Spring Break season is upon us, and the sun is (finally) starting to come out again. Whether you’re planning a beach vacation or planning to lay out in your backyard, here are some mysteries that perfectly complement that beach reading energy.

Bea was raised to be a con-woman, following in the footsteps of her cruel and cunning mother, but she vows to put all of that behind her when she begins dating the heir to one of the country’s wealthiest families. But as the past is known to do, it comes back to haunt her and puts everything she’s worked so hard for in jeopardy.

The Fury largely surrounds a gathering on a private Greek island, where a former Hollywood star and her closest friends flock for a weekend away. A storm hits, a murder occurs, and everything is not as it seems. It’s a pretty standard mystery template, but this author puts his brand of unique twist on the story.

This book’s setting reminds me very much of the East Coast island where my dad’s summer beach house is located. I’ve only been once, but there are no cars on the island, with only one ferry in and out, and the entire time I was there all I could think was that this is a perfect setting for a mystery novel. Fire Island, the setting of this story, is very similar. Privileged families come and spend the summer there, some going back generations.

When a young boy riding his bike comes across a dead body, their normally idyllic island’s dark underbelly is exposed for all to see. While it is chiefly about a murder, Bad Summer People is also a seriously funny, snarky commentary on the absurdity of the white upper-class elite.

The Retreat is a sequel to The Sanatorium, a Reese Witherspoon’s Book Club pick from a couple of years ago. While it is probably not strictly necessary to read The Sanatorium first, there will be a few things that you miss or are confused about if you start the story here.

Detective Elin Warner finds herself at a newly-opened wellness retreat on the English coast, built on an island that was rumored to be the lair of a serial killer. When one of the guests dies, seemingly from a tragic fall, secrets and whispers of old curses abound, and it’s up to Detective Warner to put the pieces together. The premise of this book is immediately intriguing, and it will keep you turning pages up until the very end.

This book has a fantastic framing device of a true crime sort of podcast and centers two very different marriages and two very different women whose connection is that they were born on the same day. The way this book is structured is incredibly interesting, and the twist comes before you expect it. If you’re paying attention you’ll figure it out, but it’s satisfying nonetheless.

None of This is True, as the title suggests, leaves you wondering what is true and what is lies. The characters and their relationships are well fleshed out and the plot will keep you on your toes. Reading this book will keep you hooked from start to finish.

Lana is a high-powered businesswoman who finds herself staying in a sleepy coastal town with her daughter and granddaughter, forced by circumstances to try to relax for seemingly the first time in her life. When her kayaking, adventurous, outdoorsy granddaughter Jack finds a murder victim floating in the water, it gives Lana a renewed sense of purpose — protect Jack. And in order to protect Jack, they have to find out what happened.

Mother-Daughter Murder Night is not only an excellent mystery, but it’s also a very heartfelt story about family dynamics, mother-daughter relationships, and everything that goes with it.

All Her Little Secrets follows a successful corporate attorney who happens to be having an affair with her boss. Her life gets thrust into turmoil when said boss turns up shot in the head in his office. What results is a clashing of past and present in a world where racism is all over the place, insidious and unavoidable. This book is giving Get Out meets an episode of Law and Order, and it’s both fun to read and makes a poignant point.

This book features excellent details and descriptions, and lots of little twists and turns. It’s very suspenseful, and probably a little too intense to fully be considered a beach read, but it’s got that page-turning, high-action thing going on that I always enjoy on a beach.

Emily is on vacation with her best friend Kristen, when she returns to their hotel room to find it covered in blood. Kristen says that she’s been attacked, and she was acting in self-defense. But then it happens all over again, and as Emily tries to return to her regular life and settles down in a relationship, Kristen appears once again and sends everything into chaos.

We Were Never Here explores toxic friendship in a devious and thrilling way. This book is more a psychological thriller than a mystery, but the obvious vacation vibes and page-turning tension make this a perfect beach read.

Note: some of the links included here are Amazon Affiliate links, which means if you purchase through said links, The Nora Theory gets a cut.

11 responses to “Best Beach Read Mysteries”

  1. […] Pirate Girls has all the details a reader can expect from a new adult romance. There’s tension, abundant miscommunications, secret feelings, and so, so much angsty drama. This book is perfect if you want something fun, easy, and light to read this summer. […]

  2. […] While the plot is easy to guess, the author’s writing style still lends itself to keeping the reader engaged with lots of drama, intrigue, and suspense. The Housemaid is the perfect example of a page-turner. This would be a great option to read on a flight, or if you’re looking for an easy book to rip through on vacation. […]

  3. […] lounge, whether it’s in a beaten-up pool chair in your normal backyard or on a fancy island beach […]

  4. […] Lie Wins is perfect for those who liked Stone Cold Fox by Rachel Koller Croft. It has a very similar energy, especially in the beginning. The two stories […]

  5. […] and it ends with a sense of deep catharsis. The Sanatorium is perfect for winter, The Retreat is perfect for spring and summer, but The Wilds feels like a crisp fall, and it’s worth reading any time of the […]

  6. […] We Love the Nightlife by Rachel Koller Croft is a creative thriller, with a unique concept that sets it apart from its contemporaries. A vampire thriller set in London, We Love the Nightlife moves through time from 1979 to 2021, following Nicola and Amber as they navigate their lives partying their way through the nightlife scene. At its core, it’s a story about toxic female friendship—something every woman can relate to. Nicola is a vampire who’s been frequenting London’s social scene for nearly two hundred years, but nothing has captured her love quite like a disco dance floor. When she sees Amber Wells, a gorgeous but bored housewife, commanding attention under the club’s spotlights, dancing like she’s made for it, Nicola offers her a deal. She offers Amber an eternity living for the nightlife. But fifty years later, after Nicola breaks her trust, Amber begins to wonder if she made the right decision after all. From 1979 to 2021, these women go on a journey involving devious lies and gruesome murders, but through it all, the party never stops. Until it does. We Love the Nightlife is a phenomenal, fast-paced read that adds something incredible and new to the world of thrillers. […]

  7. […] From 1979 to 2021, these women go on a journey involving devious lies and gruesome murders, but through it all, the party never stops. Until it does. All the truths are revealed with shocking twists and incredible drama. We Love the Nightlife is a phenomenal, fast-paced read that adds something incredible and new to the world of thrillers. […]

  8. […] missed. While it was marketed as a murder mystery, this book did not turn out to be much of a mystery in the end, more a thriller, and because I was expecting something else, this prevented the book […]

  9. […] Last One At The Wedding by Jason Rekulak is part mystery, part thriller, and part family drama. It explores complicated family dynamics and the dark side of […]

  10. […] Verity and Gone Girl will find familiar. It uses a unique premise to dive into classic themes in mysteries, and with a decidedly unreliable narrator, readers are left not knowing who to […]

  11. […] generally like to go into mystery novels completely blind, so I knew absolutely nothing about Don’t Let Him In by Lisa Jewell when I […]

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