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Sally Rooney, Stephen King, Brandon Taylor and more of summer’s hottest books

Sally Rooney, Stephen King, Brandon Taylor and more of summer’s hottest books
Sally Rooney, Stephen King, Brandon Taylor and more of summer’s hottest books

What qualifies as a “summer book”? Sizzling romances? Bubbly rom-coms? Thrilling page-turners?

Any good book released when the weather is warm and the drinks are cold. And this summer is looking to be a hot one, literally and literarily. Sure, there are tantalizing beach reads. There are also vulnerable memoirs from actors Cecily Strong and Mena Suvari, a hard-boiled noir from horror master Stephen King and Sally Rooney's much-anticipated follow-up to "Normal People."

If you're looking for more titles to add to your to-read pile, here are the 20 books we can’t wait to read this summer (on the beach or otherwise).

‘Filthy Animals’

“Filthy Animals,” by Brandon Taylor.
“Filthy Animals,” by Brandon Taylor.

By Brandon Taylor (Riverhead, fiction, on sale June 22)

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The Booker Prize finalist and author of “Real Life” returns with a collection of linked stories set among complex young creatives in the Midwest and observing their fraught relationships.

‘Dear Miss Metropolitan’

“Dear Miss Metropolitan,” by Carolyn Ferrell.
“Dear Miss Metropolitan,” by Carolyn Ferrell.

By Carolyn Ferrell (Henry Holt & Co., fiction, on sale July 6)

A longtime newspaper woman, advice columnist Miss Metropolitan, is shocked when it is discovered that a neighbor had kidnapped teen girls and held them for years in his dilapidated house in Queens. How could she have missed this story?

‘Build Your House Around My Body’

“Build Your House Around My Body,” by Violet Kupersmith.
“Build Your House Around My Body,” by Violet Kupersmith.

By Violet Kupersmith (Random House, fiction, on sale July 6)

In a debut novel drawing on a haunted Vietnam’s history and folklore, two linked young Vietnamese women go missing decades apart: One the teenage daughter of a wealthy family in the ’80s while fleeing her angry father, the other an unhappy Vietnamese-American woman in the 2010s who disappears without a trace.

‘Falling’

“Falling,” by T. J. Newman.
“Falling,” by T. J. Newman.

By T.J. Newman (Avid Reader Press, fiction, on sale July 6)

A pilot’s family is taken hostage and he’s given an impossible choice: Crash the plane and kill the 143 other passengers on board or his family dies. The kicker? The first-time author is a former flight attendant who landed a 7-figure book deal.

‘Wayward’

“Wayward,” by Dana Spiotta.
“Wayward,” by Dana Spiotta.

By Dana Spiotta (Knopf, fiction, on sale July 6)

Samantha Raymond’s life begins to come apart in middle age after the 2016 election when she flees her suburban life to buy a decrepit house in a hardscrabble Syracuse neighborhood.

‘Appleseed’

“Appleseed,” by Matt Bell.
“Appleseed,” by Matt Bell.

By Matt Bell (Custom House, fiction, on sale July 13)

This ambitious speculative epic and striking take on climate change follows three separate narratives in three different times: 18th-century Ohio; the near climate-ravaged future; and a thousand years from now, in a North America covered by a sheet of ice with one lonely inhabitant seeking out the last of civilization.

‘The Final Girl Support Group’

"The Final Girl Support Group," by Grady Hendrix.
"The Final Girl Support Group," by Grady Hendrix.

By Grady Hendrix (Berkley, fiction, on sale July 13)

The horror master behind “The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires” puts his unique spin on slasher movie tropes, imagining a group of real-life final girls who survived their attackers meeting in a therapeutic support group to process their traumas.

‘She Who Became the Sun’

“She Who Became the Sun,” by Shelley Parker-Chan.
“She Who Became the Sun,” by Shelley Parker-Chan.

By Shelley Parker-Chan (Tor/Forge, fiction, on sale July 20)

A queer, fantastical reimagining of the rise of the founding emperor of the Ming Dynasty. A sister claims her dead brother’s identity and his birthright, leading the battle to overthrow Mongol rule of China.

‘The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois’

“The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois,” by Honorée Fanonne Jeffers.
“The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois,” by Honorée Fanonne Jeffers.

By Honorée Fanonne Jeffers (Harper, fiction, on sale July 27)

This ambitious debut novel by a National Book Award-nominated poet chronicles the journey of an American family from the colonial slave trade through the Civil War to our present day, and one Black woman’s coming-to-terms with her legacy.

‘The Great Peace’

“The Great Peace,” by Mena Suvari.
“The Great Peace,” by Mena Suvari.

By Mena Suvari (Hachette, nonfiction, on sale July 27)

The actress, best known for her career-making role in “American Beauty,” pens a harrowing coming-of-age memoir, detailing how as a young star in Hollywood she lost herself in drugs, sex and abusive relationships, sharing life lessons she learned along the way.

‘Stolen’

“Stolen,” by Elizabeth Gilpin.
“Stolen,” by Elizabeth Gilpin.

By Elizabeth Gilpin (Grand Central, nonfiction, on sale July 20)

In this gripping memoir, Gilpin recounts how at 15 she was sent to a “therapeutic” boarding school for troubled teens, where she and others like her were brutally abused. “This unflinching account is impossible to put down,” says a starred review from Publishers Weekly.

‘Her Heart for a Compass’

“Her Heart for a Compass,” by Sarah Ferguson.
“Her Heart for a Compass,” by Sarah Ferguson.

By Sarah Ferguson (William Morrow, fiction, on sale Aug. 3)

That’s right, the Duchess of York has written a novel. This costume drama tells the story of an outspoken young noblewoman’s coming-of-age in repressive Victorian England as she flees an arranged marriage.

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‘Billy Summers’

“Billy Summers,” by Stephen King.
“Billy Summers,” by Stephen King.

By Stephen King (Scribner, fiction, on sale Aug. 3)

The horror master pens a hard-boiled noir about a complex killer for hire. He’s the best in the business, and he wants out – but his final job complicates everything.

‘This Will All Be Over Soon’

“This Will All Be Over Soon,” by Cecily Strong.
“This Will All Be Over Soon,” by Cecily Strong.

By Cecily Strong (Simon & Schuster, nonfiction, on sale Aug. 10)

The “Saturday Night Live” star pens a powerful memoir about losing her cousin to brain cancer in early 2020, and learning to grieve him amid all the loss and heartache of the COVID-19 pandemic.

‘Velvet Was the Night’

“Velvet Was the Night,” by Silvia Moreno-Garcia.
“Velvet Was the Night,” by Silvia Moreno-Garcia.

By Silvia Moreno-Garcia (Del Rey, fiction, on sale Aug. 17)

From the author of “Mexican Gothic” comes a noir-flavored mystery about a secretary in 1970s Mexico City intrigued by the suspicious disappearance of her beautiful neighbor and sets out in search of the missing woman.

‘Seeing Ghosts’

“Seeing Ghosts,” by Kat Chow.
“Seeing Ghosts,” by Kat Chow.

By Kat Chow (Grand Central, nonfiction, on sale Aug. 24)

The author explores grief and its fallout after her mother’s unexpected death from cancer, in a Chinese American family story that spans three generations. “The result is a moving depiction of grief at its most mundane and spectacular,” says Publishers Weekly.

‘The Reckoning: Our Nation’s Trauma and Finding a Way to Heal’

“The Reckoning: Our Nation’s Trauma and Finding a Way to Heal,” by Mary L. Trump.
“The Reckoning: Our Nation’s Trauma and Finding a Way to Heal,” by Mary L. Trump.

By Mary L. Trump (St. Martin’s Press, nonfiction, on sale Aug. 17)

The niece of former President Trump and bestselling author of “Too Much and Never Enough” writes that America is suffering from PTSD, and that national healing must start with a reckoning.

‘On Freedom: Four Songs of Care and Constraint’

"On Freedom: Four Songs of Care and Constraint," by Maggie Nelson.
"On Freedom: Four Songs of Care and Constraint," by Maggie Nelson.

By Maggie Nelson (Graywolf Press, nonfiction, on sale Sept. 7)

Drawing on a vast range of pop culture and critical theory, the celebrated cultural critic explores the ways we think, experience and discuss the concept of freedom.

‘Beautiful World, Where Are You’

“Beautiful World, Where Are You,” by Sally Rooney.
“Beautiful World, Where Are You,” by Sally Rooney.

By Sally Rooney (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, fiction, on sale Sept. 7)

From the bestselling author of “Normal People” and “Conversations With Friends” comes a new coming-of-age story about four young adults – novelist Alice, her romantic interest Felix, her best friend Eileen and her friend Simon – and the life that’s catching up with them.

‘Harlem Shuffle’

“Harlem Shuffle,” by Colson Whitehead.
“Harlem Shuffle,” by Colson Whitehead.

By Colson Whitehead (Doubleday, fiction, on sale Sept. 14)

The two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning author of “The Underground Railroad” and “The Nickel Boys” returns with an entertaining heist novel and family saga set in 1960s Harlem.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Summer books: Sally Rooney, Stephen King, Mary L. Trump and more