The 2025 Minimalist Summer Reading Guide

Our annual abbreviated summer reading guide for minimalists and decision haters

Buckle up! It’s time for summer reading. Today we’re welcoming you on a literary adventure with the release of the FOURTEENTH annual Summer Reading Guide!

We’re bringing you along for a literary road trip in our 2025 MMD Summer Reading Guide. The guide goes out to our member communities and a la carte purchasers at 10:00am EDT this morning, kicking off my favorite reading time of the year. (If you have opted in for the Guide but don’t see it in your inbox, please visit the help section on modernmrsdarcy.com/SRG. If you’re reading this after 10:00am, no worries—our Guide will be ready when you are!)

We always say that summer’s too short to squander on books that aren’t right for you, or aren’t right for you right now. The guide includes books I personally adore, though that doesn’t mean they’re right for every reader. That’s why in every description I give you the information you need to help you decide if that book sounds like a good fit for you.

This year’s guide includes 35 titles. That’s a lot of books—and that’s why every year since 2014, I’ve narrowed the choices down to a fraction of that for my fellow minimalists and decision haters. Our new Minimalist Summer Reading Guide features six selections.

For each minimalist edition, I strive to select a variety of titles across many genres that keep you turning the pages but also have serious substance. You could inhale these titles quickly but find yourself thinking about them for weeks, months, or even years to come. And while easy to read, these titles are wonderfully thought-provoking and discussable.

I hope you enjoy this short and sweet summer list!

Want the full 2025 MMD Summer Reading Guide?

Visit the Summer Reading Guide HQ page to sign up and get the 2025 guide delivered to your inbox, along with Unboxing access (if you hurry, you can still attend live!).

Our two Unboxing Parties are today at 1:00pm and 8:00pm Eastern time. In our 90+ minute live sessions, I share every title in the Guide and why I chose it. Our conversation is casual and unscripted, filled with real talk about great books, in the presence of people who love books and reading. We’ll share the replay tomorrow for anyone who can’t attend live (or anyone who just wants to watch again and again); that recorded video event will be included with purchase for anyone who accesses the Guide beginning May 16.

The 2025 Minimalist Summer Reading Guide

Run for the Hills

Run for the Hills

Author: Kevin Wilson
Wilson deftly combines the heavy and the light in this found family story of four scattered half-siblings who meet for the first time and pile into an old PT Cruiser to go find the father who abandoned them long ago. Wilson’s stories often feel larger than life, yet the emotional heart feels real and relatable. Quirky, warm, and bighearted, with a multigenerational cast and road trip hijinks galore. I don’t want to give too much away, but it’s no spoiler to say I found this coast-to-coast adventure to be an utter delight. Out May 13. More info →
What Kind of Paradise

What Kind of Paradise

Author: Janelle Brown
This thrilling family tale wrestles with questions of identity, loyalty, and our complicated relationship with technology. Jane grew up in rural Montana with only her father for company. She loves him unquestioningly, and eagerly absorbs everything he teaches her about self-reliance (good) and technology (bad). But one day when she’s seventeen, he surprises Jane by bringing home a computer that she stealthily uses to connect to the outside world. What she learns—about the world and her own existence in it—shakes her faith in the father she loves. Jane longs to break free, but even as she takes big steps to build her own life, she can’t turn her back on him. This central tension had me racing though the pages, as did the complex family dynamics and irresistible 90s nostalgia. More info →
The River Is Waiting

The River Is Waiting

Author: Wally Lamb
Lamb’s gut-wrenching new novel, his first in nine years, begins with a shocking tragedy involving a father under the influence. This act of a moment tears Corby’s family apart and strips him of his freedom. In prison, Corby’s guilt and grief consume him; his misery is compounded by a terribly unjust penal system. And yet there are moments of soaring human connection, as Corby finds small mercies in the form of kindness from the prison librarian, an escape into his art, and friendship. Lamb’s novels are not without elements of redemption but I can’t overstate how terribly sad this is—and also how deeply human. An extraordinary and unforgettable reading experience. More info →
The Other Side of Now

The Other Side of Now

Author: Paige Harbison
Cross The Holiday with Sliding Doors and you’ll get a sense of Harbison’s adult debut. After a disastrous thirtieth birthday party, Meg books a getaway to the quaint Irish village where she had once dreamed of moving. That’s when things get weird: everyone seems to know her already. She has an apartment and friends and a hot ex who’s none too pleased to see her. Most shocking of all: in this version of her life, her best friend, who died in a car accident just before college, is alive and well. So why isn’t Meg happy? Harbison asks important questions about choice, contentment, and what makes for a meaningful life. I found it utterly unputdownable. Out June 3. More info →
These Heathens

These Heathens

Author: Mia McKenzie
Small-town teenager Doris was Mrs. Lucas’s star student before family demands compelled her to drop out. When she finds herself in the family way, she persuades Mrs. Lucas to take her to Atlanta for an abortion, where the two mingle with celebrities she’s seen in Ebony, civil rights leaders like Coretta Scott King, and Mrs. Lucas’s queer Black friends. Their behavior is shocking—her mama certainly wouldn’t approve—except they treat Doris with marked kindness and seem to have good hearts and common sense. Cheering Doris on through her life-changing weekend was one of my favorite reading experiences this year. I ate up the voice, the style, the story. More info →
The Phoenix Pencil Company

The Phoenix Pencil Company

Author: Allison King
King’s exceptional debut was inspired by her grandparents and the pencil company they once ran in Shanghai. The magical pencils in this book retain the memory of what they’ve written, and those who know how to “reforge” them can bring the memories they contain back to life. This power can be used to expose family secrets, betray a nation, or communicate loving words that were never uttered aloud. This is a real genre-bender, blending WWII-era historical fiction, grounded fantasy, family drama, and queer romance, all with compelling characters and an original and propulsive plot. Readers may also be drawn to the sweet grandmother/granddaughter relationship, close look at Chinese history, and thoughtful exploration of questions concerning data, privacy, and who owns our stories. Out June 3. More info →

What are you most excited to read this summer?

If you find something great in this Minimalist Guide or our full Summer Reading Guide, would you spread the book love? Our hashtag is #MMDSummerReading. (Follow me on Instagram at @annebogel, the podcast at @whatshouldireadnext, and Book Club at @mmdbookclub for summer reading goodness all season long.)

Happy summer, and happy reading!

Anne

P.S. If you don’t yet have the full 2025 MMD Summer Reading Guide and you’re either a Book Club or Patreon member or you purchased a la carte, don’t leave a comment here. Please visit modernmrsdarcy.com/SRG and check out our help section.

The 2025 Minimalist Summer Reading Guide

17 comments

  1. Dawn Bahr says:

    Today is the day! It’s like Christmas! Thank you to the MMD team for all of your hard work!!

  2. Jill says:

    I am so excited for summer reading! It’s funny we did a whole summer reading thing on Litsy so I thought I knew all of the new books coming this summer, but most of these are new to me. This is why I’ve been saving my Libro.fm credits for months now! I ordered the printed copy and can’t wait to see it!

  3. Lynette says:

    The whole guide isn’t in my budget, but I love all the recommendations you give throughout the whole year, and this taste of the summer reading guide. Your website and podcast are my favourites! Thank you!!

  4. Molly Rohal says:

    Thank you, Anne! These all sound amazing! I just added five of them to my summer reading list. Thanks for all the work you and your team put into this!

  5. Lana says:

    River is waiting is absolutely fantastic but very raw and heavy so definitely get Kleenex tissues. I’ve read it in April and still think about it on a regular basis.

  6. Meg says:

    Thank you so much for providing this minimalist guide!

    I haven’t ever bought the full guide because I read nonfiction almost exclusively (working on The British Are Coming by Rick Atkinson currently).

    Your description makes me think I’d like Run For the Hills, though; and I might give What Kind of Paradise a try, too.

    Thanks again for including all your blog readers in the fun!

  7. Mary Kruft says:

    Wally Lamb!
    It’s like Christmas in May!
    Can’t wait to crank the AC, put phone on DND & dive in to a bunch of these books!

    Or be on a plane for vacation & get sucked in to one. Very blessed!

    • Hilary says:

      I always consider the summer unboxing day like our own little secret MMD holiday:) and I love it!!!

  8. Mary Lou Wachsmith says:

    Hello everyone:
    This minimalist guide is fabulous – I want to read all six RIGHT NOW. haha. I love the enthusiasm and energy around SRG and will see everyone at the second unboxing later today. Thanks for all you do MMD staff!

  9. Julia Reynolds says:

    Thank you for continuing to publish the minimalist guide each year! Much appreciated!

  10. Deborah Dancz says:

    Thank you for all your hard “bookish” work. This year I took the afternoon off from work in order to watch the first unboxing — and placed 11 library holds during the event. Now I am heading off to meet a friend at a bookstore cafe and to purchase a couple of your recommended summer guide titles using a recent gift card from work… all part of my Happy Half Day of Bookish fun. And I ordered the printed copies of the past few years/this year – Summer Reading Guides, so I will be eagerly waiting for the mail to bring me those treasures. I’m sure revisiting past guides – in such a beautiful printed format – will generate a lot of backlist titles for my book clubs. Thanks again for the bookish joy you and your team share!

  11. Karla Teague says:

    Now that I’ve downloaded it, how do I print it? When I try to print I can only get half the page to print. I’m clearly tech-limited because I can’t seem to get it to orient correctly to print the entire page.

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a gateway

to reliable joy this summer

Our 15th Summer Reading Guide is coming May 14th.  Pre-order now and plan to join us on May 14th for Unboxing—the best book party of the year!

Buckle Up!

It’s almost time for the Summer Reading Guide. Order now and plan to join us on May 15th for Unboxing—the best book party of the year!

summer reading starts May 16th

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