Last year I gave my dad Green Hills of Africa and felt like a genius. Pops has never touched any heavy literary stuff, but I figured for sure a book on hunting would hook him on an author I love. “Get through some of the philosophical stuff in the early chapters,” I told him. “You’ll love the kudu hunt in the second half. He even shoots a rhino.” A few days later I got a text: “Couldn’t get through Hills. I’d rather just read my own notes on the woods.”
Jesus, Dad.
Barring the rare outlier, most of the time, good writing can be appreciated by all kinds of people. Some books “define a generation,” others speak broadly. It’s in this latter category that you and your dad can bond over books. So we took the best intergeneration books from our “Best Books of Summer” series. Yeah, he may read something about the Kent State shootings for an entirely different reason than you, but that’s part of the beauty of connecting over literature. And if he doesn’t like it — well, maybe you’ll find out something about him you didn’t know, like that he’s been writing about the woods himself. – Chris Wright
Editor’s Note: The following short reviews have been selected from our picks of the best fiction and nonfiction books of the summer.

The Sport of Kings
C. E. Morgan
The Forges, one of Kentucky’s most powerful families, are trying to breed their own Secretariat, a superhorse to shatter every record. Soon a black man comes to work on their farm, causing a clash between present-day morals and the family’s slave-owning past. $17