8 best audiobooks of the year so far

June is Audiobook Appreciation Month.

June is Audiobook Appreciation Month, which is a good excuse to gather up a collection of the best audiobooks I’ve listened to so far this year, Quick Lit-style.

When I’m choosing my next audiobook listen, I’m not looking for a substitute for the print book; to my mind, the best audiobooks enhance the reading experience, adding layers that the print version can’t replicate.

I know many of you deeply value a wonderful summer audiobook, which is why for many years now, each year’s MMD Summer Reading Guide has included an “Awesome on Audio” feature. This is my place to highlight forthcoming audiobooks for the season I’ve already previewed and found to be fantastic listening, as well as draw your attention to amazing backlist audiobooks that feel just right for summer.

Quick Lit is coming up on Monday, June 15, and it just so happens that I’ve been listening up a storm recently; our mild spring has made for excellent walking—and thus audiobook—weather. That means more audiobooks I read (and mostly loved) are coming your way very soon.

I hope you find something that looks intriguing for your TBR on this list (and in the comments!), and I look forward to browsing your recent audiobook winners below.

8 best audiobooks of the year so far

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Happy Land

Happy Land

I've loved Dolen Perkins-Valdez's work in the past, especially her 2022 novel Take My Hand which was one of my favorite books that year. I decided to listen to her 2025 release on audio, largely because Bahni Turpin narrates, along with Ashley J. Hobbs. Once again, here she takes inspiration from lesser-explored history that deserves to be better known. Happy Land is about the “kingdom” established in 1873 in North Carolina by a group of freedpeople looking to escape white terrorist violence in nearby Spartanburg County SC, where they lived. This kingdom named a king and queen, formed a communal treasury, and eventually purchased land spread across the NC/SC state line. The story unfolds in two timelines: the first follows Luella, Happy Land’s first queen, and the second contemporary timeline follows her descendant Nikki. The stories are linked by the ancestral line and also by the fuller story of African American land loss in the 20th century. Perkins-Valdez excels at making history come alive through her rich historical details. 10 hrs 19 mins. More info →
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In Your Dreams (When in Rome #4)

In Your Dreams (When in Rome #4)

Author: Sarah Adams
This is the fourth and final installment in Adams's Rome, Kentucky series, which begins with When in Rome (though I think they all stand alone just fine). Each series installment centers one of the four Walker siblings; this last story belongs to wild child Madison, who's moving back to Rome after graduating from culinary school in New York City. Unbeknownst to her family and friends, she was miserable in the city, and didn't do great in school, either—despite what she led them to believe. Now she's back in Rome to work for her brother's best friend, as head chef at the new restaurant he's opening on the family farm. But, unbeknownst to pretty much everyone, his only reason for opening the restaurant is to bring Maddie back to town, because he's been pining for her for years. Oh, and the farm might go under if the restaurant isn't a success from opening night. I have some quibbles with this story, particularly the lack of detail and texture surrounding the restaurant plot, and one truly terrible "Kentucky" accent on the audiobook. But I have zero regrets about spending my time here: all in all it was an easy-reading delight to go back to Rome one more time. Narrated by Chase Brown and Christine Lakin. 11 hrs 12 mins. More info →
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Finding Grace

Finding Grace

I picked this up on Ginger's recommendation and enjoyed it so much! What she specifically said was something like, I have so much to do but all I WANT to do is keep reading this book! Once I picked it up I could understand why. This was such a juicy, plotty pageturner and I don't want to give anything away. In the first chapter we meet Honor, who feels she ought to be enjoying her Christmas holiday with her husband and young child at the Ritz in Paris, but is instead consumed with her longing for another child. But then everything changes for her family in an instant: plans are derailed, secrets are kept, friendships are strained, relationships are dissolved and reformed ... it's not the story I expected but I enjoyed it so much, especially on audio as narrated by Fiona Button. (Psst—if you want to avoid spoilers, do NOT read the reviews!) 11 hrs 24 mins. More info →
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Loved One

Loved One

Author: Aisha Muharrar
I picked up this audiobook on a whim this spring and DEVOURED it; I couldn't stop listening. Emotionally, the reading experience felt a lot like that of Finding Grace, but absent the shared theme of grief, the stories aren't readalikes. I went in knowing next to nothing and didn't mind that a bit: when the story opens, thirty-year-old Julia is speaking at the Los Angeles memorial service for her twenty-nine-year-old best friend and first love Gabe, who's just died in an accident. The novel revolves around Julia processing her complicated grief. Going back and forth in time, we experience Julia and Gabe's relationship from the beginning, when they met in Barcelona when his mother was her study abroad professor, up through the last time they saw each other weeks before his death. In the present timeline, we see Julia navigating her private grief over the loss of her celebrity friend, and traveling to London to befriend his ex-girlfriend Elizabeth under not quite honest pretenses. I enjoyed the exploration of complex relationships, but the textural details really made the book for me: the Barcelona and London specifics, the intricacies of Julia's jewelry designs and business, the numerous references to art and artists, the food and decor at Elizabeth's Shoreditch restaurant, Gabe's songwriting process and touring practices—I ate it all up. This introspective first person tale was great on audio, as narrated by Emma Ladji. (When I read last week about Phoebe Bridgers's recent pop-up concerts, my mind went immediately to this book, as fictional musician Gabe was beloved for doing something similar.) 9 hrs 17 mins. More info →
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Memorial Days: A Memoir

Memorial Days: A Memoir

This grief memoir was a word-of-mouth pick for me: I've noticed our MMD Book Clubbers saying good things about it in our forums since it was published last winter. Brooks had been married to fellow writer and journalist Tony Horwitz for thirty-five years when he collapsed and died in 2019 while on book tour far from home. He was just sixty years old. She was stunned—and then quickly swept into a barrage of pressing to-dos, everything from finding new health insurance for herself and her sons to finishing her manuscript-in-progress (that would be the 2022 novel Horse) so she had money to pay the bills. Three years after his death, she traveled to tiny Flinders Island, off the coast of her native Australia, to finally give herself time and space to grieve. This book is the result of that experience. I listened to Brooks narrate her own audio and that format served the story well; it doesn't feel quite right to say I "enjoyed" a grief memoir but this was gentle, lovely, and moving. I'm so glad I read it. 4 hrs 56 mins. More info →
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Only the Beautiful

Only the Beautiful

Author: Susan Meissner
I love Susan Meissner and her work. This story unfolds in two threads: in 1938 California, a 16-year-old named Rosie is orphaned and subsequently taken in by the owners of the vineyard where her father worked. The circumstances by which she ends up pregnant are ugly, but she loves the idea of having a child and doesn't protest when she's sent to the home for unwed mothers. But that's not where she's sent: because of her misunderstood synesthesia, she's sent against her will to a hospital for the mentally infirm; she will not be allowed to keep her baby, nor will she be able to have children in the future. Meanwhile in 1940s Austria, Helen, the sister of the vineyard owner, who knew Rosie when she was young, has been working for years as a nanny and witnesses firsthand the brutal impacts of the Nazi regime. When Helen finally returns home in 1947, she is shocked to learn what's become of Rosie, and why. I raced through the story so I could learn how Helen and Rosie's threads would finally converge and it was so satisfying when they did. This dual POV tale was beautifully narrated by Xe Sands and Jorjeana Marie. 12 hrs 28 mins. More info →
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The Best Dog in the World: Essays on Love

The Best Dog in the World: Essays on Love

Author: Alice Hoffman
I started this collection because of a mistake, but then I didn't want to stop listening! And at only four hours, I didn't exactly have to talk myself into it. In this collection, narrated by Karen Gundersen and Max Meyers, a WIDE array of authors weigh in on their beloved canine companions, sharing the joys, the laughs, the bafflements, the heartbreaks of dog ownership: Isabel Allende, Emily Henry, Roxane Gay, Amy Tan, Bonnie Garmus, Paul Yoon, and plenty more. Above all, as promised, these are essays on love. If you're a dog person in need of a feel-good comfort listen, maybe consider this one? 4 hrs and 46 mins. More info →
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London Falling: A Mysterious Death in a Gilded City and a Family’s Search for Truth

London Falling: A Mysterious Death in a Gilded City and a Family’s Search for Truth

Journalist Keefe’s narrative nonfiction delves into London’s criminal underworld. When Matthew and Rachelle Brettler learned their nineteen-year-old son Zac died by suicide, they were devastated—but the details of the story didn’t add up for them. He hadn’t seemed suicidal, and the circumstances surrounding his death didn't make sense. They soon learned he had a secret life, one in which he posed as the son of a Russian oligarch and became entangled with a crook and gangster who wanted to get at his supposed parents' money. But Scotland Yard didn’t appear to be pursuing justice for their son and so they continue to seek the truth about what happened to Zac. The ensuing investigation is riveting (tax laws never were so fascinating, or so seedy), as is the exploration of the parent-child relationship. I listened to the audiobook narrated by the author.  More info →
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What are your favorite audiobooks you’ve listened to this year? Please share in the comments.

P.S.15 Backlist Summer Reading Guide favorites that are even better on audio, 12 adventure filled audiobooks for your next family road trip, and 15 standout summer novels perfect for seasonal listening. Want even more? Browse our complete audiobook archives here.

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