The July fiction continues: Julie Buntin’s much anticipated follow-up to Marlena is out today, Sigrid Nunez’s new collection drops, along with Jem Calder’s I Want You To Be Happy. There’s a multitude of nonfiction as well, such as Pamela Colloff’s true crime investigation and Lucy Schiller’s deep-dive into aging in America. Have a great reading week!

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Sigrid Nunez, It Will Come Back to You: The Collected Stories

Sigrid Nunez, It Will Come Back to You: The Collected Stories
(Riverhead)

“Nunez injects these stories with a deep tenderness and a wry sense of humor, all the while challenging our conceptions of what it means to live an ordinary life.”
–Harpers Bazaar

julie buntin famous men

Julie Buntin, Famous Men
(Random House)

“Haunting and knife-bright, Famous Men renders womanhood with unsettling clarity and reckons with the absolute ache of becoming.”
Kiley Reid

catch the devil

Pamela Colloff, Catch the Devil: A True Story of Murder, Deception, and Injustice on the Gulf Coast
(Knopf)

“Incendiary, emotionally devastating. [This] is a feat of dogged reporting, bravura storytelling, and clear-eyed moral conscience.”
Patrick Radden Keefe

i want you to be happy

Jem Calder, I Want You to be Happy
(FSG)

“An irresistible novel that asks complex questions about contemporary life and refuses easy answers. I couldn’t stop reading.”
Sally Rooney

The Renoir Girls, Catherine Ostler

Catherine Ostler, The Renoir Girls: A Hidden History of Art, War & Betrayal
(Atria)

“Profoundly moving … With consummate skill and impressive research, Ostler tells the story.”
–Daily Mail

Cloudthief, Nathaniel Rich

Nathaniel Rich, Cloudthief
(MCD)

“[A] rambunctious, thoroughly entertaining heist novel.”
–Harpers

Aging Out, Lucy Schiller

Lucy Schiller, Aging Out: An Exploration of Caregiving, Community, and How Americans Grow Old
(Flatiron)

“A luminous work of nonfiction reportage woven into a spiritual autobiography—a meditation on time, loss, and love.”
Richard Preston

The Intrigue

Silvia Moreno-Garcia, The Intrigue
(Del Rey)

“A pulpy noir–telenovela mashup that would make James M. Cain jealous.”
–Los Angeles Times

Sex Diaries, New York Magazine

Alyssa Shelasky, Sex Diaries: Real-life Stories of Non-Monogamy and Polyamory
(Random House)

“An absolute gift—not just for the polycurious, but for anyone interested in relationships, desire, and the raw beauty of human vulnerability.”
Molly Roden Winter

The Devoted, Catherine Cho

Catherine Cho, The Devoted
(Washington Square Press)

“Cho’s writing is sensuous, with a transportive quality that draws readers into the world of her characters with immediacy.”
–Library Journal

our knives will save us

Nephi Craig, Our Knives Will Save Us: Dispatches From a White Mountain Apache Chef
(Penguin Press)

“A poignant ode to reclaiming one’s culture.”
–Publishers Weekly

Make Nice, Ryan Effgen

Ryan Effgen, Make Nice
(Knopf)

“Engaging and charming, perfect for your own summer vacation.”
Elin Hilderbrand

they stole a city

Lauren Collins, They Stole a City: Wilmington’s White Supremacist Coop and the Families Who Live with Its Legacy
(Penguin Press)

“An excellent new history out this summer that considers how the past lives in the present.”
–Harpers Bazaar

should the waters take us

Stephanie Soileau, Should the Waters Take Us
(Doubleday)

“Filled with unforgettable characters, breathtaking scenes, fascinating time jumps, and a setting so precisely rendered that it’s palpable.”
Patrick Ryan

Dan Werb, Our Wild Familiars: How Animals Are Adapting to Cities and Reshaping the Natural World
(Crown)

“Dazzling insights into the cohabitants of our daily lives.”
–Kirkus

Emily Doyle, Please Don't Touch the Body

Emily Doyle, Please Don’t Touch the Body
(Bloomsbury)

“Doyle blends humor and the bewildering with more emotionally sobering stories in her debut collection.”
–Alta

Elizabeth H. Winthrop, Conviction
(Grove)

“This potent novel about prejudice and the constraints of challenging the status quo will move and captivate readers.”
–Publishers Weekly

Imogen Willetts, Up All Night

Imogen Willetts, Up All Night: A World History of Nightlife
(Grove)

“Gloriously overstuffed and delicious entertaining … A history full of brio and bluster and plenty of wonderful nocturnal stories.”
–Booklist

Oana Aristide, Astronaut!
(W. W. Norton)

“Oana Aristide’s skill as a storyteller glimmers in every deftly navigated twist and turn, and introduces us to remarkable characters in the grip of a tired totalitarianism they may (they hope) finally be able to put to rest.”
Jennifer Croft

Air, Christian kracht

Christian Kracht, trans. by Daniel Bowles, Air
(Liveright)

“You read Kracht for the experience of reading him. You read him and wonder.”
Nell Zink

Julia Hass

Julia Hass

Julia Hass is the Book Marks Associate Editor at Literary Hub.