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Ginger Horton
I was telling Anne before we started this call that I had gone through as I proofread and noted the 15 books that I want to read for the summer based on my own Reading and 15 for 15, 15 for 15. I did not do that on purpose, but you know I love when that happens.
Anne Bogel
Hey readers, I'm Anne Bogle and this is what should I read Next? Welcome to the show that's dedicated to answering the question that plagues every reader. What should I read next? We don't get bossy on the show. What we will do here is give you the information you need to choose your next read. This week we're giving you the information you need to find out about a whole lot of reads. We are sharing the excitement of our upcoming Summer Reading Guide that will be our 15th edition releasing this Thursday, May 14th. I am joined today by the absolutely perfect guest for this episode, if I do say so myself. That is our modern Mrs. Darcy Book Club Community Manager, Ginger Horton and we can't wait to tell you more. If you are already a member of our modern Mrs. Darcy Book Club or our what Should I read Next? Patreon Communities or you purchased your a la carte ticket, you are all set to get the guide on Thursday and attend Thursday's unboxing events at either 1pm or 8pm if you'd like to join us live. Those times are Eastern, no New York City time. We are holding two book parties and we call them book parties. Not because they're parties in the traditional sense. They're, you know, informative literary events. But we call them parties because they are so much fun. But there are two events happening live so you can choose the one that suits you best or some readers join us for both. And if neither time works for you, never fear. We we have the recording for you available beginning very late in the day on May 14, but anytime thereafter you have instant access. Summer Reading Guide veterans make a big deal of unboxing for good reason. You'll hear Ginger and I talk more about that today. Readers do things like take the day off work, gather with friends, or plan whole weekend getaways to different cities because of unboxing and the Summer Reading Guide. With this year's theme of reading retreat, you could even create your own special day to watch the event, bruise your guide and plan your to be read Red List. If you've never been to one of our unboxings before, here's what to expect. I go through all the titles in the guide one by one, sharing more about why I chose each title, what the reading experience is like, and what kind of reader may most enjoy each book. I get to share more than I can say in print and answer your questions about tone, theme, content, comps and more. There's still time to purchase your a la carte ticket and we do recommend not waiting until the last minute, although you could, but less stress is good for your reading life. Ticket holders get a copy copy of the beautiful digital guide in PDF form and are invited if they so choose to attend our live unboxings. Find out all the details you need to know@modernmrsdarcy.com SRG that's for summer reading guide modernmrsdarcy.com SRg readers today I am delighted to welcome our Book Club Community manager Ginger Horton to the show to talk about our Summer Reading guide. If Ginger's name sounds familiar, we'll lucky you. You may recognize her from our recent episode where she helped to recommend titles to Cheryl Drury, or because you're an MMD Book clubber, a listener in our Patreon community, or just like to hang out in these parts. Ginger's been on the podcast a time or I don't know, 6 since you first made your debut a few years back, Ginger, and we couldn't believe you hadn't been on till then. But today Ginger's here and we're going to dive into all things summer reading. And I love having you on the show today, Ginger, because I feel like you're the perfect bridge between what I'm holding in my brain for the 2026 Summer Reading Guide that has been in one sense in the works for many years when like authors I know and love first mentioned like oh, in a few years I'm going to have a book come out about X and I've thought, oh, I'm going to like put that in a spreadsheet somewhere to remind me in four years that book is coming because I want to read it and maybe it's going to be great for the Summer Reading guide. So I've been thinking like way long term and have put this together piece by piece. But you have been collaborating on the guide for many years now and were an integral part about deciding not just what our specific vision for 2026 would be with the reading retreat theme, but also really helping me think through how to present those ideas. And we're going to get into that in detail. But Ginger, in one sense you're a creator, but in another sense you're a co discoverer with readers because it's just been like, hours since you saw the first draft of this year's summer reading guide. So. So thank you for being the perfect guest and coming to what should I read next today. Welcome.
Ginger Horton
I love this time of year and I'm so glad to be back in this space because I do. I have a complicated relationship with summer reading, but I love summer. We might get into that. I love summer.
Anne Bogel
No, we're gonna get into it right now. For those who don't know, tell us more.
Ginger Horton
Okay. Well, sometimes. Not the last couple of years, but sometimes. I have had a real dip in my reading life in the and I have theories about why that happens. But the Summer Reading Guide is a resource that I start using in May. But sometimes it takes a long time for me to enjoy all of it because I make my way piece by piece through the year sometimes. And so, yeah, I love holding out as long as I can. And as our team has grown, that has been available to me. I hold out as long as I can and kind of look at the guide as late as possible in the process, partly because my eyes are fresher to catch any typos or whatever, but partly because I love the delight and the discovery of to see what you have read. What ends up on the guide. Hearing you, like you mentioned, four years coming, one year coming. This book is finally coming out. We have a release date. And now hearing why I might want to read it.
Anne Bogel
Well, I'm glad to hear it. There are 35 books in this year's guide once again, and they are broken down in two categories. We have things like historical happenings, literary and contemporary fiction that this year we've done something fun with. It's on a spectrum from serious and earnest all the way over to playful and quirky. We have books that are about messy, messy relationships. And yes, that word is repeated. And I do mean messy in the best sense. When it comes to fiction, we have a category for magical and strange. We have seaside Stories, if I didn't already say that, mystery and suspense, memoir and nonfiction. There is good stuff in this year's guide. So we want to create a guide that is compact and has lots of options, but not so many. Not the thousands of titles coming out this summer or hundreds that are on my like. I could consider this for the guide reading list, but really whittle it down to some likely to bring you reading joy this summer, all in one little package. And we have fun features as well. We'll talk about that more in today's episode. But my friend Nikki shout out Nikki gave me the gift of describing back to me like what the guide was to so many readers. She said, reading time is precious, like we all have. I mean, some of you tell us about how much you're enjoying the switch between retiring from a full time job and becoming a retiree and having so much more reading time that it still feels abundant to you if that transition is new. But the vast majority of us feel like so many books, so little time is a serious dilemma and the thing that really stands between us and the reading life we wish we could have. And my friend was telling me how the guide every year is just such a gateway to reliable reading joy. Because if you're gonna take your precious reading time and spend it metaphorically on only a handful of books, you wanna make sure those books bring you a memorable experience. And having someone hold your hand as you make those choices can feel really, really good. And that's what we've done every year in the guide for this will 15th edition. And if you told me back in 2012 this is the first of 15 and counting, I mean, I think it would have exploded my little readerly head. But here we are. And every year since the second year, I have read every book in the guide cover to cover. And the reason that is is the first year I remember highlighting some new releases that I was really excited about that I was really looking forward to spending my reading time on. And about half of them I, I not only was disappointed but was kind of angry that my precious reading time had been spent in that way. And I resolved then, like I in this context for the summer reading guide, you know, guidance implied. I'm only gonna talk about the books that I have read and can vouch for. And just because I've read a book does not mean you will love it as well. But in the guide and that unboxing, I try to be real specific about what my reading experience was like. Not to tell you what yours will be like or that you should want that experience, but to help you wrap your head around is this, I mean, is this a train I want to get on this summer? If I only have so much reading time at my disposal, how do I want to use it and do I want this book to be in the mix? And if you have questions like, people will say things like, well, you know, I'm not feeling really sweary this summer, can you guide me in that direction? Or I need a book that's going to leave me in a hopeful space and I'm thinking about X title Is it a good fit? I can answer those questions because I've read them all. Ginger, what would you add to that?
Ginger Horton
I think that we are all in a place that we could not have collectively seen 15 years ago. And that is, I feel this, that the marketing dollars are working harder than ever. I know that there is, I guess, lore in the publishing world that they don't quite know what's happening and what to do. But I can tell you I feel the impacts of it because I see the same books, I see the big book list, everything that's getting published, and that does not mean that those books are right for me. I, I love the publishing industry. I'm so glad they're marketing books. I am cheering any books that anybody wants to put in front of me. But that doesn't mean that's a book I want to read just because it's in front of me. And so, yeah, I think that having a trusted guided source is so important. When I walk into my independent bookstore, I know which of the staff members write those little cards that I am going to seek out and I know which ones, God bless them, they're doing, they're doing great work there. But I do not want to read the books that they suggest. Not your book twin. Not my book twin. That's such a helpful thing to know, actually. And like you said, sometimes that's even specific to the year. It doesn't mean that that's forever a no for me, but that can be tailored to my reading. Summer, Summer reading is precious time.
Anne Bogel
Like you said, we hear that. Also, something that's unique about our guide is, since 2019, shout out to Katie, who designed our first one, we've done a beautiful, user friendly magazine style that you can print the whole thing if you want, you can mark it up, but it's just a really fun way to engage with something that a lot of people really enjoy and look forward to every year and that is their summer reading. Oh, what's a word that I can use that's not curriculum? Because that sounds a little too much like school to some of us. Anything that hints of school, like you want homework, you wish. We'd make worksheets for your summer reading. But for others of you, you want nothing this max of that. But as you're imagining what literary joys could await you this summer, the magazine style can be a fun way to dip in. And since 2020, I mean, we've had loose themes for a while. Book camp in 2024 was the first year where we leaned Hard into a theme. Last year's was road trip. This year's is reading retreat. And we thought that would be such a lovely theme for right now. Ginger, you want to, you want to say more?
Ginger Horton
It does. It feels like a sigh of relief. I love just the exhale that a reading ret is whether that is a literal one. As Anne mentioned, some people build their summer, the start of their summer, around the summer reading guide. Taking days off, booking an Airbnb, traveling to a location. But I think even if it's just figurative, I remember last or two summers ago we had a specific genius moves class that was all about summer. Genius moves. And one reader said that she has this hour of the day that she opens up the front door, she has a screen on it, and she pretends she's reading on like a screened in porch because no bugs all books. Was what she said.
Anne Bogel
No bugs all books.
Ginger Horton
Give me 20 minutes. But somehow you are creating this space for your reading life. And we keep hearing that recently from readers that again, they're. The publishing landscape is overwhelming in the best possible way. We love that big book party. But what we also want is just space to slow down, to savor. Man, I think about all those summers when you were a kid, speaking of homework, where you would prop your feet up, you'd turn on the ceiling fan. Maybe just me. I lived in the American South. And you just like had this long, expansive time to read. And that is the vibe I'm going for this summer.
Anne Bogel
Oh. And you know, you may hear us say words like peace and calm, but I want you to know that is adamantly not code for boring. We are talking about a really energetic kind of entry into a space that you couldn't be happier to be in, but that is anti frantic, not frenetic in any way. No FOMO allowed. What we're looking for is to cultivate vibes that feel really warm and supportive and enthusiastic and abundant. Abundant. And our desire with our reading retreats and our reading guide magazine is to come alongside you and help you discover good books that let you escape into peaceful new worlds. No, but let you escape into interesting new worlds that you want to be in and also enrich your life in meaningful ways. Like we are big nerds. Like, you are going to go places and learn things with the books in this year's summer Reading Guide. But like on your terms. And you can choose how nerdy or escapist you wish to be. And like it's modern. Mrs. Darcy, what should I read next? We. We believe in nerdy escapism, but we just really want to help you craft a season full of abundance, ease and joy, whatever it is that you want in your summer. And also one that puts a heaping helping of potential four and five star books on your readerly horizons. That's been a goal for years now and we just recently did a survey in these parts and I wasn't really expecting the biggest shot of readerly joy for readers to be to read a book that I would give four or five stars to. The other thing most likely to give readers a big shot of readerly joy was finding out an author they love has a new book coming out. I'm certain some of those are in the guide among these 35 books. Some of them you may already know like, oh, I've been looking forward to that author's new books, but I think some of them will be surprises just because it's hard to know about everything happening in publishing world. And also we have a feature like we have in several years past, that's books from authors you know and love that includes titles coming out between May and August from authors that you may already have read previous books in their series or that you may have already read previous books by them. And we want you to know they're coming even if they're not specifically featured as one of the 35 titles in the guide.
Ginger Horton
Yeah, like Anne mentioned, anti boring is absolutely what we're after. But there is nothing boring about sinking into that comfortable reading chair or comfortable reading spot and then your heart beating out your chest because you cannot stop turning the page. So absolutely, comfort can mean multiple things. But there is no more comfortable place for me to be. And I was telling Ann before we started this call that I had gone through as I proofread and noted the first 15 books that I want to read for the summer based on my own.
Anne Bogel
15 for 15.
Ginger Horton
15 for 15. I did not do that on purpose. But you know, I love when that happens. And a good many of those though are like the heart pounding ones. The. Or what I expect. Yeah, kind of the page turner ones. The. There might be some juicy. Funny. A lot of these titles are really not at all like boring pastoral vibes. They are absolutely. I'm going to power through those in two days straight.
Anne Bogel
Mm. There's definitely a purposeful mix of the heavy and the light, the long and the short. Lots of different vibes and settings this year, which we always try to do. But I don't know. Life is hard. Good books help. I wanna be sure I'M putting books for a wide variety of readerly experiences on your readerly horizons. And for the reading retreat, I really wanted to communicate a vibe that was easy but also really, really inviting. And that could help you imagine yourself taking place in a retreat that was either solo or communal. And bringing that to life with imagery was really fun. I mean, I talked in a recent newsletter about how I really enjoy going to Trader Joe's and buying all the snacks. You should have seen our family group chat. Everyone was so enthusiastic about the leftovers they were hopefully going to get to eat, which they did. And it was great. And I hired a local photographer, Shout Out Laura, who was amazing, and Ginger. I love collaborating with our team, like, so much. I love that. I mean, it was so life giving to work with someone like Laura. Got it. Thank you, Laura. I love that. And we were just arranging our snacks and our journals and our books and our blankets and our snacks and more snacks and our drinks and everything. And I had a few fellow readers on hands to help conjure the communal scenes. It was so fun to think about what would be inspiring and idea giving for you all this summer. I'm really happy with the results.
Ginger Horton
Yeah, we had a Pinterest board at one point, and I think it's pretty hard to top a Pinterest board. But I think the way the guide looks, man, I gotta tell you, I think it might be better than a Pinterest board.
Anne Bogel
So I will pass that on to Laura. That's high praise. So we want you to know if you're like, I'm not doing a reading retreat that summer. That's cool. Like, we did one in the pages so you could have the fun of flipping through that experience without thinking, like, no actual retreat required to find good books in the guide this summer. But this is a milestone for us. I mean, we've said that It's. Ginger chose 15 books for 15 years. This is our 15th summer reading guide, and this is our year of celebrations around here. You've heard us say that this year we're celebrating 10 years in Modern Mrs. Darcy Book Club. We hit 10 years of the podcast in January. Let's see, this is 15 years of the blog as well.
Ginger Horton
I love an anniversary that's so much fun to talk about. You can absolutely celebrate, you know, four years into something. Why not? But there's just really something nice about those 10 and 15 year numbers.
Anne Bogel
Yeah. And we, we had fun with 15. There's an anniversary feature in this year's guide where I walked down memory lane and really did the hard work of finding the original summer reading guides, which are purposely not just something you can click on Modern Mrs. Darcy and Access. But there's a feature that walks you through many of the covers from past years going back to the first edition. And I recommend Backlist books through the years because we love a juicy new release, but we also love a book that you can get your hands on immediately at your public library because there's not a bonkers wait list for it and because we know you will like Backless picks so much. I mean, as do you and I, Ginger. Like we get this. Every title in the guide has a handful of four fans of Pics is what they're FFO pics in my reading journal that are titles that would be really nice flight picks that just play really nicely with the new title I'm recommending in the summer reading guide. Sometimes it's because of setting. Like all the books take place on the Camino de Santiago, for example. Sometimes it's because of the genre. But it's a book that has a similar like tone or emotional feel to the book I'm recommending so that you can both get a sense in this like really shorthand fashion of what the new book is like. But also you can do a hmm, if I enjoyed reading this one, what should I read next kind of thing with all these these books, it's just another way to help you discover older titles you may enjoy.
Ginger Horton
I love those bonuses because they do feel like a sneaky way to get a couple more books. You could build a personal curriculum out from there. And also it's such a great way to see. Oh, I liked both of those books. This one's going on my TBR list.
Anne Bogel
That's what it's designed for. Ginger, would you like to do the honors of telling everyone about our team feature for this year?
Ginger Horton
Yes. I absolutely love this. I might have already let genius moves tumble off of my tongue because this is the time of year where I think it really occurs to me to think in a very specific way about my reading life. And that way I hope to be intentional throughout the year. But that way is to get some wins. And genius moves are those short little pithy ways that we win in our reading lives. This started actually back at an in person reading retreat for book club a while back and we asked all, all the attendees to bring one quick win, one genius move for their reading life. They were so varied, so much fun and so helpful that we've kind of used that as shorthand for the rest of book club. So we'll have a class every so often with just like these collection of genius moves. And so we asked the team to contribute their best genius move. And those are so much fun to read to get tips to see those little tiny tweaks. You're not going to overhaul your reading life with a genius move, but you might make one tweak that allows you to get, oh, let's say 30 more minutes of reading time on your family vacation. Hint, hint, that's mine. A sneaky way that I do it. And yeah, I just, I love to see the variety and the creativity of readers especially, man, our team members really came through. So that's going to be such a fun feature.
Anne Bogel
I really enjoyed that tip personally. Personally, because 30 more minutes of reading time, especially, I mean, I'm an introvert.
Ginger Horton
Same.
Anne Bogel
So. So the way you worked that idea into your genius move, I really appreciated it.
Ginger Horton
Well, you'll have to open your guide. I wish I knew the page number. It would fall off my tongue. But I open your guide to the page with genius moves and find out what that would be.
Anne Bogel
Well, it's in the beautiful table of contents because this year's guide is so. It's just so pretty. It continues our same aesthetic, but the design is a little bit different. This year it's usually. But it's different. And I think you'll. I think you'll really enjoy it, whether this is your first guide or your 15th. Let's. Let's talk a little more about the books. Yes, there are 35 this year in those categories we talked about. And I want you to know there will be a minimalist summer reading guide this year. It'll go on the blog on May 14, and then our first Tuesday. What should I read next episode after the summer reading guide releases? That's on Tuesday, May 19th. That will be me unboxing the minimalist guide. And when it occurred to me to do this little preview episode in this way, I thought, why on earth have we not done it this way before? It makes so much sense. But unboxing means, like, I'll give you a little more color and flavor and you'll be able to hear the tone of my voice, a little more nuance, a little extra information versus the short little blurb that will be on the blog. But we're going to tell you what three of those books are right now out. We don't do it this way every summer, but this summer, we happen to be reading three new 2026 releases that are all in the Summer Reading guide in Modern Mrs. Darcy Book Club. And we announced those to our book clubbers a few weeks back in the middle of April. And we're going to tell you about all of them today.
Ginger Horton
I am so excited about these three titles. First of all, I think each one of them could totally stand on its own. But also I, I think it's pretty representative of the breadth of the guide. I love that we are reading something that I think would be immediately hospitable to almost any reader. Just like that beach read, that airport read. You could pull this off the shelf, take it down and it's gonna just go down easy. But there's also a lot to talk about. There is a more juicy literary family drama that's, that's very discussable and a little nerdier kind of mid summer. And then we sort of end our summer on a really avant garde pick. And there's ghosts, there's some more drama. I think this is so representative of what we do. A lot of fun, a lot of discussability, a lot of discoverability. And so Anne, would you like to do the honors and tell us which three books I've been obscurely describing?
Anne Bogel
I'd be delighted. In June, we're reading a romance author that I believe is no stranger to the vast majority of you. You. I am quoting Wallace Stegner all the time in modern Mrs. Darcy Book Club. He has a fictional novelist and crossing to safety say hard writing makes for easy reading. And ooh, this book goes down easy in the best sense. Our author is Annabelle Monahan, joining us for a chat to talk about her new May release, Dolly all the Time, in late June. It's a seaside story with a big hearted, fiercely loyal protagonist that so many of you are going to want to root for, who we're going to cheer on to see her get her happy ending. And that is all I'm going to say about that until unboxing. You can look it up, but that's all I'm going to say until unboxing. So that's June. Dolly all the Time by Annabelle Monahan. In July, we're reading another book that I inhaled. My initial two sentence review was what a juicy, delicious, lavish, atmospheric, messy in the best way, love triangle of a book. My first from this author, but won't be my last. We are reading Sisters of a Halved Heart by Nayantara Roy. I just had very different expectations from Dolly all the Time. The tone and setting are totally different, but oh, I sucked this down so fast. It Messy in the best way. It's in the messy, messy relationships category. Really interesting family drama that also has a wonderful supporting cast. Like, I love the relationship between the female protagonist and her female best friend. There's a kid in the book who's perfect, brings out things in the other characters without feeling overdone or annoying. There's a literary mystery woven throughout because the protagonist works at a literary magazine that has cachet. And there's a manuscript that is like, knock your socks off. Fantastic. That appears unsolicited on our protagonist desk because of her role as a magazine and the question of who wrote it and why'd they send it to her permeates the whole book. And it does get resolved and it's very satisfying. Plus, Ginger, I told you, we both have mixed feelings about epilogue, but we're gonna have a whole forum in book club about the epilogue for this book. I mean, I think I really liked it. I don't ever feel that way about epilogues, but I think I really liked it.
Ginger Horton
I'm so nervous. But it's gonna make for great discussion.
Anne Bogel
I'll tell you more about the specifics of this story at unboxing, but that's Sisters of a Half Heart by Nayantara Roy, out in July. And then August is our debut novel with those ghosts that Ginger was just talking about. This is the Great Wherever by Shannon Sanders and it is a powerful multi generational family saga about inheritance, a family farm, and the meddlesome, gossipy nose in your business opinionated, judgmental family ghosts that reside on the farm and have strong, strong opinions on the family members lives as they're still buzzing around the property. Oh, it's hard. It's hard to not keep going because I just want to talk about all these books. But that's August the Great Wherever by Shannon Sanders. It's her first novel.
Ginger Horton
I can't wait to talk about that one too. I spent six years of my life in Memphis and so I am so always happy to see Memphis on the page as well.
Anne Bogel
Well, this fictional family farm is right down the road.
Ginger Horton
Love it. And like Ann said, this is the beginning of a bookish conversation. And so not only will we be talking more about those books in book club, but there will be bonus episodes in a Patreon space all summer long. And yeah, this is just the beginning of the chatter about the 35 books and more. You know, we'll continue to talk about books all summer long.
Anne Bogel
Yes, we will. Ginger, you said you just went through the guide and marked down 15 titles. You were especially interested in reading. I'm cur on just getting some commentary that's not spoilery, but, like, was there anything in there you've already read? Anything you previously knew about that you were really anticipating? Anything you previously knew nothing about that especially piqued your interest? Readers want to know things.
Ginger Horton
Yes. Yes. Okay. So the books that I am leaning towards seem to have, like, two or three themes going on. Number one, I have been in grad school this year and I want to do two things for my reading life. Life. I want to read those gentle, pastoral, sweeping, but something you could put on a child's bookshelf in the Lake District in the pastoral times. I want to read gentle stuff. And I also want to read. Well, it's so specific because there's a forum about personal curriculum in a book club and people have been helping me put together my exact reading list. It involves Winnie the Pooh and a secret garden and things like that. But I also want to read, like, the buzziest of the buzziest. You said that people aren't feeling very sweary this year. Oh, I want controversy. I want drama. I bring on all of the sweary, art theft, juicy. I. That is exactly what I want. And several of the authors that are on the summer reading guide, I think are going to come through on that for me. There are destinations that are places I want to go. There are authors that I always are auto buy authors. For me, there is at least one author that I am a complete no. 2 authors that I am a completist for and one that I would love to be a completist for. So I want to go places. I want buzzy, I want controversy. And then, you know, I'll just top that off in the evenings with, like, a gentle breeze and James Harriet kind of calling over the planes to me. So I think we can contain multitudes. But that is what I am hoping for for my summer reading life.
Anne Bogel
Ooh, I like your very specific vibes. Well, for years now, I've done like, a remix of the books in the back of the guide. I just wanna put them in front of you in a different way than they're originally categorized. So that if a book that was set in, like, a category that's heavy on historical fiction didn't catch your eye, maybe if I describe it as a book that had music galore, that would inspire you to make a playlist. Like, maybe that would get your attention and reconsider a book that you had, like, glossed over the first time. Because there is a Lot of that this summer. There are quite a few specific books I read to vet for the guide, but four that made it into the guide. That there are so many artists and even specific tracks name checked that I was like, well, okay, I just put down my book but now I'm making dinner. I have to like listen to these songs they've been talking about. So I really enjoyed that. There were a weird number of mentions and epigraphs from Reiner Maria Rilke, the patron saint of what should I read next? Because we quote him at the end of every episode. Ah, how good it is to be among people who are reading. There are five debut novels in this year's guide. The longest book is 592 pages. The shortest is under a hundred. There are how many works in translation? There are four. I'm going to tell you an unboxing about the book that my 16 year old saw sitting on the counter. One of those works in translation. It was like, like that looks cool. Would I like that? Can I take this to school? So you know that made my heart sing. We have books that are on the shorter side, like 2, 24 or less. We have books on the longer side, 450 and up. Lots of books to take you around the world. I told you about the immersive books I gulped down in two days. Or sometimes I was going to say closer to two hours. That's an exaggeration, but more like 24 hours. Yes, absolutely. Lots of thorny relationship dramas, a nice amount of magical realism. There's just lots of good stuff in this year's guide.
Ginger Horton
And aside from the books, both of our communities have so much fun stuff planned. We mentioned bonus episodes. Book club really comes alive in the summer. We have got our readers weekend. We have got Austin in August and we have a really fun class planned for June that will involve a lot of team members and a lot of tips for doing just what we hear that you all want to do, which is slow down and savor at certain points in your reading life. And so we're going to share a lot of strategies and tips for that. So we have got places in the community if you want to not just read the books, but you want to talk about them, you want to talk about them with fellow readers. You want to celebrate your reading life and celebrate your reading wins. We would love to have you in either of those communities. They are both such warm and welcoming places. And especially in the summer we. We know that we get people that kind of come in and out depending on their Reading lives. Hello. So many teachers. We love you.
Anne Bogel
I was just thinking that.
Ginger Horton
But if this sounds like a place that you would want to be in the summer or any time of the year, this is a great time to jump in.
Anne Bogel
And we really want to be at your service as you make your reading life work for you. And the Summer Reading Guide can absolutely be your beginning and your end of summer discussion, but it can also be the leaping off point for summer of lots more discovery and enjoyment. So if you're interested in exploring more, I know many of you are in our Patreon community. I just released a bonus episode a couple weeks back that was featuring April 2026 releases that I thought were 100% worth talking about but were not in the pages of the summer Reading Guide. So I know many of you often read the guide thinking is she going to include the whatever. So preemptively, I'm telling you, here's some like early summer reading guide ish picks. And also if you're wondering where the new book by whoever is, it's not in. I can tell you now it's right here. And if you want new releases that are already out, they are all out as of now. We also do a bonus Patreon episode that we also make available to all our book clubbers. This is always for several years now, the first bonus after the guide releases where I go really in depth and answer like so many summer reading guide questions from unboxing and from our community comments in the wake of unboxing. And then our first Patreon mini matchmaking episode after the guide release will be specifically for summer reading guide books. When you're saying okay Ann, this is what I've enjoyed lately, this is what I haven't. This is what I'm looking for. Looking for. Readers will often tell me these are the summer reading guidebooks I'm considering. What do you think? And I'll tell you, it's one of
Ginger Horton
the really nice things about this guide and I have yet to discover in all the bookish worlds that I inhabit anyone who reads every book that they promote on the guide and and I just want to give you more props, I know you mentioned it, but it is so much work that you put in to reading and not just vetting and making sure that they are right for the guide, but also the availability to answer questions for for these communities to, you know, yeah, clock in no, that one probably wouldn't be right for you. Or yes, this one sounds right up your alley based on what you've Told me that is a huge part of the work that you put into this. And man, do we as readers get to benefit from that.
Anne Bogel
Well, one of our core values is trust. Sometimes your readers, our team member, hears me all the time refer back to the the values that guide us as a team and me as a creator. And like, when it comes to trust, I feel like you need to know that I'm not just making stuff up or regurgitating marketing copy. Now sometimes at our previews I'll say this is how the publisher is pitching it. And that is true. And I'll be very clear that I do not have the personal experience there. But in the guide, yeah, I have read every word and I want you to know what you are getting from us that's really important. Maybe I should have started by saying thank you Ginger. We work hard to make this really good and I just really hope you all continue to find it a really useful tool and like my friend Nikki said, a gateway to reliable reading. Joy and I hadn't planned to talk about our philosophy, not just philosophy, but like guidelines, laws about artificial intelligence that we have for our team. But it really just plays right into our team core value of trust. We want to be honest and forthright and dependable in our content and its delivery. And like we are known and we've worked hard to be known for our taste. Whether you think it's good taste, I think, you know, it's my taste and for our reliability and you know, bringing news and opinions and ideas from the book world to you. We really want to celebrate the written word and the people who create the books we love to read. And we want you to know like all these books are human selected. We don't use generative AI, no chat GPT, no Claude, no Gemini, no algorithms are picking these books. No. Any computers? No. I mean I'm using my MacBook. Okay, but like machines are not writing our blurbs. We don't use digital tools to choose books for our guests or for our blog, like in any way. And not for the summer reading guide either. All our work is out own and like this is the time consuming old fashioned way and y', all, it kills me to then see our stuff turned around and cop like copied verbatim and then this is one of the reasons on Instagram anymore. It just makes me sad. But. But we do work hard to create good stuff that you enjoy reading or listening to. Like we take our reading lives and your reading lives I hope at the same time both like we don't take ourselves seriously. But we take take this stuff really seriously. Like life is hard and good books can be such a source of joy and connection and respite that really energetic peace and like rejuvenating calm. And we want that for you and think you deserve our best effort. And now I'm just going. I repeat myself for emphasis. I just repeat. I really mean it. You can tell because I keep saying
Ginger Horton
is fun work, but it is hard work. And I was going to insert joke here that you can not only trust that these are books that are picked by someone with taste, but you can also just trust that they are actually books that exist. Unlike one certain AI generated book list that was traveling around the Internet last summer. Yeah.
Anne Bogel
Which was so funny and also so sad at the same time.
Ginger Horton
Such a moment. Such a moment in time. Exactly. These all do exist. You can go to the bookstore and buy them or put them on your library holds list. We promise. That is our solemn vow.
Anne Bogel
And that reminds me just thinking about the generative AI. We do work really hard. It's expensive and costly in many ways, both like financially and time and energy and labor to create good stuff for you. And we really ask that you respect the work that went into it. There's a page in the guide that shows all the covers, like all the little thumbnail images. It's so pretty. Please don't put that on your Instagram. We would really like to keep that for the people who've gotten the guide. And we hope you can understand that it hurts when our work is copy or misused, whether that's by the obvious plagiarism that has become more and more of an issue over the years, but also by like feeding it for free to those large language models like ChatGPT or Claude or Gemini. Please don't copy paste our stuff in there. Like, we don't want it to be used for training, we don't want it to be remixed. And we would be really grateful if you would would refrain from any action that would result in our work being used for that kind of thing. We have a little note in the guide, but it's worth saying again, this
Ginger Horton
is the one time that imitation is not a sincere form of flattery. So. Well, I guess we've said a million trillion words about the guide. And so now if you're wondering where you can get that.
Anne Bogel
Ann, that does seem important.
Ginger Horton
Yes. Tell us how one would get their hands on a copy digitally or a print guide. And an invite to that unboxing. Hello, the big book party. I will Start off by saying that it is a perk for Patreon members and book club members. If you are already in those spaces, you absolutely know that you are in the right spot. That will hit your inbox as it always has. It will be on all the pages, you know, all the spaces that you know to go look for events and resources. But we also offer an a la carte version and so if you have chosen that those are not communities that you are willing to commit to right now, totally understand. And we want to make sure that you have the availability to get yourself the guide and also an invite to the unboxing.
Anne Bogel
Please visit modernmrsdarcy.com srg for summer reading Guide to get your a la carte copy of the guide. We really would love you to join one of our communities if you are so inclined that does, financially and really like, from a morale perspective, support the work we do day in and day out here for what should I read next? And it's I think, where we put our best stuff and you'll hear from more of our team in our communities. What should I read next? Patreon for bonus episodes and fun events and modern Mrs. Darcy Book Club for community classes and conversation. This is where we host almost monthly author chat, regular classes, member meetups and all kinds of stuff to help you get more out of your reading life by learning to read better together with your fellow book clubbers.
Ginger Horton
Can I put in a little plug? Because they are both valid ways to get the guide a la carte or a member community. But if you are the kind of person who is excited about reading 35 potential blurbs for books, you might want to put on your TBR and you want to talk about summer reading and you want to nerd out about what books are going on your list, you might want some more bookish friends. So if that feels right to you, it might just be the place that you find your people, you find your book people and you find community. And I would just say, yeah, give it a try. Summer is a great time to find those bookish friends. And if you are the kind of person who nerds out about summer reading, you might find your people there.
Anne Bogel
Indeed. It's a great place to be. And if you were fuzzy on what modern Mrs. Darcy Book Club was at the beginning of this episode, Ginger is our community manager for this space. And so Ginger, I feel like you're always singing the book club song.
Ginger Horton
I know it doesn't feel like I have to sell it to anybody because I absolutely believe in this community. It has made me a better reader. I cannot even picture what my reading life would be like, what my reading list would look like without this community. I found out about so many books this way and I have found so many true friends this way. So I just cannot even imagine my reading life without it. Can you hear me saying, come be my friend?
Anne Bogel
Well, I'm so glad to be your friend and to be a part of it. And if you don't have the time or inclination to join a community, we got you. It's@modernmrsdarcy.com SRG okay, I want to acknowledge the next part can be a little bit confusing, but you can also get a hard copy printed guide, summer reading guide that shows up as a magazine in your inbox via snail mail. You can get that independently, which will not include unboxing or the digital PDF or you can buy it as an add on, but that is an option. We did it for the first time last year and the only thing I dislike about it is, I mean it takes over my house for a couple days but worth it. The only thing I dislike about it is the terminology. Like I don't want anyone to be confused. I want you to know what you're getting and get what you expect. But if you are so inclined or you like the sound of having a print copy, I really encourage you to go this direction. I did a lot of printing the Guide myself here locally in the years between 2012 and 2025 and it is really expensive and the results are very hit and miss. But Will Bogle has worked just hand in hand with our local printers these past couple years. We printed a lot of things to like ramp up to doing the guide for the first time last year to make sure we get a gorgeous edition at the lowest cost we can and order as many as we can. So please, please order your guide. It makes it more affordable for everybody. But we get that nice bulk printing discount. We know we're getting top notch quality and we can pass that bulk bulk printing discount along to you. So ordering from us will be cheaper. Your result will be better. You'll have to wait for the USPS to bring it to your door because like we don't wrap this thing in March so that we know you'll have it ready and in your hands on May 14th because I want to read as much as I can to get you as many books. But we do expect to have these in hand I hope before May 14, so it will be arriving then or shortly thereafter. But we'll definitely be mailing them by May 14th. And if you want one to pop up in your mailbox box, we would be delighted to send one your way.
Ginger Horton
It's worth the extra communication because they are really pretty. So it is worth a little extra moment acknowledging that you can get a hard copy because if you are so inclined. Oh, they're so pretty. I miss old school magazines coming to my mailbox and this is one way to recapture that.
Anne Bogel
Oh, I. I still love a magazine. I love a magazine. I mean, the kids say, Prince coming back.
Ginger Horton
You're here.
Anne Bogel
Yeah, yeah, yeah. My 16 year old is buying cassette tapes and I'm here for the hard media resurgence.
Ginger Horton
Oh, man. All right, I'll listen to a 16 year old, right? Surely they know what's cool.
Anne Bogel
I am so sorry to say that right now we are only shipping to the United States. That has not always been the case, and I hope it will not always be the case. But we're a small business. We cannot keep up with what's happening in the global landscape. And that is the case right now. So if you're in the US or have a US mailing address and want a copy, we would be delighted to send that to you. And we'll have links for everything we talked about in the show notes for today's episode. Oh, too many details. I do love a detail. Look, we want you to know what you need to know. All right, Ginger, final question. Because we gotta end on a more fun note than shipping something you're most looking forward to in your summer reading or something you're most excited for readers to experience with their summer reading.
Ginger Horton
That's a great question. Okay, there could be many answers to this, but I have got to say one thing that we have not talked about is in the guide that I am so excited for people to see, and that is that somehow in the archives, the team that put this together, probably mostly you, Ann, went through and found like 15 standout moments, one from every year. That was some of the. Oh, my gosh, I remembered many of those, but there were some that I had completely forgotten about. Delight upon delight upon delight. And so I thought, now, if you've been around here a long time, that is going to be the most blast from the past. Look down memory lane. But also we have had this year of celebration. And I keep thinking if you are new around here and you've discovered this warm, bookish community and you are wondering, I've got 10 years to catch back up on. I've got 15 years to catch Back up on. This is kind of one of those things that's like a little shortcut to here's the best of the best. And so start here. Check this out. It's not so overwhelming. Here are 10 or 15 things that we loved and that are great memories. And so I just love that part. It was so fun and I giggled multiple times. And I mean, again, it just looks really beautiful. So shout out to the team who put that together.
Anne Bogel
It does look really beautiful. So thank you for the, the compliment for my editorial eye. But also this year, our guide was designed by a what should I read next alum. In fact, we first connected when Julie Van Heusen was on the podcast back on March 12, 2024. She's episode 421, fittingly called Go ahead. Judge that book by its cover because she is a designer and she has an eye for that kind of thing. And so in this year's guide, she brought her eye to our summer reading explorations. And the final result is just like, I mean, we gushed. We gushed about it.
Ginger Horton
Yeah, good job, Julie. It's real pretty, as they say. And yeah, what a full circle moment here on what should I read next?
Anne Bogel
Full circle. Okay. What I'm looking forward to for our readers this summer, I wish everyone the pleasure of reading and deeply, deeply enjoying a book from a favorite author that caught their eye that they thought, oh, that book's for me and I want them to read it and love it and go, yes, that was so worth waiting for. And also, I imagine with joy. And I do wish for them the experience of finding a book that makes them go. I'm intrigued. I don't even know why this isn't what I was looking for. I'm going to take a chance on this unfamiliar thing that feels a little bit outside my lane and read it and go, ugh, I had no idea I wanted a book like that, but I'm so glad I read it.
Ginger Horton
Yes, may we all have all of those experiences this summer.
Anne Bogel
All the books, all the things, all the feelings. Oh, Ginger, thank you for joining us as collaborator and co discoverer and creator.
Ginger Horton
Thank you for having me. And I am always here to talk about summer reading. I hope to hear from many of you whether that's in the comments here on the post. In both of our community spaces. I just can't wait to talk more summer reading. And this was a delight to talk with you. And here we go. This begins the most nerdiest time of the year.
Anne Bogel
Oh, the pleasure is mine. And I hope all of yours and that it's just a really wonderful reading Summer. Readers, I hope you enjoyed our conversation today. I'd love to hear your Summer Reading Guide questions or whether there are any titles you're expecting or hoping to see featured in this year's guide. Although mum's gonna be the word till that thing is out on May 14, you will find the list of titles that Ginger and I discussed today and all the Summer Reading Guide links and details you need to know at what Should I read next? Podcast.com if you want to go on and grab your a la carte access, that's@modernmrsdarcy.com SRG for summer reading Guide, follow our show on Instagram @whatshouldireadnext, where our capable, competent, delightful Social Media manager Lee Kramer will be sharing some behind the scenes peaks. And if you do join us for Thursday celebrations, we'd love to ask that you wait to share your excitement about those actual selections so that we don't spoil any surprises for those getting the guide later. The 2026 Summer Reading Guide is exclusively for our members and a la carte purchasers, so please do avoid spoilers when sharing about the Summer Reading Guide on social media. And thank you so much for supporting the work we do and looking out for your fellow readers. Please join our email list. This is our favorite way to share all our news and events and happenings. For stuff like our Summer Reading Guide plus our weekly episodes and other bookish happenings. Sign up at what Should I read next? Podcast.com newsletter. Thank you to Ginger Horton for joining me today and to all the people who make the show happen. What Should I Read Next Is created each week by Executive Producer Will Bogle, Media Production Specialist Holly Wilkachevski, Social Media Manager and Editor Lee Kramer, Community Coordinator Brigid Misselhorn, Community Manager Shannon Malone and our whole team at what Should I Read Next? And Modern Mrs. RC HQ. Plus the audio whizzes at Studio D Podcast Production Readers, that's it for this episode. Thanks so much for listening and as Reiner Maria Rocha said, ah, how good it is to be among people who are reading. Happy reading everyone.
Podcast Summary: What Should I Read Next? — Ep 525: Get Ready for a Reading Retreat (May 12, 2026)
In this milestone episode, host Anne Bogel is joined by Ginger Horton, Community Manager for Modern Mrs. Darcy Book Club, to usher in the 15th annual Summer Reading Guide. This year’s celebratory theme is "Reading Retreat"—an encouragement to craft a peaceful but vibrant reading season, whether that means traveling for a group event or simply savoring books solo at home. They explore the philosophy behind the guide, its categories and features, recommendations of standout titles, and the broader community and ethos that make the guide more than just a book list.
“...reading time is precious...what we also want is just space to slow down, to savor.” (13:04 - Anne Bogel)
“All our work is our own...the time-consuming old-fashioned way.” (37:41 - Anne Bogel) “You can also just trust that they are actually books that exist. Unlike one certain AI-generated book list that was traveling around the Internet last summer.” (39:54 - Ginger Horton)
35 Carefully Selected Titles spread across diverse, thoughtfully crafted categories like:
Anne:
“There’s definitely a purposeful mix of the heavy and the light, the long and the short. Lots of different vibes and settings this year.” (16:51 - Anne Bogel)
This Year’s Theme: Reading Retreat:
The idea is about facilitating a restorative, immersive escape—whether in-person with friends or carving out cozy time at home. Exemplified by fun anecdotes, like the reader who simulates a porch reading experience with just a screen door.
“Just to create this space for your reading life...what we also want is just space to slow down, to savor.” (12:55 - Ginger Horton) “No FOMO allowed. What we’re looking for is to cultivate vibes that feel really warm and supportive and enthusiastic and abundant.” (13:28 - Anne Bogel)
“That is going to be the most blast from the past...here are ten or fifteen things that we loved and that are great memories.” (48:01 - Ginger Horton)
“You’re not going to overhaul your reading life with a genius move, but you might make one tweak...” (21:41 - Ginger Horton)
Anne and Ginger tease three representative titles, each showcasing a distinctive mood—from frothy to literary to experimental:
June: Dolly All the Time by Annabelle Monahan
“Goes down easy in the best sense... a seaside story with a big-hearted, fiercely loyal protagonist...” (25:45 - Anne Bogel)
July: Sisters of a Halved Heart by Nayantara Roy
“What a juicy, delicious, lavish, atmospheric, messy in the best way love triangle of a book...” — includes a literary mystery and a “forum-worthy” epilogue for book club discussion. (26:44 - Anne Bogel)
August: The Great Wherever by Shannon Sanders
“A powerful multi-generational family saga about inheritance, a family farm, and...opinionated, judgmental family ghosts.” (28:21 - Anne Bogel)
“There is nothing boring about sinking into that comfortable reading chair...and then your heart beating out your chest because you cannot stop turning the page.” (15:56 - Ginger Horton)
“We want you to know...all these books are human selected...all our work is our own...” (37:41 - Anne Bogel)
On importance of book trust:
“[When I walk into my independent bookstore,] I know which of the staff members write those little cards that I am going to seek out... Not your book twin. That’s such a helpful thing to know...” (10:13 - Ginger Horton)
On the energy of a good reading retreat:
“We believe in nerdy escapism, but we just really want to help you craft a season full of abundance, ease and joy.” (13:41 - Anne Bogel)
On diversity in the guide:
“There's definitely a purposeful mix of the heavy and the light, the long and the short...” (16:51 - Anne Bogel)
On trustworthy guidance:
“One of our core values is trust. Sometimes your readers, our team member, hears me all the time refer back to the values that guide us as a team and me as a creator. I feel like you need to know that I'm not just making stuff up or regurgitating marketing copy.” (37:00 - Anne Bogel)
AI cautionary tale:
“You can also just trust that they are actually books that exist. Unlike one certain AI-generated book list that was traveling around the Internet last summer.” (39:54 - Ginger Horton)
To Access the Guide:
ModernMrsDarcy.com/SRG (for a la carte copies, community info, unboxing and more)
For Behind-the-Scenes:
Instagram: @whatshouldireadnext
Connect & Discuss:
Join Modern Mrs. Darcy Book Club or Patreon for full benefits, community, bonus content, and author chats.
“All the books, all the things, all the feelings...” (50:55 - Anne Bogel)