CORAL GABLES
Summer Reading
THE BEST NEW BOOKS
PLUS SUMMER TRAVEL: FLORIDA TRIPS
DOROTHY THOMSON: A PROFILE
Mitchell Kaplan Proprietor, Books & BooksTHE BEST NEW BOOKS
PLUS SUMMER TRAVEL: FLORIDA TRIPS
DOROTHY THOMSON: A PROFILE
Mitchell Kaplan Proprietor, Books & Books“ THE NOVEL INTRODUCES YOU TO A WORLD YOU ARE UNFAMILIAR WITH AND SOMEONE ELSE’S EXISTENCE. AND YOU DEVELOP AN EMPATHY FOR THAT...”
MITCHELL KAPLAN, PROPRIETOR OF BOOKS & BOOKS PHOTO BY RODOLFO BENITEZFor the past seven years, through the challenges and isolation of COVID, our Coral Gables Chamber of Commerce has worked collaboratively with our partners at Books & Books to produce a stellar summer reading list for readers of all genres, desires and tastes.
This summer is no different as you peruse the titles below featuring some fan faves and some new works and some gems yet to come. A new book in your hands reminds us of our pre-pandemic summers of leisure and travel that brought us such joy. This summer we return to this favorite pastime with a vengeance further understanding how lucky we are that Books & Books is once again along for the ride.
Mitchell Kaplan and his team are the very best and picking a great summer readwhether to be enjoyed on the plane, by the pool or on a sandy beach somewhere in our great big beautiful world.
We are back to travel, but most of us have never left a great book behind. There is comfort on the page, light in the journey, life in the diverse characters and escape in the story. Use the time to unwind, heal or laugh. I know I am.
And while I am a fan of historical tomes and real-life characters, I have also learned that when the team says “read this book”, they do know best.
So enjoy these recommended titles and fill up that carry-on back-pack with a great book, courtesy of your Chamber and our friends at Books & Books!
Now, enjoy the read!
Mark A. Trowbridge President & CEO Coral Gables Chamber of CommerceStacker are the stars of Chain-Gang All-Stars, the cornerstone of CAPE – Criminal Action Penal Entertainment – a popular, highly-controversial, profitable program in America’s private prison industry. It’s a return to gladiators as prisoners compete for the ultimate prize: their freedom. ChainGang All-Stars is a kaleidoscopic look at the American prison system’s unholy alliance of systemic racism, unchecked capitalism, and mass incarceration.
Aspiring playwright Kate Gamble is struggling to launch a script she’s been secretly researching her entire life, mostly at the family dinner table. Her father is Christian Gamble, CEO of Buck Technologies, a private data company whose clients include the CIA and counter-terrorism organizations. Kate’s father adores her, and a play about the dark side of Big Data would be the ultimate betrayal in his eyes. But Kate is compelled. Harper Lee Prize winner.
The daughter of a wealthy merchant, young Dol a Llull Prat is besotted with the dashing Miguel Cervantes. Despite Miguel’s entreaties, however, the ever-practical Dol refuses to upend her life for him, although she always welcomes his attentions. When Miguel renders her as the lowly Dulcinea in his great “Don Quixote,” he commits an unforgivable offense and their decades-long affinity is severed – until he reaches out to her one last time.
Two Colombian expats meet as strangers on the streets of New York City, both burdened with traumatic pasts. In Cuba, a woman discovers her deceased brother’s bones have been stolen, and the love of her life returns from Ecuador for one night. A cash-strapped couple hustles in Miami to life-altering ends. “The Faraway World” is a collection of arresting stories from the New York Times bestselling author of “Infinite Country.”
Seventeen-year-old Victoria Nash runs the household on her family’s peach farm in Iola, Colorado – the sole female in a family of troubled men. Wilson Moon is a young drifter with a mysterious past. Victoria encounters him by chance on a street corner, a meeting that profoundly alters both their young lives, igniting as much passion as danger. When tragedy strikes, Victoria flees into the surrounding mountains with no clear notion of what her future will bring.
Chemist Elizabeth Zott is not your average woman, and she would be the first to point out that there is no such thing. But it’s the early 1960s and her all-male team at Hastings Research Institute takes a very unscientific view of equality. Except for one: Calvin Evans, the lonely, brilliant, Nobel–prize nominated grudge-holder who falls in love with her mind. True chemistry results. A Best Book of the Year.
On the cusp of turning forty, Alisha Fernandez Miranda has reached the peak of professional success, but at a price – she’s overworked and exhausted. Bravely, she decides to give herself a break, pausing her stressful career as the CEO of a high-powered consulting firm. With the tentative blessing of her husband and eight-year-old twins, she leaves home in London to spend one year exploring the dream jobs of her youth, seeking to answer “What if?”
Pulitzer Prize–winning, New York Times bestselling author, and actual Florida Man Dave Barry returns with a Florida caper full of oddballs, twists, and turns. Jesse Braddock is trapped in a tiny cabin deep in the Everglades with her infant daughter and her ex-boyfriend, a wannabe reality TV star. Broke and desperate for a way out, Jesse stumbles across a long-lost treasure, which could solve all her problems – if she can keep it.
From the acclaimed author of “In Cuba I Was a German Shepherd” comes a new novel about the search for freedom and community. The Helena is an art deco apartment building that has witnessed the changing face of South Miami Beach for 70 years, observing the lives housed within. Among those who have called apartment 2B home: a Cuban concert pianist, the widow of an intelligence officer, and a man waiting on a green card marriage to end.
#1 New York Times bestselling author Daniel Silva delivers another stunning thriller in this action-packed tale of international intrigue. Legendary art restorer and spy Gabriel Allon joins forces with a brilliant and beautiful master-thief to track down the world’s most valuable missing painting, but soon finds himself in a desperate race to prevent an unthinkable conflict between Russia and the West. Silva’s powerhouse novel showcases his outstanding skill and brilliant imagination.
The Covenant of Water is the long-awaited novel by Abraham Verghese, author of the word-ofmouth bestseller “Cutting for Stone,” which has sold over 1.5 million copies in the U.S. alone. Spanning 1900 to 1977, “The Covenant of Water” is set in Kerala, on South India’s Malabar Coast, and follows three generations of a family that suffers a peculiar affliction: in every generation, at least one person dies by drowning – and in Kerala, water is everywhere.
The Postcard
BY ANNE BERESTWinner of the Choix Goncourt Prize, “The Postcard” is a vivid portrait of 20th century Parisian intellectual and artistic life, an enthralling investigation into family secrets, and a poignant tale of a Jewish family devastated by the Holocaust and partly restored through the power of storytelling. It begins with an anonymous postcard delivered to the Berest home, with the names of Anne Berest’s maternal great-grandparents killed at Auschwitz on the back.
Jack might be a polished, Harvard-educated lawyer on paper, but everyone in the village of Onset, Massachusetts, knows his real job: moving people on the run from powerful enemies. The family business (co-managed with his father, a retired spy) is smooth sailing, as they help clients shed their identities in preparation for fresh starts. But when Elena, Jack’s former flame, makes an unexpected return to town, her arrival upends Jack’s routine existence.
In her first book in seven years, Tananarive Due further cements her status as a leading innovator in Black horror and Afrofuturism. The American Book Award-winning author’s second collection of stories includes offerings of horror, science fiction, and suspense. From the mysterious, magical town of Gracetown to the aftermath of a pandemic to the reaches of the far future, Due’s stories all share a sense of dread and fear balanced with heart and hope.
Even through the roar and effervescence of the 1920s, everyone in New York has heard of Benjamin and Helen Rask. He is a legendary Wall Street tycoon; she is the daughter of eccentric aristocrats. Together, they have risen to the top of a world of endless wealth – all as a decade of excess and speculation draws to an end. But at what cost have they acquired their fortune? Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for fiction.
Seventeen stories traverse borderlines, mythic and real, in the lives of Filipino and Filipino American women and their ancestors. Moving from small Philippine villages to the coast of near-future Florida, “When the Hibiscus Falls” examines the triumphs and sorrows that connect generations of women. Daughters, sisters, mothers, aunties, cousins, and grandmothers commune with ancestors and descendants, mourning what is lost and what is gained when we safeguard the legacy of older generations.
Vividly written and exhaustively researched, Jonathan Eig’s “King: A Life” is the first major biography in decades of the civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr. – and the first to include recently declassified FBI files. In this revelatory new portrait of the preacher and activist who shook the world, we see an intimate view of the courageous and often emotionally troubled man who demanded peaceful protest for his movement but was rarely at peace with himself.
As a boy, Burkhard Bilger often heard his parents tell stories about the Germany of their youth. “Fatherland” is the story of Bilger’s nearly 10-year quest to uncover the truth about his grandfather Karl Gönner, who was an elementary school teacher and father of four when the war began. In 1940, he was posted to a village in Alsace, in occupied France, and ordered to reeducate its children. But did he help or hurt them? A study in human complexity.
For many Americans, President Gerald Ford was the genial accident of history who controversially pardoned his Watergate-tarnished predecessor, presided over the fall of Saigon, and became a punching bag on “Saturday Night Live.” Yet as Richard Norton Smith reveals in a book full of surprises, Ford was an underrated leader whose tough decisions and personal decency look better with the passage of time.
In “Leadership,” Kissinger analyzes the lives of six leaders through the strategies of statecraft they embodied: Konrad Adenauer (Germany, postWWII); Charles de Gaulle (France, post-WWII); Richard Nixon; Anwar Sadat (Egypt, Middle East peace); Lee Kuan Yew (Singapore); and Margaret Thatcher (Britain). Kissinger brings historical perception, public experience, and personal knowledge of each.
From books to movies to Barbie dolls, most mainstream portrayals of Keller focus heavily on her struggles as a deafblind child – portraying her teacher, Annie Sullivan, as a miracle worker, and Keller as an almost secondary character in her own story. Few people know that her greatest accomplishment was not learning to speak, but what she did with her voice when she found it, opposing racism, Nazism, apartheid, and McCarthyism.
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The Roaring Twenties has been characterized as a time of Gatsby frivolity. But it was also the height of the uniquely American hate group, the Ku Klux Klan. This historical thriller by a Pulitzer and National Book Award-winning author tells the riveting story of the Klan’s rise to power in the 1920s (in the Mid-West!), the cunning con man who drove that rise, and the woman who stopped them.
Half American: The Epic Story of African Americans Fighting World War II at Home and Abroad
BY MATTHEW DELMONTOver one million Black men and women served in World War II. Black troops were at Normandy, Iwo Jima, and the Battle of the Bulge, serving in segregated units and performing unheralded but vital support jobs, only to be denied housing and educational opportunities at home. In a time when questions regarding race in America are troublingly relevant, this meticulously researched retelling makes for necessary reading.
North Korea is an open-air prison from which there is no escape, a symbol of human injustice and collective brain washing. Only a handful of men and women have succeeded. Jihyun Park is one of these rare survivors. This is the harrowing story of a woman who escaped famine and terror in North Korea, not once but twice. It will be the most insightful book you’ll ever read about how it is to live and suffocate in North Korea.
In “Easy Money,” TV star Ben McKenzie (“The O.C.,” “Gotham”) enlists the help of journalist Jacob Silverman for an exposé of the final days of cryptocurrency now upon us. Weaving together stories of traders and victims, crypto “visionaries,” Hollywood’s true believers, anti-crypto whistleblowers, and government agents searching for solutions at the precipice of a major crash, “Easy Money” is a look at a perfect storm.
Pulitzer Prize–winning and New York Times bestselling journalist Gretchen Morgenson and financial analyst Joshua Rosner investigate the world of private equity, revealing how it leeches profits from everyday Americans. The book lucidly traces the 30-year history of corporate takeovers in America, investigating the biggest names in private equity, exposing how they buy companies, load them with debt, and then bleed them.
From a legendary music producer, a master at helping people connect with the wellsprings of their creativity, comes a beautifully crafted book many years in the making that offers that same deep wisdom to all of us. “The Creative Act” is a beautiful and generous course of study by a nine-time GRAMMY winning producer that illuminates the path of the artist as a road we all can follow. It distills the wisdom gleaned from a lifetime’s work into a luminous reading experience.
The title “Bullfrog” is given to the Navy SEAL who has served the longest on active duty. Admiral McRaven received this honor in 2011 when he took charge of the US Special Operations Command. When McRaven retired in 2014, he had 37 years as a Navy SEAL under his belt. The book draws on the experiences from his incredible life, including crisis situations, management debates, organizational transitions, and ethical dilemmas.
The United States, the richest country on earth, has more poverty than any other advanced democracy. Why?
Elegantly written and fiercely argued, this compassionate book gives us new ways of thinking about a morally urgent problem. It also helps us imagine solutions. Desmond builds an original and ambitious case for ending poverty. He calls on us all to become poverty abolitionists, engaged in a politics of collective belonging to usher in a new age of shared prosperity.
Global warming is one of the greatest dangers mankind faces. Even as temperatures increase, sea levels rise, and natural disasters escalate, our environmental crisis feels difficult to predict and understand. Again and again, Frankopan shows that when past empires have failed to act sustainably, they have met with catastrophe. Blending brilliant historical writing and scientific research, “The Earth Transformed” will reframe the way we look at our future.
The runaway success of the microchip processor may be reaching its end. Running up against the physical constraints of shrinking sizes, silicon chips are not likely to prove useful in solving humanity’s greatest challenges, from global starvation to incurable diseases. But the quantum computer, which harnesses the power of the atomic realm, promises to be as revolutionary as the transistor and microchip once were.
In her first book, “How to Do Nothing,” Jenny Odell wrote about the importance of disconnecting from the “attention economy” to spend time in quiet contemplation. But what if you don’t have time to spend? To answer this seemingly simple question, Odell took a deep dive into the fundamental structure of our society and found that the clock we live by was built for profit, not people. Here is her solution.