Welcome to Quick Lit, where I share short and sweet reviews of what I’ve been reading lately on (or around) the 15th of the month, and invite you to do the same.
Despite a three-day trip where I did almost zero reading, it’s been a great reading month. I just got back from the beach with my family, where this year I got to read almost a book every day. What a great feeling! Most of these were forthcoming fall 2025 titles (and WOW do I have some great stuff to tell you about come Fall Book Preview in September), but I also brought along some backlist novels that have been patiently waiting for me on my shelves, including Simon Mawer’s Prague Spring (2018) which I wrote about below. In fact, I’m just now realizing that none of my selections for this month’s Quick Lit are brand-new, though as you’ll hear, I made my way to several of them courtesy of the new releases featured in the MMD 2026 Summer Reading Guide. (Available now!)
Audiobook lovers: I read several of this month’s selections in print, but a great many on audio, and I’m happy to report I found them to be excellent in that format: Kayla Rae Whitaker’s The Animators (2017), Nayantara Roy’s The Magnificent Ruins (2024), and Patrick Radden Keefe’s nonfiction work Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland (2018).
Rounding out my list this month is Jane Smiley’s enormous textbook-like 13 Ways of Looking at the Novel (2005), which, while certainly dense and a little bit dry in places, I’m so glad I read and now can’t stop talking about.
I hope you enjoy this month’s selections, and that you find something that looks intriguing for your TBR here. And, as always, I can’t wait to hear what you’ve been reading lately!
Thanks in advance for sharing your short and sweet book reviews with us!
Welcome to July Quick Lit
Dinner At The Homesick Restaurant
The Animators
Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland
Prague Spring
The Magnificent Ruins
13 Ways of Looking at the Novel
What have YOU been reading lately? Tell us about your recent reads—or share the link to a blog or instagram post about them—in comments.











29 comments
This month‘s reading roundup includes a 5 star read that will be one of my favorites of the year, an unexpected dud, and more! Check out my reviews below:
https://neverenoughnovels.com/2026/07/15/july-2026-book-reviews/
Say Nothing was so good. I finally read it this year too.
I also took some time off from reading in June, but had a really good month despite that. Here’s my list of four and five star reads:
https://www.allthebooksihaventread.com/blog-1/2026/7/15/show-us-your-books-july-2026
Jane Smiley’s book sounds fascinating and like something I might want to take a slow-and-steady approach with. I love Anne Tyler, but there are so many of her titles I have yet to explore and Dinner… is one of them. French Braid is probably my favorite of hers but that may be because it was my Tyler introduction.
It was a successful reading month for me, with a 5-star literary mystery, some cozy rom-coms, a fun time travel novel, and a few nonfiction titles that gave me plenty to ponder. I always love seeing accidental repeating themes in my reading, and they were plenty this month: grieving widows, absent mothers, strong sister-bonds, magical books, and characters coming home to save the family business/farm/house/friend—each of these appeared in MANY of the books that I read this month. Which always leaves me to wonder, are these especially popular tropes in fiction right now, or did I just happen to stumble on a string of books with shared themes? Either way, it’s fun to see different authors using similar ideas in different ways.
https://kendranicole.substack.com/p/quick-lit-july-2026
Say Nothing sounds like it would be an excellent audiobook to help me with my nonfiction reading goals. I’m also super interested as both an author and a reader in 13 Ways of Looking at the Novel. I’ll be placing a hold on both of these!
Here’s what I’ve been reading this month: https://readeatrepeat.net/2026/07/books-in-progress-july-2026/
Sounds like a great beach trip – almost a book a day is fabulous!
This month I loved reading Kate Bowler’s new book “Joyful Anyway” and Laura Vanderkam’s new book on “Big Time.”
And for novels? I found “James” to be so interesting (better than the original “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn”).
Here are all 7 books that I’m recommending in July:
https://lisanotes.com/7-books-i-recommend-joy-hope-justice/
I also just finished The Magnificent Ruins (I had to read more after Sisters of a Halved Heart) and felt the same. It was a bit long , but I flew through it and still enjoyed it. I am pretty sure my library account has been suggesting that book to me since it came out two years ago..now I know why.
Sounds like you had a really great reading month! This past month was also the best reading month I’ve had in a while; after several months with no 5-star reads, I had multiple!
https://cocoonofbooks.blogspot.com/2026/07/what-ive-been-reading-lately-quick-lit.html
Books 61-68 of the year: https://thereisnosuchthingasagodforsakentown.blogspot.com/2026/07/reading-update.html
Thanks for your recommendation of Smiley’s 13 Ways of Looking at a Novel. Have you ever read Vladamir Nabokov’s Lectures on Literature (Pts 1 & 2)? They are fantastic (with the exception of his dismissal of Jane Austen, which is of a piece with that “gentle patriarchy” of the time). They are also much shorter than Smiley’s work. I will be curious to compare.
I have a few Anne Tyler books on my to-read list, but I have yet to read any. Three Days in June, A Spool of Blue Thread, Clock Dance, Digging to America, and now Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant are all on my list. Any tips on which one I should read first?
This month, I dipped my toe into some romance, including a romance novella collection that offers various authors all with a summer lovin’ theme. I also have a 2020 romance, a new mystery that I did not care for at all, and I finally read a celebrity memoir that had been on my list for a while.
Summer Lovin’ Collection
Hello, Summer
Sex on Murder Island
Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing
https://www.sincerelystacie.com/2026/07/quick-lit-july-2026/
In this month’s LITERARY CHATTER, we’re all about The Cape Cod Creamery Series by Suzanne Woods Fisher.
Plus a whole bunch of Kindle deals!
https://lindastoll.substack.com/p/the-cape-cod-creamery-series
Jane Smiley’s book looks really interesting and might be fun to include as part of a personal curriculum. I’m familiar with her as a fiction author, but never realized she wrote non-fiction as well!
Some of my recent reads include YA fantasy sequels, a funny contemporary novel, and a Japanese novella that I unexpectedly loved.
https://booksandpickles.substack.com/p/recent-reads-jun-jul-26
My favorite Anne Tyler (not that I am a completist by any means) is Ladder of Years.
That was the first Anne Tyler I read and I still think about it years later.
I co-sign Jessica’s recommendation (and favorite): Ladder of Years is my absolute favorite alongside a bunch of Tyler novels that I love.
I’m reading a biography of Edna St. Vincent Millay right now, carrying it everywhere. (She was a Maine girl.)
By happy coincidence, I featured another poet in my July roundup and offer readers the opportunity to win a copy of his work. https://michelemorin.substack.com/p/look-through-the-telescope-of-summer
Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant would defininitely be in my 3 books I love on WSIRN. I identify it as the book that made me an adult reader. It’s the first book I discovered and truly loved in the adult stacks at the library when I was a teenager. I remember making an extra effort to help my working mom with housework and cooking because of it. She would ask, ‘what is this book that makes you so helpful?!’ Haha. I am committed to becoming a completist–Tyler always satisfies. Thanks for the love for this one! I need to reread it.
I suggest reading The Accidental Tourist next. It was written a couple years after Homesick and I remember it having a similar vibe. Of course, I was 22 and 25 when I last read these titles and am now interested to go back and see what I think as a much more seasoned reader! I’ll keep my eye out in used bookstores.
I’ve had some great reading with new books this year but it is backlist that has been my ride or die.
Thanks, Anne
I think I found my summer reading groove. My reading has been eclectic to say the least. Check out what I have been reading https://myviewofthehoneypot.blogspot.com/2026/07/what-i-have-read-july.html
I’m already making notes in my journal about possible book projects for 2027. I’ve spent part of my morning updating my list of Anne Tyler’s novels that I have not yet read. I didn’t keep a reading journal/list back when I first found her after moving to Baltimore in 1979. How fortuitous that was. Wouldn’t it be fun to do a slow read of 13 Ways of Looking at the Novel while reading (or rereading) Anne Tyler’s novels and searching for her short stories. My 2026 reading projects are not yet completed (no surprise) and I’m planning my next reading project. Here’s hoping I finish 2026.
I really liked Say Nothing when I read it a few years ago. I read it right after reading The Milkman – Anna Burns’ Booker Prize winner. They were wonderful to read together and painted a visceral portrait of living amidst political violence. I always caveat a recommendation of The Milkman by saying that it’s one of my favorite books but it took me about 150 pages to get sucked in.
Love your eclectic reads! Thank you for sharing. My summer reading thus far is not nearly as plush!
https://ourlittlebookcollection.substack.com/p/summer-reading-dreams-real-life-and
I listened to Say Nothing a few weeks ago. Had to keep a good clip because I checked it out on Libby. (I had put it on hold after listening to London Falling, which is equally compelling!) It’s hard to say I “loved it” because it was so, so dark. But amazingly researched and told, PRK style. Having grown up in that era, I remember the headlines but was too young to know about the complete societal breakdown that happened. After finishing it, I started a rewatch of Derry Girls, to mop up some of the darkness. Also, at the beginning of the audio book, I couldn’t figure out why the reader sounded Scottish, then discovered that the Belfast accent is a little bit of a hybrid. Interesting!
Anne Tyler has become a “sure thing” as a reading choice for me. I am currently reading Saint Maybe. I read at bedtime and I look forward to getting in bed and getting back to it. I liked Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant, Breathing Lessons, A Spool of Blue Thread to recommend a few of hers. I scored a first edition of The Accidental Tourist at a bookstore in Denton, TX. A treasure! I recently heard good word of mouth on the new Elizabeth Berg.
Dinner at the Homesick Cafe is my favorite Anne Tyler. If I were designing a flight to accompany it, my first pick would be Dorothy Gilman’s (of Mrs. Pollifax fame) slim, evocative memoir of the 10 years she spent homesteading in Nova Scotia: A New Kind of Country. Published in the same era as Homesick, it’s an unsung gem and a window into Gilman’s soul. Every few years, I re-read the gently used hardcopy I snagged at the Book Barn in Niantic, CT. It is the book I read aloud (along with several Wendell Berry short stories and poems by Berry and Mary Oliver) to my best friend in the days she lay dying. She loved those readings, a memory I cherish.
I’ve read almost every Anne Tyler, starting back years ago up to her latest and the one that has stuck with me the most (and doesn’t get much attention) is Celestial Navigation. I’m very fond of the Accidental Tourist as well and love the family portrayed in that one as well (also has a dog ;-).
I usually work on three books at a time – one book in print, one book in Hoopla, and one CD audiobook in the car. Right now my three books are:
– The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store,
– Ian Kershaw’s Fateful Choices, about the beginning of WWII,
– and for fun, Kate Quinn’s The Astral Library.
You know I love the concept of a slow read in the morning… I think I’m going to buy the Jane Smiley book. Really interested… And, ofc big fan of Mel and Dave so will have to check out Prague Spring. Have been reading such good books recently. Looooved Tata by Valerie Perrin from 2026 SRG. Listened to Eddie Winston is Looking for Love by Marianne Cronin which was just delightful. Whistler by Anne Patchett was perfect. Been a great summer reading season thus far!!!
I wrote my high school junior year research paper on Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant (back when we still used card catalogs). What a throwback!