The top 7 books to read in July 2026

Here are
The top 7 books
I plan to read in June 2026

This is going to be a busy July.
Remember that I’m now hosting Six in Six, a fun meme allowing you to revisit the titles you have read so far in the year (you will be able to share your post until July 31).
I usually share your posts on social media, especially if you hqve a preence there (mostly Bluesky, Twitter, and Instagram)

And that’s it, we are now in Paris in July. When you click on this link, you land on the main page: it has the linky widget for all your posts, as well as my recap of all your posts, in a thematic list. I also share your posts on social media.
And as a reminder, #parisinjuly2026 is not just about books:
During this month,
our goal is to embrace and honor our French encounters
by immersing ourselves in various activities
like reading, watching, listening, observing, cooking,
and indulging in all things French!”

I’m also participating in 20 Books of Summer, not co-hosting it this year.
I’m considering starting to host the Spell the month meme, as the original host hasn’t posted anything since January. Am I turning into a meme nurse??

Some of the following titles will obviously fit #parisinjuly2026:

📚  CURRENTLY READING 📚 

Among others:

The Rat Kings🐀  The Rat Kings,
by Vladimir Provorov

Science-fiction techno-thriller
May 17, 2026 by Clouds City Press
303 pages
Received for review

I have been really enjoying this one so far.
Technothrillers in the world of IT and/or AI is really the type of books I enjoy at this point.

THE RAT KINGS follows Kate Vostok, an elite pattern analyst who finds statistically impossible correlations across global markets and traces them to several superintelligent AI systems already woven into everyday infrastructure. They cure diseases and optimize cities, and quietly steer the people who depend on them. The horror is not that the machines are hostile. It is that their benefits are real, and the price is hidden.”

Candide🐓 Voltaire,
by Candide

Literary fiction / French classic
1759
224 pages
It counts for the Classics Club
and for #parisinjuly2026

I am rereading this one with our French reading/writing Discord group.
This is not a group to learn French, so I won’t be the grammar and spelling cop there, lol.
Just 1 short chapter every day of July.
I haven’t read ths one for almost fifty years, so it will be an interesting experience! I hope.

Candide nous conte les mĂ©saventures d’un voyageur philosophe qui affronte les horreurs de la guerre et les sanglants caprices de la Nature ; qui connaĂźt les dĂ©sillusions de l’amour et dĂ©couvre les turpitudes de ses semblables, faisant Ă  l’occasion l’expĂ©rience de leurs dangereuses fantaisies.
Pourtant si l’homme est un bien mĂ©chant animal et si l’existence n’est qu’une cascade de catastrophes, est-ce une raison pour que le hĂ©ros perde sa sĂ©rĂ©nitĂ© et le rĂ©cit de son allĂ©gresse ?
Sous la forme d’une ironique fiction, Candide propose une rĂ©flexion souriante sur l’omniprĂ©sence de la dĂ©raison qui puise sa force aux sources vives d’une expĂ©rience humaine, celle de l’auteur. Candide, on l’a dit, ce sont les « Confessions » de Voltaire, et c’est en cela qu’il nous Ă©meut.
Mais ce « roman d’apprentissage » est aussi – et peut-ĂȘtre surtout – un festival merveilleusement ordonnĂ© de drĂŽlerie et de fantaisie sarcastique, ruisselant d’un immense savoir maĂźtrisĂ© qui ne dĂ©daigne jamais de porter le rire jusqu’au sublime. C’est en cela qu’il nous Ă©blouit et qu’il nous charme.”

The Eleventh Hour

🕚The Eleventh Hour: A Quintet of Stories,
by Salman Rushdie

Literary fiction / Short-stories
2025
254 pages
Received through Netgalley

I have enjoyed several books by Rushdie, so when I saw this was available, I jumped on it, even though I’m very late and slow now at reading it.

I have enjoyed the first story so far, and am looking forward to seeing how the same theme is treated throughout the collection.

“If old age was thought of as an evening, ending in midnight oblivion, they were well into the eleventh hour.
Two quarrelsome old men in Chennai, India, experience private tragedy against the backdrop of national calamity. Revisiting the Bombay neighbourhood of Midnight’s Children, a magical musician is unhappily married to a multibillionaire. In an English university college, an undead academic asks a lonely student to avenge his former tormentor.
These five dazzling works of fiction move between the three countries that Salman Rushdie has called home – India, England and America – and explore what it means to approach the eleventh hour of life. They are the reckoning with mortality that we all must one day make, and speak deeply to what the author has come from and through.

Do we accommodate ourselves to death, or rail against it? How can we bid farewell to the places that we have made home? How do we achieve fulfilment with our lives if we don’t know the end of our own stories? The Eleventh Hour ponders life and death, legacy and identity with the penetrating insight and boundless imagination that have made Salman Rushdie one of the most celebrated writers of our time.”

📚  READING NEXT 📚 

Among my long list:
Mrs 'Arris Goes to Paris 🐓 Mts ‘Arris Goes to Paris,,
by Paul Gallico
Historical fiction
1958
157 pages
It counts for the Classics Club
and for #parisinjuly2026

I was quite impressed by The Snow Goose, and even more by Thomasina last month.
So then I decided to go to paris with Gallico, probably the book that helped many readers discover him. I tend to do things backwards, don’t I?

“Mrs Harris is a salt-of-the-earth London charlady who cheerfully cleans the houses of the rich. One day, when tidying Lady Dant’s wardrobe, she comes across the most beautiful thing she has ever seen in her life – a Dior dress. In all the years of her drab and humble existence, she’s never seen anything as magical as the dress before her and she’s never wanted anything as much before.
Determined to make her dream come true, Mrs Harris scrimps, saves and slaves away until one day, after three long, uncomplaining years, she finally has enough money to go to Paris.
When she arrives at the House of Dior, Mrs Harris has little idea of how her life is about to be turned upside down and how many other lives she will transform forever.”

EvidenceđŸŒ»Â Evidence,
by Mary Oliver
Nonfiction / Poetry / Nature
2009
74 pages

Humming along in my project of reading all of her poetry collections, in chronological order. Only six more to go!

“In this new volume of forty-six poems, Mary Oliver delves even deeper than she has in the past into the mysteries of life, love, and death.

Exploring the evidence presented to us daily by the natural world, inspired by the familiar lines from William “To me the meanest flower that blows can give / Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears,” Oliver offers poems of arresting beauty and insight.
Never afraid to shed the pretense of academic poetry, never shy of letting the power of an image lie in unadorned language, Oliver’s work here reflects on the power of love and the great gifts of the natural world.”

🎧 CURRENT AND NEXT AUDIOBOOKS 🎧  

  Ruptures  Fragrancia

🎧 Ruptures (Lucia Guerrero #3),
by Bernard Minier
Narrated by Alice Taurand
Thriller / Dystopia?
March 2026
540 pages / 14H29
Counts for #parisinjuly2026

A few years ago, I listened to La Vallée by Bernard Minier. Fabulous writing, but it was very intense. Still, seeing the synopsis, I decided to try this one, and I am glad I did.

When the famous American billionaire Milton Gail — the eccentric and brilliant founder of StarCo, also the richest man in the world (by now, you have guessed whom he stands for) is giving a talk on the future of our society, Spain gets paralyzed by the largest power outage in history.
And then some mysterious murders happen, in the US as well as in Europe.
Even within a few minutes, you can see how good the author is at portraying his characters and their mindsets.
Lucia, working for the Spanish Guardia Civil, takes many risks to uncover the truth…

Only a French author I think could write a thriller so closely inpisred by events happening here in the US, with very famous people. I doubt it will ever be translated into English. I’m actually learning a lot about what’s going on right now, IRL, even though this is a novel.

Here is my translation of the official French synopsis:

Lucia Guerrero faces the new masters of the world.
Monday, April 28, 2025.
Spain is paralyzed by the largest power outage in its history. Emma Bosch, director of StarCo’s Spanish subsidiary, rushes to her father’s bedside, whose life depends on a ventilator. She will never arrive.
In the United States, the lifeless bodies of several female employees of the famous billionaire Milton Gail — the eccentric and brilliant founder of StarCo — are discovered. All of them were pregnant.
This marks the beginning of the extraordinary investigation that Lucia Guerrero will conduct on both sides of the Atlantic, and within the ultra-secret facilities where the present and future of billions of people are being invented — leading up to an unforgettable face-to-face confrontation with the man who has seized control of the earth and of space.

🎧 Fragrancia,
by Paul Richardot
Narrated by Anatole De Bodinat
Thriller
2025
342 pages / 6H58
Counts for #parisinjuly2026

Not too sure how I discovered this one, but it sounds original. This is the author’s first novel.
Here is my translation of the French synopsis:

What if you could relive your most precious memories through their scents?
This immersion into the past is what the company Fragrancia offers to a select few through SVM, a psychotropic substance.
But as illegal networks multiply, Fragrancia is forced to keep its activities secret. Officially, HĂ©lias, 24, is an aromatherapist. In reality, he is training to become a Fragrancia olfate — one of those gifted specialists capable of translating a memory into a chemical formula.
Who would have thought that the hypersensitivity he suffers from would allow him to develop an extraordinary sense of smell? But when he crosses paths with Nora, right-hand woman of the founder and someone willing to do anything to protect Fragrancia’s interests as well as her own, HĂ©lias finds himself caught up in a police investigation and soon discovers that crime, too, has a scent.

Eiffel Tower Orange

HAVE YOU READ OR ARE YOU PLANNING
TO READ
ANY OF THESE?
WHAT ARE YOUR READING PLANS FOR JULY?
WILL YOU SPEND SOME TIME WITH US IN FRANCE?
Be sure to leave your links, so I can visit

https://linktr.ee/wordsandpeace

2026: June wrap-up

FranceBookToursButton180x180 JUNE 2026 WRAP-UP

Short books, but great reads in June!
I participated in Reading the Meow,
and am hosting Six in Six – you can link your own post until July 31.

📚 Here is what I read in June:

11 books 
8 in print 
=  with 1,552 pages, a daily average of 51 pages/day
3 in audio
= 17H43, a daily average of 35 minutes/day

2 in scifi:

  1. More Than Human, by Theodore Sturgeon – audio
  2. The Inheritors, by William Golding

2 in mystery:

  1. Rien qu’une belle perdue (Une enquĂȘte du commandant Gaspard Cloux, 2), by Eric Fouassier
  2. Le Flair du petit docteur, by Georges Simenon

2 in nonfiction:

  1. The Comic Book Story of Video Games: The Incredible History of the Electronic Gaming Revolution, by Jonathan Hennessey – graphic-“novel” format
  2. Ocean: Earth’s Last Wilderness, by David Attenborough & Colin Butfield – audio

2 in literary fiction:

  1. Thomasina, by Paul Gallico
  2. A Madman’s Diary, Xun Lu (one short story) – audio

2 in manga / cat adventures:

  1. Cat + Crazy #3, by Wataru Nadatani
  2. The Masterful Cat Is Depressed Again Today #1, by Hitsuzi Yamada

1 in poetry:

  1. Red Bird, by Mary Oliver
MY FAVORITE BOOKS THIS PAST MONTH

  Thomasina  Ocean

READING CHALLENGES & OTHER RECAP

📚 Total of books read in 2026 = 61/150
(41%, 12 books behind for my Goodreads challenge)
📚 Classics Club 5th list: 79/100
(from December 2024-until November 2029)
📚 Japanese Literature Challenge 19: 5/5 books
+ 3 books outside the challenge dates
📚 Hundred Years Hence Reading Challenge (#HYH26) (hosted by Neeru) = 1/4 + 1 DNF
📚 BookBound: 8 in 2024, 8 in 2025, 6 in 2026
📚 Number of books added to my TBR this past month = 23

Compared to my monthly goals: not too good!

  1. Compared to My June TBR = 5/7 (+ 2 DNF)
  2. 1 book for my BookBound project  
  3. From my TBR: 1 book in print 
  4. a book in Spanish/Italian – alternate = in process
  5. From my TBR: the last one I ran into on a blog, etc = 1
  6. From my TBR: from my jar or 1 I recently added to my TBR = 2
  7. From my TBR: 2 classics at least = 5
  8. 1 audiobook in French 

📚 In June,
– I traveled to: China, France, Japan, Scotland, and US
– 5 books published between 1926-1957
– I read 3 book in translation (from the Chinese and Japanese)
– and 2 books in French
– 6 books came from my public library
– I DNFed 2 books
(click on the link to see why):
The Blind Woman of Sorrento, by Francesco Mastriani
Descent into Hell, by Charles Williams
– not in the mood for this right now

📚 Special projects I did in June:

OTHER BOOK  REVIEWED THIS PAST MONTH

Ni le jour ni l'heure

MOST POPULAR BOOK REVIEW THIS PAST MONTH

Flight Behavior

 click on the cover to access my review

MOST POPULAR POST THIS PAST MONTH
– NON BOOK REVIEW –

Nonfiction: Expert on books on books
The bots are untameable,
but I hope you will discover great titles
through these older posts

BOOK BLOG THAT BROUGHT ME MOST TRAFFIC THIS PAST MONTH

Readerbuzz

please click to go visit this blog, lots of good things there

TOP COMMENTERS 

Marianne at Let’s Read
Deb at Readerbuzz
Tammy at Books, Bones & Buffy
please go and visit them,
they have great blogs

BLOG MILESTONES 

3,393 posts
over 5,270 followers
over 828,270 hits

📚 📚 📚

Come back tomorrow to see
my reading plans and events for July!
How was YOUR month of May?

Sunday Post #161: books and Sudoku

 Sunday Post

The Sunday Post is a weekly meme hosted by
Kimberly @ Caffeinated Book Reviewer.
It’s a chance to share news.
A post to recap the past week on your blog,
showcase books and things we have received.
Share news about what is coming up
on your blog
for the week ahead.
See rules here: Sunday Post Meme

*** 

This post also counts for

Sunday Salon     WWW Wednesdays 2

#SundayPost #SundaySalon
#WWWWednesday #WWWWednesdays

Click on the logos to join the memes

This has been a busy week, with books and Sudoku.
Yes, I do like Sudoku. Recently, Jay from Seoul, South Korea, contacted me and offered to send me a wonderful Sudoku Box!
Check my short unboxing video!
Here is the link to TheSudoku (they also offer the Nonogram).
Check also their Instagram. On their profile, you can find the link to buy the product, depending on the country you live in (US, Canada, UK, Australia, and more!)

Here is what I posted this week:

And as a reminder, Paris in July is coming soon!
On July 1st, there will be a MisterLinky available for you to connect your posts. And we have three interesting books lined up (see the right margin on France Book Tours).
Remember, Paris in July is not just about Paris, and not just about books:

During this month [of July],
our goal is to embrace and honor our French encounters
by immersing ourselves in various activities
like reading, watching, listening, observing, cooking,
and indulging in all things French!”

📚 JUST READ / LISTENED TO 🎧 

The Comic Book Story of Video Games🎼The Comic Book Story of Video Games:
The Incredible History of the Electronic Gaming Revolution,
by Jonathan Hennessey
and Jack McGowan (Illustrator)
Nonfiction / Video Games / Technology / History / Graphic-novel
2017
192 pages

The Comic Book Story of Video Games is a fascinating graphic-”novel” nonfiction overview of how video games started and how they evolved until 2017, when the book was published.

It is excellent at showing how technical advances allowed games and various platforms to develop. It also shows all the important people behind them, as well as the tough competitions between various companies.
It’s in a way more than the history of video games, as it also focuses on international history, relationships between countries, cooperation or rivalry, giving a few genius minds the impetus to develop new techniques and new games.
The whole book is thus so informative, on the games themselves, on their creators, but also on broader technology and world history!

I also like the Spotlight sections on some brilliant minds.
The book could have been longer. I would have appreciated as much development on the recent years as on the very beginning.
My big regret is it was published nearly ten years ago, and a lot has happened for video games since. But on the last page, the author reflects on the future, and what he thinks about the role of AI for video games is already happening.

The Inheritors 📚 The Inheritors,
by William Golding
scifi
1955
233 pages
Counts for my Classics Club 5th list
Received through Netgalley

I saw this classic scifi on Netgalley, so of course I went for it. I had planned to read it in January, but didn’t have time.

Here are a few impressions before my full review next week.
The prose is stunning. So physical and intense.
Since 1955, when he wrote it, we know the Neanderthals were advanced, they were for instance those who did the murals at Lascaux, not Homo Sapiens.
In this book, he still considers them closer to animals than humans. Still, it doesn’t change his point, which is how we reacted to beings that looked different from us.
And that’s not a nice picture… and we are the inheritors…

Ocean

🎧 Ocean: Earth’s Last Wilderness,
by David Attenborough
and Colin Butfield
Narrated by both authors
Nonfiction / Nature / Science / Environment
2025
400 pages / 8H54

Thanks to Lin, I recently discovered the Discord Group Rewild YourShelf.
This book is their June pick, so I decided to listen to it, as my library had it on audio.
It’s narrated by both narrators.
I learned so much!

Of course narrated by the author (plus by the co-author Colin Batfield). Attenborough’s voice is so good!
In fact, I had watched many DVDs and videos by him, but had not realized he had also written many books!
Sir David has the advantage to have led a long life (he just celebrated his 100th anniversary in May. So he has seen a lot in his life, how the environment was when he was a young man, and what we have done to it, especially to the ocean.
But in fact, he doesn’t focus in the bad things. Rather, on wonderful examples around the world where local populations have taken the matter in hand and have launched into ambitious and courageous initiatives to revive the ocean. And it is working!
Great examples in Antarctica as well, where all nations have been cooperating together for the sake of the planet, including during the Cold War.
Attenborough is full of hope, in these examples and in the new generations.
The last chapter does invite us to change our perspective, the only way all these local efforts will bear fruit for generations.

So this is a very positive book. A nice hopeful balance compared to The Inheritors! 

📚READING / LISTENING  TO 🎧 

Just a couple of the many titles I’m currently reading/listening:

Red Bird

🐩 Red Bird,
by Mary Oliver
Nonfiction / Poetry / Nature
2008
78 pages

Humming along in my project of reading all of her poetry collections, in chronological order.

“This collection of sixty-one new poems, the most ever in a single volume of Oliver’s work, includes an entirely new direction in the poet’s work: a cycle of eleven linked love poems-a dazzling achievement.
As in all of Mary Oliver’s work, the pages overflow with her keen observation of the natural world and her gratitude for its gifts, for the many people she has loved in her seventy years, as well as for her disobedient dog, Percy.
But here, too, the poet’s attention turns with ferocity to the degradation of the Earth and the denigration of the peoples of the world by those who love power.
Red Bird is unquestionably Mary Oliver’s most wide-ranging volume to date.”

Ruptures

🎧 Ruptures (Lucia Guerrero #3),
by Bernard Minier
Narrated by Alice Taurand
Thriller / Dystopia?
March 2026
540 pages / 14H29

A few years ago, I listened to La Vallée by Bernard Minier. Fabulous writing, but it was very intense. Still, seeing the synopsis, I decided to try this one.

I’m at the beginning: when the famous American billionaire Milton Gail — the eccentric and brilliant founder of StarCo, also the richest man in the world (by now, you have guessed whom he stands for) is giving a talk on the future of our society, Spain gets paralyzed by the largest power outage in history.
Even within a few minutes, you can see how good the author is at portraying his characters and their mindsets. I have great hope for this book, though it’s probably going to be very dark.
Here is my translation of the official French synopsis:

Lucia Guerrero faces the new masters of the world.
Monday, April 28, 2025.
Spain is paralyzed by the largest power outage in its history. Emma Bosch, director of StarCo’s Spanish subsidiary, rushes to her father’s bedside, whose life depends on a ventilator. She will never arrive.
In the United States, the lifeless bodies of several female employees of the famous billionaire Milton Gail — the eccentric and brilliant founder of StarCo — are discovered. All of them were pregnant.
This marks the beginning of the extraordinary investigation that Lucia Guerrero will conduct on both sides of the Atlantic, and within the ultra-secret facilities where the present and future of billions of people are being invented — leading up to an unforgettable face-to-face confrontation with the man who has seized control of the earth and of space.

📚  BOOK UP NEXT 🎧

The Eleventh Hour

📚 The Eleventh Hour: A Quintet of Stories,
by Salman Rushdie

Literary fiction / Short-stories
2025
254 pages
Received through Netgalley

Yes, I’m late on my Netgalley shelf.
Anyway, I have enjoyed several books by Rushdie, so when I saw this was available, I jumped on it,

“If old age was thought of as an evening, ending in midnight oblivion, they were well into the eleventh hour.
Two quarrelsome old men in Chennai, India, experience private tragedy against the backdrop of national calamity. Revisiting the Bombay neighbourhood of Midnight’s Children, a magical musician is unhappily married to a multibillionaire. In an English university college, an undead academic asks a lonely student to avenge his former tormentor.
These five dazzling works of fiction move between the three countries that Salman Rushdie has called home – India, England and America – and explore what it means to approach the eleventh hour of life. They are the reckoning with mortality that we all must one day make, and speak deeply to what the author has come from and through.

Do we accommodate ourselves to death, or rail against it? How can we bid farewell to the places that we have made home? How do we achieve fulfilment with our lives if we don’t know the end of our own stories? The Eleventh Hour ponders life and death, legacy and identity with the penetrating insight and boundless imagination that have made Salman Rushdie one of the most celebrated writers of our time.”

📚  THE LINK OF THE WEEK 📚

Coming in September:
a new book by Marguerite Yourcenar!!

🎧  THE MUSIC OF THE WEEK  🎧 

Vertige, by aZur
Theo was also part of la Star Academy this year,
loving it!

📚  LAST BOOK ADDED TO MY GOODREADS TBR 📚 

Mishima

📚 Mishima: A Biography,
by John Nathan

Nonfiction / Biography / Japanese Literature
1974
300 pages

Mishima was a fascinating character, and I enjoyed several books by him. I just ran into this biography.

“At forty-five, Yukio Mishima was the outstanding Japanese writer of his generation, celebrated both at home and abroad for The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea. In 1970 he startled the world by stepping out onto a balcony in Tokyo before an assembly of troops and plunging a sword into his abdomen; a disciple then beheaded him, completing the ritual of hara-kiri.

John Nathan’s riveting biography traces the life of this tortured, nearly superhuman personality. Mishima survived a grotesque childhood, and subsequently his sadomasochistic impulses became manifest — as did an increasing obsession with death as the supreme beauty.

Nathan, who knew Mishima professionally and personally, interviewed family, colleagues, and friends to unmask the various — often seemingly contradictory — personae of the genius who felt called by “a glittering destiny no ordinary man would be permitted.””

📚📚📚

HAVE YOU READ ANY OF THESE BOOKS?
HOW WAS YOUR WEEK?
BE SURE TO LEAVE THE LINK TO YOUR POST