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“Reading has been unfairly maligned as an indoor activity for far too long,” Bekah Waalkes wrote this past spring. “As a child, when nice weather came around, I was told to put down my book and go play outside.” But why can’t reading a book be a form of outdoor play? Reading outside can also be a practice in sustained attention, Waalkes writes: The act of focus can actually sharpen “one’s perception of the trees, the soil, the friends chattering at the next table in the beer garden.”

Today’s newsletter offers a guide to reading outdoors—how to make the most of it, and which books to take with you on your adventure.

Six Books You’ll Want to Read Outdoors

By Bekah Waalkes

Reading has been unfairly maligned as an indoor activity for far too long.

Read the article.

24 Books to Get Lost in This Summer

By The Atlantic Culture Desk

The Atlantic’s writers and editors have chosen fiction and nonfiction to match all sorts of moods.

Read the article.

The One Book Everyone Should Read

By The Atlantic Culture Desk

The Atlantic’s staffers on the books they share—again and again

Read the article.

Still Curious?

Take your book outside: Reading al fresco isn’t always idyllic, but it can be sublime, Emma Sarappo writes.The unbearable smugness of walking: Literary walking has long been celebrated, Michael LaPointe writes. Is it really worth the hype?

Other Diversions

How Justin Bieber finally gave us the song of the summerAlexandra Petri: “How I came to be in the Epstein files”The psychological secret to longevity

P.S.

A panoramic view from Rifugio Lagazuoi Courtesy of Tim Tumlin

I recently asked readers to share a photo of something that sparked their sense of awe in the world. “I had awakened early on this morning in July 2016 and tiptoed out of the hikers’ dorms at Rifugio Lagazuoi, which is perched at 9,000 feet in the Italian Dolomites,” Tim Tumlin, 74, in Darien, Illinois, writes. “As I hoped, the silent overwhelming beauty made the climb the day before more than worthwhile.”

I’ll continue to feature your responses in the coming weeks.

— Isabel


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