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Ten books to read in July

Ten books to read in July, including “The Vapors” and “Say It Louder” and “Utopia Avenue”  (MacMillan Harper Collins Penguin RandomHouse)
By Bethanne Patrick Special to the Washington Post

The best thing about social distancing? You have a valid excuse to stay home and read. Of course, some establishments are reopening, and that includes bookstores. Patronize them when you can and remember to wear a mask when you do. You’ll want to be safe and courteous as you check out July’s bumper crop of new titles.

“Say It Louder!: Black Voters, White Narratives, and Saving Our Democracy,” by Tiffany D. Cross (July 6): Cross is a veteran news analyst whose time on the campaign trail has convinced her that black voters can shape the future of the United States – if they are not silenced. She examines the paradox of a system designed to exclude black lives that would not exist without them.

“Notes on a Silencing: A Memoir,” by Lacy Crawford (July 7): Sexually assaulted at 15 by two fellow students at a prestigious prep school, Crawford spent years putting her past behind her. But when she found out she wasn’t the only victim, she came forward, only to learn about the extensive and sustained efforts by school leaders to cover up a culture of abuse.

“The Vapors: A Southern Family, the New York Mob, and the Rise and Fall of Hot Springs, America’s Forgotten Capital of Vice,” by David Hill (July 7): Hill, a native of Hot Springs, Arkansas, takes readers back to the 1930s to the ’60s, when that city was as rife with gang activity as Las Vegas or Miami. When Owney Madden came to town and decided to open a resort called The Vapors, casinos, brothels and racetracks followed. Hill interweaves this history with first-person accounts, including one from his grandmother.

“Antkind: A Novel,” by Charlie Kaufman (July 7): Once you enter the world of protagonist B. Rosenberger Rosenberg, who has seen a three-month-long film masterpiece that no one else has, you won’t be able to extricate yourself until the 700-plus-page novel is finished. Kaufman (the screenwriter of “Being John Malkovich,” “Anomalisa” and “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind”) crafts a mind-bending fever dream that’s also a ripping good read.

“Want: A Novel,” by Lynn Steger Strong (July 7): Despite a Ph.D., a husband and kids, Elizabeth feels like she’s reached a dead end: She’s bankrupt and can’t find a job in academia, while her husband struggles to get his carpentry business off the ground. But when she reconnects with her childhood friend, Sasha, old patterns resurface alongside an overwhelming desire for complete fulfillment.

“Utopia Avenue: A Novel,” by David Mitchell (July 14): This rock-opera of a book follows Utopia Avenue, a bizarre band whose members include Jasper de Zoet (yes, a descendant of the title character in Mitchell’s “The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet,” set in 17th-century Japan). Mitchell’s rich imaginative stews bubble with history and drama, and this time the flavor is a blend of Carnaby Street and Chateau Marmont.

“Twilight of Democracy: The Seductive Lure of Authoritarianism,” by Anne Applebaum (July 21): Please listen to Applebaum, and not simply because she was previously a columnist at this newspaper. She’s been sounding alarm bells about anti-democratic trends in Europe for a long time, and as an acclaimed historian of the Soviet Union (she won a Pulitzer in 2004 for “Gulag: A History”), Applebaum understands how and why authoritarianism takes hold.

“Hamnet: A Novel,” by Maggie O’Farrell (July 21): Imagine that a penniless Latin tutor married to a somewhat wild woman had a son they loved to distraction, who died of a plague. His name was Hamnet – and a few years later the tutor would pen a play titled “Hamlet.” But that’s really as far as O’Farrell goes with the Shakespeare stuff in this brilliant examination of grief and family bonds.

“Afterland: A Novel,” by Lauren Beukes (July 28): Three years after a pandemic known as The Manfall, the world is run by women. Is it a better place? Not for mothers like Cole, who will go to any length to protect her 12-year-old son from a fate as a reproductive resource, sex object or “stand-in son.” To evade Cole’s sister, mother and son must race across a United States transformed by imbalance and despair.

“Memorial Drive: A Daughter’s Memoir,” by Natasha Trethewey (July 28): When a poet writes a memoir, take note. When that poet is Trethewey, former poet laureate of the United States, start reading immediately. The author was 19 when her stepfather shot and killed her mother at their home in Atlanta. While the book grapples with personal pain, its expansion into the societal ills of racism and domestic abuse lifts it to a new level of urgency.

Patrick is the editor, most recently, of “The Books That Changed My Life: Reflections by 100 Authors, Actors, Musicians and Other Remarkable People.”