2021 Cape Cod Summer Reading List

Beach Bliss. Photo Credit: Chris Hackett/Getty Images/Tetra images RF

Jeff Shaw, July 1, 2021

There is something remarkably relaxing about reading on the beach. Whether holding an actual book (old school!), scrolling on a device, or flipping through pages of a magazine, a gentle breeze across your face, warm sand in between your toes and the natural sounds of waves washing ashore is a setting hard to beat.

There are many authors who live on Cape Cod. There are also a ton of books – fiction and non-fiction – about Cape Cod. Now best sellers most of these recommendations are not. But if you just want to get lost in a book for a while, why not pick one about the very sand you are sitting on? Enjoy these reads on your next day at the beach.

2021 Cape Cod Summer Reading List

Into A Raging Sea, My Life and the Pendleton Rescue, 1985

The autobiography of Coast Guard hero Bernie Webber, who captained the rescue boat CG36500, is a truly unbelievable account of a career in the U.S. Coast Guard.

Certainly best known for leading the unimaginable rescue of crew members of the Pendleton, which split in half during a storm in February, 1952, he also was stationed in Vietnam, in Truro, on Martha’s Vineyard, at Monomoy Light and on Lightships displaying an unassuming heroism that simple defines the greatest generation he was apart of.

Lovers of nautical history, and of course Cape Cod history, must know the stories told on these pages. It may give you a new respect for the fishermen, patrollers and scientists that devote their life to the sea.

Baseball by the Beach, Christopher Price, 1997

After the 2020 Cape Cod Baseball Season was cancelled, what better way to make up for lost time with this detailed historical account of the earliest years of baseball on Cape Cod, all the way to the modern day.

The early evidence of the Nichols Baseball Club of Sandwich (1860s), suspisouions that future major leaguers played (Mickey Cochrene), and the debate about which year was the true start of the Cape Cod Baseball League (CCBL). Price finds the newspaper evidence of the first time baseball was playedon Cape Cod, the first time the words “Cape Cod Baseball League” was printed and chronicles the changes from rosters full of local players to the recruitment of college stars, and the decision to use wooden bats. 

He also includes the history of each franchise (current and former), with team records for major statistical categories, wins, losses, and managers. A perfect companion for a summer afternoon. 

Legends and Lore of Cape Cod, Robin Smith-Johnson, 2016

A collection of short stories and vignettes you never heard of about people, places and noteworthy events that have occurred on Cape Cod. There are suggestions that the first to visit Cape Cod was not Samuel de Champlain, the first white explorer in 1605; not Bartholomeow Gosnold, credited with naming Cape Cod and Martha’s Vineyard; not the Pilgrims who landed in Provincetown and later colonized Plymouth, but the Lief Ericson and the vikings with are rumored to have wintered on Cape Cod in the summer of 1004.

There are accounts of famous people like President Grover Cleveland’s “Gray Gables” summer retreat and personal train station in Bourne, America the Beautiful author Katharine Lee Bates birthplace in Falmouth and of course the Kennedy’s compound in Hyannis Port.

Of course, you will find stories of major disasters (hurriance, shipwrecks, erosion, etc) to murder mysteries and requiste hauntings to where famous landmarks get their names (MacMillian Wharf, “Bellamy” anything, etc) to UFO sightings. Perfect book for the beach, before bed or if you get interrupted regularly.

Murder on Cape Cod, Maggie Day, 2019

There is no better name than “Cozy Caper,” the actual name of the fictional book club (Cozy Capers) in the story to describe this fun and quick read. Murder on Cape Cod is the first of a new book series by author Maggie Day, who takes you on a loop through the Upper Cape Cod fictional town of Westham. WIth plenty of Falmouth area references, both numerous and direct, it is hard not to visualize this quaint seaside village.

The main character is impossible not to like and who happens to live off a bike trail and owns a bike shop. Even the businesses owned by her friends are “delightfully Cape Cod;” bakery, candy store, bookstore, library, liquor store and lighthouse caretaker, who all convey the ease of getting around a main street by foot. While there is little to no mention of life on the water, a fishing knife becomes a prominent clue in the mystery.

The author sprinkles in actual places, a few opinions on life choices that transcend to real life, and actual recipes of meals included in the story arc in the appendix. 

In need of other recommendations? Check out the Cape & Islands Book Store Trail that span the peninsula and usually feature a section about books written by, or about, Cape Cod.