18-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Irish Examiner
A good read guaranteed with our top picks for summer
For the middle-aged holidaymaker who isn't averse to nostalgia
Geoff Dyer is one of the most idiosyncratic writers around, but his latest book keeps it simple.
Homework is a memoir of Dyer's youth in England in the 1970s, which means it will resemble computer code for younger readers but will be welcome nostalgia for the older cohort.
For the history-loving centrist
No shortage of options here — traditionally a crowded field and this year's no different. We recently reviewed Philippe Sands latest book, 38 Londres Street, a fitting companion to the gripping East West Street and The Ratline.
It's a slight diversion from Sands' usual stomping ground, the Second World War, but no less entertaining for all that.
For the person who really loved Timothée Chalamet as Bob Dylan in that movie
Certain periods of history acquire legendary status, and that's certainly true of the 60s in a certain part of New York City.
Earlier this year, we had a look at Talkin' Greenwich Village: The Heady Rise and Slow Fall of America's Bohemian Music Capital by David Browne, and its account of the tumultuous period which led to a creative explosion across a variety of musical genres.
It will surely become the definitive account of that era. The answer may not just be blowin' in the wind, but written in this book.
John Boyne's 'Air' at under 200 pages, makes for a short and satisfying beach read.
For the completist who's nearly there with one writer's work
John Boyne recently brought his ambitious Elements series to an end with Air.
While the subject matter may seem on the serious side, he brings his customary flair to this book which, at under 200 pages, makes for a short and satisfying beach read.
For the person keen to know what journalism was like in the great old days
The name may not ring many bells now, but there was a time when Irish journalist EJ Dillon was known all over the world, and no wonder.
He was present for the assassination of a Russian tsar, the Dreyfus trial, the Spanish-American war, and the Paris Peace Conference.
He counted Tolstoy and Dostoevsky as acquaintances and his personal life was equally eventful.
Kevin Rafter's Dillon Rediscovered: The Newspaperman Who Befriended Kings, Presidents, and Oil Tycoons is a meticulously researched account of Dillon's life made even more extraordinary given his humble origins in the slums of Dublin.
For someone who wants a thriller for a hot day at the beach
Jane Casey's track record is practically a guarantee of quality, and so it proves with her latest book, The Secret Room.
Fans will rejoice as favourites DS Maeve Kerrigan and DI Josh Derwent return to try to solve the murder of a wealthy woman in a London hotel room where she was due to meet her secret lover.
A locked-room mystery executed with Casey's usual aplomb, it will have you gripped from beginning to end.
Erling Kagge details the expeditions which tried — not always successfully — to make it to the top of the world. Picture: Simon Skreddernes
For the person who wants to enjoy the heat by reading about the cold
Nobody wants to jinx the weather, but if you want to remember what it's like to freeze, try The North Pole: The History Of An Obsession by Erling Kagge, which details the expeditions which tried — not always successfully — to make it to the top of the world.
It's easier, however, than getting to the South Pole, according to Kagge.
For the music fan who likes to read about someone overcoming obstacles aplenty
Keith Donald is a familiar figure on the Irish music scene, but his memoir, Music and Mayhem, takes us on a journey that goes far beyond the stage and recording studio.
Donald did his tours of duty on Ireland's showband circuit, as a theatre musician, session player, full-time social worker, and arts administrator, but this book also reveals his battles with addiction. An entertaining and engrossing read.
For the sports fan who's also interested in 1970s Ireland
There was a time when the most famous man in the world was running up and down the Dublin Mountains to get ready for a boxing match in Croke Park.
This reissue of The Big Fight: When Ali Conquered Ireland by Cork author Dave Hannigan reaches beyond the square ring and into the nooks and crannies of the Ireland of 50-plus years ago to brilliant effect.
For the politics addict who doesn't really want to be a fortnight without their fix
The recent travails of Keir Starmer's Labour government may obscure the fact that he swept to power in a landslide, but the British prime minister is still a somewhat mysterious figure.
Get In: The Inside story of Labour under Starmer by Patrick Maguire and Gabriel Pogrund is a fascinating look at the people now in charge next door.
And the Corkman behind it all — the Morgan McSweeney from Macroom who masterminded Starmer's ascent to power.
Our reviewer correctly questioned the depiction in this book of a young McSweeney belting a sliotar against a wall with his 'hurl'. In Cork? Surely not. Still, a good read.
Catherine Kirwan on Barrack Street, Cork City, where her latest mystery novel is based. Picture: Chani Anderson
For someone looking for a more accurate depiction of Cork
Catherine Kirwan has been bringing her background as a solicitor to bear in chronicling the seamier side of Cork life for some time now, and her newest book doesn't disappoint.
The Seventh Body has a familiar setting for Cork residents — the historic Barrack Street stretch of the city — and readers with good memories will recall the real-life inspiration for the plot. But there's something for everyone in this gripping thriller.
For the high-concept crime thriller fan who likes a vicarious thrill
Carmel Harrington has a well-earned reputation as a master of the emotional family drama, but her new book takes a turn into darker territory and will surely give a few shivers to vacationing parents.
The Stolen Child features a child vanishing from a cruise, but the story goes much further than that enclosed setting. One to read while your children are all present and correct.
For the fan of historical fiction inspired by fact
Joseph O'Connor is an acknowledged master across a range of genres, and The Ghosts of Rome is a terrific portrait of Rome in the Second World War.
It's the second volume in a trilogy but can be enjoyed as a standalone book.
The famous Monsignor Hugh O'Flaherty gives way in this book to his female co-conspirator, the Contessa Giovanna Landini. Shenanigans ensue.
For the person who likes a literary biography, or reading about a literary biography
The original of the species is Richard Ellmann's biography of Joyce, which looms over this genre in much the same way Ulysses looms over modern fiction.
Zachary Leader, who has a fair track record in the biography trade himself, has hit upon a decent idea here with a biography of a biography.
His new book, Ellmann's Joyce, is a fascinating account of how the biographer came to write his magnum opus, with quite a lot of information about Ellmann's own life shared out along the way.
For the poetry lover looking for a slim volume
It's been a good year for poetry, and one of Cork's finest talents, Bernard O'Donoghue, shows no signs of slowing down in his latest book.
The former Oxford academic's new collection, The Anchorage, got a glowing review in these pages recently and is well worth delving into.