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Whether you are preparing for a long-haul flight that kicks off an Italian getaway or are simply stuck at home lazing around the yard, you probably need a book to accompany you in these last few weeks of summer. This August offers up new books about the 1979 Iranian Revolution, supernatural sisters in 18th-century England and the history of racist arson in 1970s America.

Iranian Revolution of 1979. The book contends that this event, which famously replaced a “secular, pro-Western shah” with a “radical Islamic cleric,” initiated a “seismic geopolitical realignment in the Middle East,” said The New York Times. The book also serves as a “cautionary tale” regarding the “gross foreign policy missteps” made by the U.S. that “continue to haunt the country to this day.” In everything from the Middle East conflict to the war in Ukraine, the “world is still experiencing the aftershocks of the fall of the shah,” said John Simpson at The Guardian — and “it’s not over yet.” (out now, $27, Amazon; Doubleday)

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The Atlantic. The book “wants to directly engage the subtext of all witch stories, in which femininity itself is perceived as a menace, and to try to understand why women are often seen as natural conduits for unnatural forces.” (out now, $27, Amazon; Holt)

The Guardian. The plot of this fantasy fable, told from the perspective of a magician, is “like a zany Dungeons & Dragons campaign played with friends,” said Donna Edwards at The Associated Press. (out now, $24, Amazon; Ace)

Amazon; Norton)

academia has broken your heart, the more you’ll love R.F. Kuang’s new novel,” said Beejay Silcox at The Guardian. “‘Katabasis’ knows how it feels to spend your best thinking years doing grunt work to further someone else’s ideas.” (August 26, $22, Amazon; Harper Voyager)

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