Standout audiobooks for summer listening

New and recent audiobook releases for your summer listening enjoyment.

I love to listen to audiobooks; I’m picky about my audiobooks. Anyone relate? I read more slowly on audio than I do on the page, and I want to make those hours count.

That feels especially true this time of year: we make a big deal of summer reading around here, and while I listen to audiobooks year-round there’s something special about listening to a great read in the summer.

When I’m choosing my next audiobook listen, I’m not looking for a substitute for the print book; 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 includes an “Awesome on Audio” feature, in which I highlight that season’s standout audiobook selections, as well as draw your attention to amazing backlist audiobooks that feel just right for summer.

June is Audiobook Appreciation Month, which is a good excuse to gather up a collection of audiobooks that I’ve found to be completely perfect for my own summer listening, and might suit yours, as well. You’ll find four categories of titles in this audiobook list: three are from the 2024 MMD Minimalist Summer Reading Guide, one backlist selection has strong ties to one of this year’s Summer Reading Guide selections, one new release was almost in the Guide and feels just right for right now (especially on audio), two have appeared in our Guide’s Awesome on Audio feature. Plus I included several audiobooks I personally happened to enjoy at this time of year, right at the beginning of the summer season.

I hope the audiobooks on this list keep you company all summer long. Please tell us about the ones you’ve loved and continue to look forward to in the comments!

For more great summer reads—print and audio, new and backlist—our Summer Reading Guide is now available! Get yours here.

Standout audiobooks for summer listening

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Brooklyn

Brooklyn

Author: Colm Tóibín
With this summer's publication of Tóibín's companion book Long Island, many readers are revisiting this 2009 historical fiction—or finding it for the first time. (Read the two in whatever order you'd like.) In this quiet coming-of-age story, set just after the second World War, a young girl from Ireland's County Wexford is offered the opportunity to travel to America to settle in a a Brooklyn neighborhood that's "just like Ireland," with the assurance of an education and a good job. She had no intention of leaving home, but can't say this aloud, and so she goes. A poignant novel with homesickness at its heart, reminiscent of Betty Smith's A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. This contemplative work is beautiful on audio, as narrated by Kirsten Potter. 7 hrs 38 mins. More info →
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Notes on Your Sudden Disappearance

Notes on Your Sudden Disappearance

Author: Alison Espach
I don't remember why this May 2022 release originally caught my eye, but once I began listening to Jesse Vilinksy's excellent narration I was immediately swept up in the story. Since then we've featured it as a backlist title in the Summer Reading Guide's Awesome on Audio section. Chronologically, this story of two sisters in small-town 1990s Connecticut begins when shy Sally is just thirteen, and her bold and beautiful sister Kathy is sixteen. But on the first page of the story Sally is 28, seemingly telling her absent sister about everything that happened between then and now. ("You disappeared on a school night. Nobody was more surprised by this than me ...") Back then both girls nursed crushes on Billy Barnes, the handsome senior a year older than Kathy; when Kathy and Billy start dating, Sally drinks in all her sister's updates on their relationship. But then a car accident involving the three teenagers kills Kathy. This is the story of what happened after, a haunting portrait of confusion, love, and grief, enhanced by the unusual second person narration. Espach's July 2024 release The Wedding People is one of this year's MMD Minimalist Summer Reading Guide selections. 12 hrs 17 mins. More info →
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Warrior Girl Unearthed

Warrior Girl Unearthed

I can't gush enough about Isabella Starr LeBlanc's narration for this 2023 Summer Reading Guide pick! Boulley’s much-anticipated (and standalone) sophomore novel, set ten years after the events of Firekeeper’s Daughter. Unlike her studious twin, Perry Firekeeper-Birch wasn’t initially interested in the Ojibwe summer internship program, but when she incurs a big debt, she has no choice but to get to work. Her job assignment centers on her tribe’s struggle to reclaim the remains and sacred objects of her ancestors from disinterested profiteers. The more Perry learns, the more determined she becomes to right this wrong, with a little help from her friends. A heist novel that’s both thrilling and thoughtful, with a winning protagonist you’ll want to root for. 11 hrs 32 mins. More info →
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The Hotel Nantucket

The Hotel Nantucket

Over the past few years I got into the habit of listening to the latest Hilderbrand on audio, read by longtime narrator Erin Bennett. This 2022 release is my favorite of recent years. When the story begins the titular hotel’s Gilded Age glory days are long gone: it’s a real dump (and in a fun plot twist—haunted!) when London billionaire Xavier Darling buys it sight unseen. The new owner hires local restaurateur Lizbet Keaton to make his hotel the best property on the island, if not the whole Eastern seaboard. And that means The Hotel Nantucket has to wow Shelly Carpenter, the influencer who’s become a national obsession for her blog Hotel Confidential. The influential critic regularly reviews hotels for her eighteen million followers and awards each property anywhere from one to five keys. The staff is energized by this audacious goal, because no hotel has ever earned five keys from Shelly Carpenter. To earn the coveted fifth key, they’ll have to do everything right. Super fun, and I especially enjoyed the ghost story element! 12 hrs 27 mins. More info →
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When the Vibe Is Right

When the Vibe Is Right

Author: Sarah Dass
A 2023 MMD Summer Reading Guide Awesome on Audio selection: This heartfelt YA enemies-to-lovers romance features hugely likable protagonists and unfolds against an equally appealing backdrop: Trinidad’s lauded Carnival celebration—and thanks to Antonevia Ocho-Coultes's narration, you feel like you're right there in the middle of the action. For Beatrice, known as “Tess” to her friends, Carnival is the family business: she’s a talented seamstress who designs costumes for the family masquerade band Grandeur. But after a public incident threatens Grandeur’s future, she’s forced to ask for help from skilled social media influencer Brandon, who also happens to be her nemesis. But the more the two start hanging out, the harder it is for Tess to hate him. A sweet (and chaste) love story, endearing side characters, and a modern riff on Much Ado About Nothing all add up to perfect summer reading. 10 hrs 17 mins. More info →
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The House of Doors

The House of Doors

Author: Tan Twan Eng
I read this May 2023 release just days after the release of that year's Summer Reading Guide: in his Booker-longlisted novel, Malaysian writer Eng imagines how British novelist W. Somerset Maugham came to write his short story "The Letter," which was hugely popular in its time (largely because it was adapted into a widely-seen play and then a film starring Bette Davis). Maugham, who was vastly more successful in his day than I had realized, was known to mine real life for material, particularly the relationships of his friends and acquaintances. Here Eng focuses here on Maugham's visit to Penang in 1921 to visit an old British friend and his wife. Shortly upon his arrival, he learns he's lost his life savings to a bad investment, and must quickly write another novel to fund his much-desired further travels. With a novelist's ear for scandal, he quickly suspects one of his hosts has stories to tell that he can then re-tell on the page: of her loveless marriage, her relationship with a Chinese revolutionary, and especially of her friend who will soon stand trial for murder. You don't need to be familiar with Maugham's work to enjoy this lush historical look at colonial Malaysia and the disrupting influence of a famous writer on the hunt for material—but you'll likely want to read "The Letter" because of it. 11 hrs 15 mins. More info →
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The Ministry of Time

The Ministry of Time

Author: Kaliane Bradley
A 2024 MMD Minimalist Summer Reading Guide selection, and one of the weirdest, most original books I've read in a long time: Bradley’s gripping debut unfolds in a near future where the British government employs time travel, as administered by a clunky bureaucracy. Our unnamed narrator takes a position as companion to the devastatingly handsome Commander Graham Gore, of the lost 1845 Royal Navy Arctic Expedition. She’s hired largely because her mother was a refugee from Cambodia, as her charge is also a refugee of sorts—not from another country, but from history. At once fast-paced and deeply philosophical, Bradley weaves together a spy plot, a love story, and heaps of droll British humor as her characters converse on race, gender, inherited trauma, and imperial legacy. This is most definitely awesome on audio, as narrated by George Weightman and Katie Leung (who narrates several of summer's fantastic new releases, and who you might remember as Cho Chang in the Harry Potter films). 10 hrs 22 mins. More info →
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Skin & Bones

Skin & Bones

Author: Renee Watson
A 2024 MMD Minimalist Summer Reading Guide selection: Piecing Me Together author Watson wows with her adult debut. Zenzi Williams's moving narration further enhances the reading experience. Things are finally going well for forty-year-old Lena: she has a good job, loving relationships with her parents and daughter, and a handsome fiancé she’s set to marry in just a few weeks. But his shocking confession the morning of her would-be wedding sends her reeling, and destabilizes the once-firm foundation she’s carefully built. Close female friendships and familial relationships feature prominently as Watson unpacks the beliefs surrounding beauty, love, fatness, and faith handed down from each generation to the next. Lyrical and kaleidoscopic, Watson compassionately explores what it means to love yourself, love your body, and love others, while showcasing Portland’s rich Black history. 9 hrs 9 mins. More info →
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There’s Always This Year: On Basketball and Ascension

There’s Always This Year: On Basketball and Ascension

A 2024 MMD Minimalist Summer Reading Guide selection: Basketball isn't really my thing, or so I thought—but in Abdurraqib’s hands, I couldn’t get enough of Columbus, the Cavaliers, and LeBron James. Who knew? And Abdurraqib is a magnificent narrator of his own work. In this inventive, far-reaching collection, the poet and music critic shares riveting anecdotes and fascinating details about the game itself. He also uses the ball as a jumping off point to explore a wide (wide!) variety of topics, including heroes and role models, the passage of time, the fragility of life, and the joy of rooting for the underdog. I can’t begin to capture his stupendous storytelling skills, but know this: this is my first read from the author and I’m hooked. I've already begun my summer project of exploring his backlist. (Just a few chapters left in They Can't Kill Us Until They Kill Us; I'm loving it.) 8 hrs 40 mins. More info →
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Funny Story

Funny Story

Author: Emily Henry
I thoroughly enjoyed this new romance and might have included in the Summer Reading Guide, but for its April 24 release date and the fact that you've already seen it everywhere. (I might have gasped when I saw the staggering first-week sales in Publishers Weekly!) Fan favorite narrator Julia Whelan reads Henry's love stories, which makes them extra-enticing to audiophiles. In this emotional latest, two unlikely roommates fall in love. They move in together as a matter of convenience, because their housing and the rest of their lives are upended when their respective soon-to-be-spouses fall in love ... with each other, which results in two cancelled weddings and general chaos. Of course these two new roomies are going to fall in love, but in romance it's the journey that counts and this was a fun one. (Although it's worth noting that reading about self-absorbed parents was sometimes painful.) The lakeside town abutting Lake Michigan has a delightful small town feel; he has a cool job at a winery and she works as a children's librarian, which means lots of library details and story time scenes. Once again Henry manages to be insightful and unputdownable; I would call this one most similar in tone to Happy Place. 11 hrs 23 mins. More info →
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Have you listened to any of these yet? What audiobook releases are you looking forward to this summer? Tell us all about them in the comments section!

P.S. 18(!!!) Audiobooks I’ve enjoyed this summer, 7 Ways To Discover Your Audiobook Style, and 15 Backlist Summer Reading Guide favorites that are even better on audio. Plus check out our audiobook archives here.

30 comments

  1. Kate says:

    So many great recs! Highly recommend checking out the Books, Beach & Beyond podcast released today– Elin Hilderbrand & Tim Ehrenberg interview Erin Bennett. Erin is an award-winning audio book narrator and is the narrator of 22 of Elin’s novels.

  2. Tracie says:

    I loved Warrior Girl Unearthed so much. It’s a must-listen! While technically a standalone, I’d highly recommend reading Firekeeper’s Daughter first. I think knowing what happened 10 years earlier adds to the tension and enhances this story greatly.

    • Donna Hampton says:

      I absolutely agree with you. Warrior Girl was an excellent read/listen to AND, although not necessary to understand the plot, reading the Firekeeper’s Daughter added to the experience. Highly recommended.

  3. I heard about the excellent audio narration of The Husbands by Holly Gramazio on a WSIRN podcast and listened to it on vacation last week. Definitely lived up to the hype. Excellent voicing of a highly inventive, Groundhog-Day kind of story. The ending was especially satisfying.

    • Anne Bogel says:

      I’m so glad you enjoyed The Husbands, Susan. (That’s an especially great one to share here because it’s our June MMD Book Club selection!)

    • Maureen Lyons says:

      Of all the books I’ve read in the past couple months, The Husbands was definitely the one that I couldn’t wait to get back to each time I had to put it down. I need to check out the audio version to see how the various characters were voiced.

      • Susan Meissner says:

        The amazing thing is, one voice actor pulled off the the entire book. All the voices.

  4. Gina Jones says:

    I’m listening to It’s Hard for Me to Live with Me. This memoir by Rex Chapman is short but does not lack depth-it covers his time playing basketball at the University of Kentucky (no spoilers but there is contention between him, his girlfriend and the administrators), his time in the NBA, how he became addicted to opioids and was living in his car, and more. I think you and Will would fly through it!

    • Kristine Yahn says:

      Spotify is unfair to songwriters (my brother Mark D Sanders had a very successful career as a country songwriter, including I Hope You Dance). I hope they don’t treat authors and narrators the same way.

        • Sally says:

          Me, too! I am about the 1,000,200th person in line for this book- kidding, but almost true 🙂

      • Brittany says:

        Kristine, this is fascinating. Your brother wrote many of the 90s countries hits that were a favorite in my childhood home!

  5. Courtney says:

    The Guncle would be a great addition to this list! I’m anxiously awaiting this summer’s sequel!

  6. Donna Hampton says:

    I like to read books on kindle or on paper while picking up where I left off on audio depending on what I am doing so I will definitely be adding a few of these audiobooks to my summer reading.

  7. Mary Ann says:

    I lived Where the Rhythm Takes You on audio, so thanks for the Sarah Dass recommendation – that’s going on my audio TBR!

  8. Lynn says:

    I’ve found I can only do non-fiction on audio…for anyone in the same boat I’m loving The Editor from Anne’s summer reading guide. Judith Jones was fascinating!

  9. Cathy B says:

    I just checked out the audio of Notes on Your Sudden Disappearance from the library. I also made notes in the 2024 SRG to look for those titles on audio. Thanks for this! I needed some specific ideas for audio.

  10. Kim says:

    Thank you for all of the great recommendations! Would There’s Always This Year be appropriate for a road trip with a 10-year old boy? Looking for good audiobooks for traveling with family. 🙂

    • Anne Bogel says:

      Kim, I don’t think this is a good pick for kids or young teens. One of Abdurraqib’s themes is the way life beats people up and knocks them around; he’s writing to people who have experienced and seen hard things. I think it’s the rare 10yo or young teen who’s ready to relate to and appreciate his writing.

      • Kim says:

        Thank you! It sounds like a great book for myself or my husband then. My son loves basketball, but is not known for his appreciation of deep thoughts! 😂

  11. Dolores says:

    I recently joined Libro.fm and one of the titles I selected was Mary Jane by Jessica Anya Blau. What a great narrator – perfectly cast – and the perfect summer read! As a kid raised in the seventies it was a real throwback for me. Loved it!

  12. Sally says:

    I recommend these audiobooks for your road trip. I really enjoyed both of them. , I Cheerfully Refuse by Leif Enger and Colton Gentry’s Third Act by, Jeff Zentner. The narrators are great and the books aren’t heavy listening.

  13. Sally says:

    So many great recommendations! Per your wisdom, I have recently listened to No Two Persons on audio, which I really liked, and just started Jennifer Weiner’s The Summer Place, good so far and Jennifer never disappoints me 🙂 I actually took a rec from one of your previous podcasts and downloaded Stephen King’s The Stand, which will take me the rest of my life to listen to, but I’ve got this 🙂
    Heading to Southern Ontario for our annual cottage vacation from Phoenix and stumbled upon Carley Fortune’s summer romance series that focuses on Canadian Beach Cottages and I am here for it. Bought, packed and ready to read on my beach vacation 🙂 I can always put them in my local free little libraries when I return 🙂

  14. kathy duffy says:

    I recently listened to A Paris Book by Ruth Reichl and loved it…. could feel the dress on my body, taste the food, smell the flowers…..listened to it in one day! and then again the next day. Will probably listened to it some more…. This is the second one by Reirch (I read Delicious on Audible last year and also adored it.) She is now one of my 5 track down everything she has written authors.

  15. Rachel M says:

    Hands down my favorite audio to date is “In the Lives of Puppets” by TJ Klune. It’s been out about a year and I find it one of those impossible books to recommend with persuasion. It is a Pinocchio story in reverse (with the main character human surrounded by robots). See… right about now most readers are like, ‘yeah, no thank you.’ However, in addition to being a fantastic story, the narration is like listening to a play with moments of wry humor, laugh out loud cheekiness, and profound, soul aching observations on the human condition. I have forced a few friends to listen and all of them gush. Nurse Ratchet forever!

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