Summer weather invites you to slow down, unwind and lose yourself in a really good book. Get ready to refresh your summer reading list for 2026. These British authors have the perfect stories to see you through the warmer months, whether you’re soaking up the sunshine on a coastal holiday, or escaping the heat with a good book in hand.
To celebrate the long, sun-filled days, we’ve curated an essential list of British reads, offering the perfect way to update your summer reading list. Find a sunny spot, pour yourself something refreshing and settle in – these must-reads will carry you through the season.
Table of Contents
The Summer Escape
A holiday romance or something more? Single-mother Beth is desperate for a break. Reeling from the loss of her mother, she takes her five-year-old daughter, Ellie, and sets off to a charming holiday cottage on the Isles of Scilly. Trystan, the owner of the charming holiday cottage, adds something a little extra to the stay, and the holiday fling starts to feel like something a little more. But are the odds stacked against them, or is this a holiday romance that is going to stretch past the last few days of summer.
Read The Summer Escape by Hannah Ellis
The Dead of Summer: Strange Tales of May Eve and Midsummer
Tales of May Day Eve, Walpurgis Night and Midsummer Eve, or the Summer Solstice, and their rituals and feasts, have been told for centuries, but there are few that observe those ancient ways in today’s modern world.
Johnny Mains set out on a mission to bring the stories of the lost stretch of the ritual year back to life with a collection of tales of the bizarre, the beastly and the brutal. The Dead of Summer features stories from classic authors such as E.F. Bensen as well as lost classics from British and American obscure periodicals.
Read The Dead of Summer by Johnny Mains
My Big Greek Summer
Mandy, carefree and thirty-something, thought that her marriage to Danny, her first-love, would be forever. But after discovering Danny had a fling, she realises some big changes need to be made.
Mandy is single and determined to find her spark again; she hops on a plane with adventure and a second chance at happiness in mind. A spontaneous summer spent on a Greek island sees her making new friends, and falling for a tall, dark and handsome stranger. But Mandy is about to find out if a holiday romance can heal her broken heart.
Read My Big Greek Summer by Sue Roberts
Last of the Summer Wine (The Best of British Comedy)
Last of the Summer Wine from Richard Webber is an illustrated guide to a show said to be favoured by Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother and Prince Charles.
Set and filmed in and around Holmfirth, West Yorkshire, Last of the Summer Wine is the adventures of three unusual pensioners and their quirky neighbours. It is a true British classic appealing to all generations, and is the UK’s longest running comedy program.
This book includes:
- An overview of how Last of the Summer Wine was created and developed
- Gags and catchphrases from the show
- Did you know snippets of info about the show and cast
- Some of the most memorable scenes in full
- A Last of the Summer Wine quiz
Summer at the Castle Cafe
Alice Appleton finds herself single just after losing her mother. An escape to the Dorset coast sees her taking a job at the crumbling Castle Cafe – a million miles away from her London lifestyle, and a change she knows her mum would have approved.
Jay O’Donnell has spent his life in Castle Cove. With a tragedy in his past that haunts him, he has a mission to save as many people as possible through his role as a lifeboat volunteer.
While Alice is considering if the seaside village is the place for her to heal a broken heart, Jay is reminding himself that he can have no distractions; however, someone to talk to may be just what he needs.
The Secret Society of Librarians
When war breaks out in London 1939, librarian Joyce Kindred is determined to respond to a call for help from libraries across London. She knows that books offer safety and comfort, and wants no one left behind.
From that call for action comes a mobile library scheme, and sheltering a young Jewish refugee, Adela. It isn’t long before Joyce finds out Adela has a secret that could turn everything upside down.
In occupied Poland 1942, Dorotha knows her chances of escaping the barbed wire fences and the cruelty that happens at the Łódź ghetto is getting smaller every day. Reading is the only thing left she has some control over. From the depths of war comes a secret library of sharing books under the cover of darkness – and then, that too is taken away.
Two countries, two librarians, best friends. Will they ever find each other again?
Based on real events, The Secret Society of Librarians is an untold story of two ordinary women during WW2 that will have you turning pages.
Read The Secret Society of Librarians by Kate Thompson






