Which Booktok Books Summer 2025 Are Trending For Beach Reads?

2026-07-08 04:31:59
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5 Answers

Neil
Neil
Favorite read: Saltwater Kisses
Spoiler Watcher Translator
Got a poolside stack ready, but honestly I'm seeing a weird split this year. Most of the chatter is still about 'The Idea of You' and 'Fourth Wing' re-reads, which feels so 2024. The actual new 2025 stuff that keeps popping up for beach vibes seems to be either super-light romantic comedies or these bizarrely specific thrillers. Like, everyone's talking about 'The Paradise Problem' by Christina Lauren because it's a fake-dating-on-a-yacht premise, which is basically beach read catnip. But then my FYP is also flooded with people clutching 'The Midnight Feast' by Lucy Foley on a towel, which is a murder mystery at a luxury wellness retreat. Not sure a whodunit with body counts screams 'relaxing day in the sun' to me, but the algorithm disagrees.

I think the real trend isn't a specific title, but the aesthetic. Books with neon covers, palm leaves, or cocktails on the front are doing numbers regardless of genre. People want that Instagrammable pop of color next to their sunscreen. Saw a video with 'The Housemaid's Secret' by Freida McFadden, which is absolutely not a light read, but someone had it propped against a blue pool edge and it got a million likes. Makes me wonder if 'beach read' now just means 'physically portable and looks good in daylight.'
2026-07-09 04:39:06
8
Detail Spotter Student
Beach reads for me equal zero fantasy or heavy world-building. I want to be present, not decoding maps and family trees. So the trending list that actually works is all contemporary: 'The Rom-Commers' by Katherine Center for pure, uplifting fun, 'The Women' by Kristin Hannah for those who want historical drama but with a strong, cinematic narrative that pulls you along, and surprisingly, 'The Fury' by Alex Michaelides. That last one's a thriller, but it's set on a private Greek island and reads like a guilty pleasure movie. Short chapters, big twists, perfect for dipping in and out of between swims.
2026-07-10 16:25:25
5
Finn
Finn
Bookworm Nurse
I need my summer reading to be addictive but not demanding. The book that's absolutely owning my lounge chair time is 'Funny Story' by Emily Henry. It's her latest, and it has that perfect blend of witty banter, a little heartache, and a gorgeous lakeside setting. It feels substantial enough that you're invested, but the prose just flows so easily. It's the kind of book you look up from and realize you've been reading for two hours and your lemonade is warm. Another one that fits the bill is 'Just for the Summer' by Abby Jimenez—contemporary romance with a fake-dating premise and a lot of emotional warmth. These aren't necessarily the most viral, screaming-from-the-rooftops books, but they're consistently recommended in 'if you liked this, try this' threads for reliable, satisfying summer escapes.
2026-07-11 19:35:47
10
Gemma
Gemma
Favorite read: The Siren Song Series
Detail Spotter Pharmacist
Went down a rabbit hole on this yesterday. The consensus from my corner of BookTok is that 2025 beach reads are all about escapism to the extreme. It's either 1) books set in glamorous, faraway locations you wish you were at, or 2) fluffy, low-stakes rom-coms that feel like a cold drink. For the first category, 'The Holiday' by T.M. Logan is everywhere—it's about a group of friends on a villa holiday where secrets unravel. Perfect for reading while secretly judging your own friend group. For pure fluff, 'Not in Love' by Ali Hazelwood is trending hard; it's a STEM romance that's apparently very breezy and funny. I'm also seeing a resurgence of older, feel-good books like 'The Unhoneymooners' as a comfort re-read pick. The vibe is 'brain needs a vacation too,' so nothing too dense or literary.
2026-07-12 22:21:50
18
Isla
Isla
Favorite read: Hot Billionaire Series
Reply Helper Pharmacist
All the hype feels manufactured this summer. My feed is just the same three books with the same three beach towels, probably sent in a PR package. I grabbed 'The Paradise Problem' because of the buzz and it was fine, predictable. The real beach read I loved nobody's talking about: 'Greenwich Park' by Katherine Faulkner. It's a domestic thriller but the pacing is so smooth you blast through it in one afternoon, which is what I want from a pool book—total absorption. Don't trust the trending page; dig deeper into the midlist stuff.
2026-07-13 12:33:31
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Which booktok books summer 2025 titles are perfect for vacation reading?

4 Answers2026-07-08 13:24:29
there are a few titles that just scream 'beach bag' to me. The upcoming fantasy 'The Starfall Sea' by Lila Vance has everyone buzzing. It’s pitched as a sapphic pirate adventure with a found family trope and, from the snippets, the prose is all sun-drenched salt spray and yearning. It seems like pure escapism, which is exactly what you need when you're trying to disconnect from real life. On the completely different end of the spectrum, 'How to Bury Your Dog' by Sam Chen is getting a weird amount of traction. It’s supposedly a darkly comedic literary fiction about a man dealing with grief by trying to give his pet the perfect backyard funeral, and it keeps getting derailed. Sounds heavy, but the clips people are sharing are hilarious in a painfully relatable way. I could see reading that in one sitting by a hotel pool, feeling cathartic and a little unhinged. My own copy is pre-ordered. Honestly, I'm a bit skeptical about the hype for 'The Whisper Index', a thriller about social media influencers. It feels very 'of the moment' in a way that might date badly, but the premise of a popularity contest turning deadly is undeniably sticky for vacation reading—you can just turn your brain off and enjoy the mess.

What are the top booktok books summer 2025 must-read picks?

4 Answers2026-07-08 15:51:40
Alright, look, I've been seeing the same five books shoved down my throat on my FYP for weeks, and I'm officially over it. The 'must-read' label is getting slapped on anything with a vaguely cartoony cover and a three-word title. That being said, I did cave and read 'Funny Story' by Emily Henry, and... okay, fine. It was exactly the frothy, hate-to-love beach read I needed. It's not changing my life, but it's perfect for when your brain is melting from the heat. What I'm actually excited about is this darker, atmospheric fantasy everyone's sleeping on called 'Atonement of the Spine King'. It's got that intricate, morally grey political plotting that reminds me of older 'A Song of Ice and Fire' fans, but with a unique magic system involving tattoos. It's not a quick, buzzy read, which is probably why it's not dominating the charts, but if you want something to sink your teeth into over a few lazy afternoons, this is it. My trust in BookTok's taste is waning, but I'll still check out the hype for the sapphic pirate romance that's supposedly blowing up next month.
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