It鈥檚 time to build your summer stack: that squatty tower made up of equal parts brain candy, literati buzz, and guilty pleasure. This year鈥檚 juiciest offerings feature an African aid-work hustler, a monster in backcountry Alaska, a drifter in Hawaii, a Spaniard obsessed with murder and cheese, and a trio of river rats who risk jail and damnation to become legends of the Grand Canyon.
Start with , by 国产吃瓜黑料 contributing editor Kevin Fedarko (read an excerpt here). In the spring of 1983, snowmelt and rainstorms threatened to blow out Glen Canyon Dam, the concrete plug that harnesses the Colorado River above the Grand Canyon. To ease the pressure, dam engineers sent a raging pulse of water through the Canyon. A trio of grizzled river guides responded like Laird Hamilton to a buoy report: Launch time! Fedarko, a Colorado River boatman himself, crafts a dramatic tale of courage and hubris that encompasses the sweeping history of the Canyon.
An eminence grise of travel writing, Edward Hoagland reminds us that he is also a nimble novelist in . Children follows the transient life of Hickey, an American freelance aid worker who moves food and medicine through battle zones and bandit alleys, offering a vivid window into the continent鈥檚 hot spots. About an outlaw militia鈥檚 airstrip in the Congo, Hoagland writes, 鈥淭here are no police or consular officials or coroners: just vultures to do the autopsy and record the fingerprints and dentistry. You鈥檇 be recycled into wings.鈥
For a comic break, turn to , Jack Handey鈥檚 adventure novel set in a bizarro slice of paradise, where the narrator goes to escape his creditors. Handey鈥檚 burlesque works best in small doses, so take one bite at a time.
Having redefined the road-trip memoir in , Michael Paterniti travels into new territory with . In his quest to find the mejor queso del mundo, Paterniti discovers a Spanish cheesemaker caught up in a clash between the old and new worlds. Wealthy First World foodies beat a path to the poor cheese-maker鈥檚 door鈥攄estroying him in the process. 鈥淲hen you put something alive in your mouth,鈥 the old master tells Paterniti, 鈥渋t makes you more alive.鈥 But the arrival of global commerce can suck the life right out of that perfect moment.
Best for last: for those awaiting the next Jon Krakauer鈥揺sque classic, look to an Alaskan writer named Tom Kizzia. spins the spellbinding tale of the Papa Pilgrim family, a homespun clan that charmed the Alaskan locals with their old-timey government-hating ways鈥攔ight up until the day the eldest daughter exposed Papa as an abusive patriarch who terrorized his family. It鈥檚 a gripping nonfiction thriller told with masterful clarity, and I鈥檓 betting it will be the sleeper hit of the summer. Put it at the top of your stack.