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Sunday, May 31, 2026

20 Books of Summer – 2026

The 20 Books of Summer is a reading challenge meant to identify books you've been putting off (in a good way) or to make a dent in your TBR pile. Participants make a pledge to read and review a list of 10, 15, or 20 books during the summer months (typically June 1st through August 31st). 
It was created by Cathy of 746 Books, and is now hosted by Annabel of AnnaBookBel. Here are my 20 books, plus an extra:

Iris in Winter by Elizabeth Cadell (1949)

A Place Beyond Courage by Elizabeth Chadwick (2007) - also for The Historical Fiction Reading Challenge.  My review.

The Last Runaway by Tracy Chevalier (2013) - also for The Historical Fiction Reading Challenge

Grimbold’s Other World by Nicholas Stuart Gray (1963) - also for Reading the Meow
Bird’s Eye View by Elinor Florence (2014) - also for The Historical Fiction Reading Challenge

The Clairvoyant Countess by Dorothy Gilman (1975) - also for The Cloak and Dagger Challenge

The Glass Sentence by S.E. Grove (2014) - also for The Historical Fiction Reading Challenge

The Foundling by Stacey Halls (2020) - also for The Historical Fiction Reading Challenge

Someday I’ll Find You by C.C. Humphreys (2023) - also for The Historical Fiction Reading Challenge

Gale Force by Owen Laukkanen (2018) - also for The Cloak and Dagger Challenge

It’s a Great World by Emilie Loring (1935)

The Double Image by Helen MacInnes (1965) – also for The Cloak and Dagger Challenge and Paris in July

Sabriel
by Garth Nix (1995) - also for Reading the Meow

The Whirling Shapes by Joan North (1967)

The Haunted Lady by Mary Roberts Rinehart (1942) - also for The Cloak and Dagger Challenge

A Far-flung Life by M.L. Stedman (2026) - also for The Historical Fiction Reading Challenge

A Murder in Marylebone by Emily Sullivan (2026) - also for The Cloak and Dagger Challenge

As It Was (1926) & World Without End (1931) by Helen Thomas

Stateless by Elizabeth Wein (2023) - also for The Historical Fiction Reading Challenge

A Deceptive Devotion by Iona Whishah (2019) - also for The Cloak and Dagger Challenge and the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge

Have you read any of these?
Off the Blog: I spent most of the weekend at the DCU Center in Worcester as a delegate at the Massachusetts Democratic Convention. The only race in dispute was Ed Markey being challenged for his U.S. senate seat by Congressman Seth Moulton. Here is Senator Markey addressing the 4,000+ delegates. "Don't agonize, organize!" seems a suitable theme.

11 comments:

  1. A nice list: I hope you enjoy them all!

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  2. I really enjoyed perusing your list--such a varied mix! And how cool that you are a delegate. That must have been very exciting.

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  3. Good luck with your list for summer. I've only read the Tracy Chevalier - all of her books are good.

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  4. I love that slogan! Thanks for taking the time to be involved in the political process. We will survive!

    I loved The Last Runaway so much that I read it twice, just a few years apart. Chevalier is one of my favorite contemporary authors, and I really like the premise and setting of this one.

    Good luck with your 20!

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  5. Good luck with this! I'm reading A Far-flung Life now and I think you'll enjoy it.

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  6. The list itself is quite impressive, but it’s the photo that makes you realize just how big a challenge that is. That’s quite a pile of books. Can’t believe I haven’t read a single one of them.

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    1. I like to put the books in a pile and pick one from the top!

      Texas is such a diverse state. The real question is whether Paxton can get enough support to win. He sounds awful but people like to vote for someone they've supported in the past.

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  7. Constance, a lot of the books on your list are new to me, and I hope you review some of them.

    Going to the Massachusetts Democratic Convention is impressive and I bet it was a good experience.

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  8. Good going as a delegate. Is there hope in the political arena? I like your list and have only read the ML Stedman novel which kept me going but is pretty grim. Of these, I'm most curious about The Last Runaway ... so will look for your review of that. Chevalier usually does interesting historical fiction. Happy reading. I just put out my list too .... of mostly just recent releases.

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  9. Excellent list! I've read Sabriel, good series by Garth Nix. I might've read The Last Runaway, not sure but read plenty of other TC books. Enjoy your summer reading!

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  10. I haven't read anything from your list, but am looking forward to your reviews (especially) of the Cadell's and Chevalier's. Have fun with your summer readings!

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