Gilbert Cruz, Books Editor, The New York Times:
The first one is “Swan Song.” Elin Hilderbrand, she is a writer who puts a book out every summer. They’re all about Nantucket. They all have drama. They all have romance. And somehow I have found myself reading one book of hers a summer for the past decade.
I’m sort of — I have only been to Nantucket for two hours on, like, the coldest day that I can recall. So I have no idea what it’s like to be there in the summer, but I sort of do because I have read a dozen Elin Hilderbrand books.
So I’m a big horror person. There’s a book called “Horror Movie” by Paul Tremblay. And there’s some people who save their scary stuff until October, until the fall. I’m not that person. I like it all year round. And I think there are many people like me.
This is about essentially an independent horror movie that was made years and years ago. A bunch of tragedies happened. It’s become a cult film. And the only person left from the production has started to encounter some weird things. So that’s “Horror Movie” by Paul Tremblay.
And then, finally, another genre book, a fantasy, “The Bright Sword” by Lev Grossman. If you have heard of Lev Grossman, it’s because of his “Magicians” trilogy, which were a set of books that essentially imagined, what if Harry Potter, but with older people and cursing and all the stuff that older teenagers get into.
This new book imagines the days and the months after the death of King Arthur. So there have been many retellings of the King Arthur legend, books, movies, musicals. This one is sort of a sequel.