, and I dont know how to drive.Then you should probably give that license back, I said.Believe me, Im waiting for it to expire. Im going to feel so free. I hate when people think Im able to drive just because, legally, I am.Shadi was a terrible driver. She screamed whenever she turned left.Besides, you know how scheduling off is in the industry. Im lucky my boss said I could have Fourth of July. For all I know, hes expecting a blow job now.No way. Blow jobs are for major holidays. What youve got on your hands is a good old-fashioned foot job quid pro quo.I took another sip of gin, then turned from the end of the deck and nearly yelped. On the deck ten feet to the right of mine, the back of a head of curly brown hair peeked over a lawn chair. I silently prayed the man was asleepthat I wouldnt have to spend an entire summer next door to someone whod heard me shout good old-fashioned foot job.As if hed read my mind, he sat forward and grabbed the bottle of beer from his patio table, took a swig, and sat back.So true. I wont even have to take my Crocs off, Shadi was saying. Anyway, I just got to work. But let me know if its drugs or leather in the basement.I turned my back to the neighbors deck. Im not going to check until you visit.Rude, Shadi said.Leverage, I said. Love you.Love you more, she insisted and hung up.I turned to face the curly head, half waiting for him to acknowledge me, half debating whether I was obligated to introduce myself.I hadnt known any of my neighbors in New York well, but this was Michigan, and from Dads stories about growing up in North Bear Shores, I fully expected to have to lend this man sugar at some point (note: must buy sugar).I cleared my throat and pasted on my attempt at a neighborly smile. The man sat forward for another swig of beer, and I called across the gap, Sorry for disturbing you!He waved one hand vaguely, then turned the page of whatever book was in his lap. Whats disturbing about foot jobs as a form of currency? he drawled in a husky, bored voice.I grimaced as I searched for a replyany reply. Old January would have known what to say, but my mind was as blank as it was every time I opened Microsoft Word.Okay, so maybe Id become a bit of a hermit this past year. Maybe I wasnt entirely sure what Id spent the last year doing, since it wasnt visiting Mom and it wasnt writing, and it wasnt charming the socks off my neighbors.Anyway, I called, Im living here now.As if hed read my thoughts, he gave a disinterested wave and grumbled, Let me know if you need any sugar. But he managed to make it sound more like, Never speak to me again unless you notice my house is on fire, and even then, listen for sirens first.So much for Midwestern hospitality. At least in New York, our neighbors had brought us cookies when we moved in. (Theyd been gluten-free and laced with LSD, but it was the thought that counted.)Or if you need directions to the nearest Sexual Fetish Depot, the Grump added.Heat flared through my cheeks, a flush of embarrassment and anger. The words were out before I could reconsider: Ill just wait for your car to pull out and follow. He laughed, a surprised, rough sound, but still didnt deign to face me.Lovely to meet you, I added sharply, and turned to hurry back through the sliding glass doors to the safety of the house, where I would quite possibly have to hide all summer.Liar, I heard him grumble before I snapped the door shut.
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Product information
- Długość wersji drukowanej:400 str.
- Język:Angielski
- Data publikacji:19 maja 2020
- Wymiary:14.02 x 2.69 x 21.01 cm
- ISBN-10:1984806734
- ISBN-13:978-1984806734
- Author:Emily Henry
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