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STACKED

books

  • STACKED
  • About Us
  • Categories
    • Audiobooks
    • Book Lists
      • Debut YA Novels
      • Get Genrefied
      • On The Radar
    • Cover Designs
      • Cover Doubles
      • Cover Redesigns
      • Cover Trends
    • Feminism
      • Feminism For The Real World Anthology
      • Size Acceptance
    • In The Library
      • Challenges & Censorship
      • Collection Development
      • Discussion and Resource Guides
      • Readers Advisory
    • Professional Development
      • Book Awards
      • Conferences
    • The Publishing World
      • Data & Stats
    • Reading Life and Habits
    • Romance
    • Young Adult
  • Reviews + Features
    • About The Girls Series
    • Author Interviews
    • Contemporary YA Series
      • Contemporary Week 2012
      • Contemporary Week 2013
      • Contemporary Week 2014
    • Guest Posts
    • Link Round-Ups
      • Book Riot
    • Readers Advisory Week
    • Reviews
      • Adult
      • Audiobooks
      • Graphic Novels
      • Non-Fiction
      • Picture Books
      • YA Fiction
    • So You Want to Read YA Series
  • Review Policy

Cover Makeovers: Fall 2020 YA Edition

July 6, 2020 |

It’s makeover season!

Although it’s still summer here in the northern hemisphere and will be until September, publishers have been putting efforts behind promoting and sharing their fall 2020 YA books. There are so many great new books, as well as great previously-published books getting their paperback editions.

Many paperbacks look similar to the hardcover, but in a softer, cheaper, and more portable form. But as happens in YA quite a bit, a number of books get a new look in their paperback form. Be it for marketing purposes, for better highlighting the mood and tone of the book, or to get it on fresh reader radars who may have missed it before.

Let’s take a look at some of the YA books getting new looks in paperback in the coming season.

As always, the original hardcover is on the left, while the paperback is on the right.

 

Spontaneous by Aaron Starmer

 

 

I hadn’t realized Starmer’s book wasn’t in paperback yet, since the hardcover came out in 2016. Perhaps because the book is in development for adaptation. The new paperback will hit shelves September 8.

The original hardcover really pops. The yellow background with the orange title and clever burst of the “o” in the font. It’s not super surprising to see that the John Green blurb takes up more real estate than the title and author name, and in addition, there’s a tag line which reads “a novel about growing up . . . and blowing up.” The ice cream truck is central, and the girl in the image says so much with her body language. She’s over the truck, but she’s also tough.

In paperback, the ice cream truck is gone, as is whoever was standing beside the girl. Now she’s front and center, giving off the same vibe as in the hardcover. She’s tough and she’s over it, whatever “it” might be. The bubble is a clever little detail.

Missing from the paperback is the tag line, the standout color background, and clever font design for the title. The new color is more muted, as is the title. But the Green blurb is still present, though it blends into the background a bit more than before.

Either cover is fine. I’m not sure one is better than the other, nor does one draw me in more than the other as a reader. Perhaps the new cover is a hint at news of the adaptation coming soon?

 

Chicken Girl by Heather Smith

 

 

Chicken Girl! It reminds me a lot of Hot Dog Girl by Jennifer Dugan, of course, though rather than being a girl in a hot dog costume, it’s a girl in a chicken suit.

The hardcover doesn’t give any indication of that and, in fact, is kind of confusing all around. Is the girl actually a chicken? Does she raise chickens? The bright pink is fun, but the contrasting bright yellow feathers, as well as the black-on-yellow font for the book title and author name is a little challenging on the eyes (especially digitally).

In paperback, it’s a different story. We know exactly what the book is about: a girl who might be wearing a chicken costume, presumably for a job. The fact we don’t see a face of the girl is clever, especially paired with the tag line, which carried over from the hardcover: “Life can be a tough egg to crack.” The light pink with pastel yellow is much easier on the eyes. I love that the chicken head looks like it has an eye roll going on.

For me, this one is easy. The paperback is way more appealing and would make it pick it up. I suspect teens would feel similarly.

The paperback hits shelves September 8.

 

Everlost by Neal Shusterman (series)

 

 

Given the tremendous success in the last few years in Neal Shusterman’s career, it shouldn’t be any surprise one of his older series is getting a fresh look. It’s a good one, too!

Everlost looks perfectly creepy in hardcover, but it does feel like design that’s about a decade old. In no way is it bad, but it blends into so many other book covers of the time of its publication.

The paperback, on the other hand, feels fresh and contemporary. The cover also indicates it’s part of a trilogy, which is super helpful for readers and those who work with readers. Added to the paperback, in addition to a new — but still familiar — look, is that Shusterman is a New York Times bestseller. The title of the book gets a new font, with the second “e” getting a little special touch. Perhaps most noticeable is Shusterman’s name. What was once in the corner of the book is now front and center and takes up much more real estate.

I think both covers are effective and evocative, though the new paperback might edge out the original look a bit for me, if for no reason other than how fresh it feels.

You can grab Everlost in paperback September 8. All of the books in the trilogy will be getting the redesign, which is going to look so sharp on shelves.

 

Tithe by Holly Black (series)

 

 

 

Another series getting a whole new look is Holly Black’s “Modern Faerie Tale.” The originals, picked above, are dark and reminiscent of the YA fantasy which published around the same time (2004!). Think LJ Smith and the Vampire Diaries, among others. It’s really perfect for the series, and readers who are looking for dark fairy tales know what to pick up.

But the paperback design? It’s absolutely gorgeous. The books maintain the same feel, but they’ve been updated and modernized for today’s teen readers. The images pay homage to the classic covers, while also making clear these are still modern and relevant. Holly Black’s name is much larger now, and like with the Shusterman redesign, the series title is indicated on the front cover. The font is fresher, too.

For anyone with this series on your shelves at libraries or schools: this is your sign to update.

It’s not going to be surprising that I think the paperback redesign is a total win. The originals are great, but they’re of an era. The new looks are of this era.

The redesigned series will hit shelves October 20.

 

 

The Beauty of the Moment by Tanaz Bhathena

 

This cover redesign seems to be a classic of “what is the story about” variety. I love the hardcover. It’s eye-catching and unique. But what is it about? I love the brown model at the center, paired with the illustrated flora and fauna, as well as the swoopy script lettering of the title. There’s a tag line, too, which in digital rendering is super challenging to read: “Why fit in when you can stand out?” It’s a beautiful cover but it tells absolutely nothing of the story.

The paperback is a big change, though the illustrated girl definitely gives the same vibe about her as the model on the hardcover. It’s more clear that romance might be central to the story here, and even clearer is that the girl might not be entirely into it. It’s interesting that the background is of a skyline, which suggests an entirely different feel than the hardcover, featuring nature.

On paperback, the font is not noteworthy except for the thing that does make it noteworthy: it’s big! And rather than the author’s name being in all lower case letters, it’s now rendered in all uppercase. Both the title and author font stand out well on the muted-rainbow background.

The tag line has disappeared, but it’s been replaced with a blurb that explains the story so much better: “A titanium-strength love story.” In no way does the original suggest love story, but the paperback? Absolutely.

And interestingly, there’s a different cover for the Canadian edition of the book, which may be the inspiration for the new design in paperback:

 

This cover is a sheer delight. Look at the girl! Look at the boy who is trying so hard to be smooth with her! I love the elements of this one.

Both the paperback and hardcover are beautiful, but the paperback seems more true to the story itself. If only we had the choice of the Canadian edition because it’s especially good.

You can grab the paperback July 21.

 

 

What do you think? Which covers do you prefer? I’d love to hear your thoughts!

 

 

Filed Under: aesthetics, book covers, cover designs, Cover Doubles, Cover Redesigns, ya fiction, Young Adult, young adult fiction

Booklist: Getting Lost in a Book

June 24, 2020 |

If you’re reading this blog, you likely know what it’s like to get lost in a book: to read so deeply and intently that you lose track of time, forgetting to eat or go to sleep. The characters in the books listed here have an altogether different problem: they literally get lost in books. By choice or by chance, they open a book and travel inside its pages, becoming a part of the story – and perhaps changing it.

I was prompted to write this booklist by the announcement of Shannon Hale’s new book, Kind of a Big Deal, which features this trope. While it’s one I feel is pretty familiar to most readers, I struggled to find many middle grade or young adult books that focused on it. Perhaps the popularity of Inkheart in the early 2000s has misled me as to how widespread the trope is. I found plenty of books featuring characters from books visiting our world, but only four titles where someone in our world visits the book’s world (or, like Inkheart, where they can do both). Do you know of any others?

 

Beauty and the Beast: Lost in a Book by Jennifer Donnelly

Smart, bookish Belle, a captive in the Beast’s castle, has become accustomed to her new home and has befriended its inhabitants. When she comes upon Nevermore, an enchanted book unlike anything else she has seen in the castle, Belle finds herself pulled into its pages and transported to a world of glamour and intrigue. The adventures Belle has always imagined, the dreams she was forced to give up when she became a prisoner, seem within reach again.

The charming and mysterious characters Belle meets within the pages of Nevermore offer her glamorous conversation, a life of dazzling Parisian luxury, and even a reunion she never thought possible. Here Belle can have everything she has ever wished for. But what about her friends in the Beast’s castle? Can Belle trust her new companions inside the pages of Nevermore? Is Nevermore’s world even real? Belle must uncover the truth about the book, before she loses herself in it forever.

 

Inkheart by Cornelia Funke

12 year-old Meggie lives with her father, Mortimer, a bookbinder. Mo never reads stories aloud to Meggie because he has a special gift: when he reads a book aloud, the characters come out of the book and into the real world.

One night, when Meggie was a small child, Mortimer was reading aloud from a book named Inkheart when an evil villain named Capricorn, his aide Basta, and a fire-eater named Dustfinger escape from the book and into their living room. At the same time, Mo’s wife Resa gets trapped within the book.

Twelve years later, Capricorn is on a hunt to find and destroy all copies of Inkheart and use Mo’s abilities to gain more power for himself in the real world. Meggie discovers her father’s secret and, along with the help of Dustfinger and Meggie’s eccentric aunt Elinor, fights to free her father and destroy Capricorn.

 

The Book Jumper by Mechthild Gläser

Amy Lennox doesn’t know quite what to expect when she and her mother pick up and leave Germany for Scotland, heading to her mother’s childhood home of Lennox House on the island of Stormsay.

Amy’s grandmother, Lady Mairead, insists that Amy must read while she resides at Lennox House—but not in the usual way. It turns out that Amy is a book jumper, able to leap into a story and interact with the world inside. As thrilling as Amy’s new power is, it also brings danger: someone is stealing from the books she visits, and that person may be after her life. Teaming up with fellow book jumper Will, Amy vows to get to the bottom of the thefts—at whatever cost.

 

Kind of a Big Deal by Shannon Hale

From bestselling author Shannon Hale comes Kind of a Big Deal: a hilarious, deliciously readable YA novel that will suck you in—literally.

There’s nothing worse than peaking in high school. Nobody knows that better than Josie Pie.

She was kind of a big deal—she dropped out of high school to be a star! But the bigger you are, the harder you fall. And Josie fell. Hard. Ouch. Broadway dream: dead.

Meanwhile, her life keeps imploding. Best friend: distant. Boyfriend: busy. Mom: not playing with a full deck? Desperate to escape, Josie gets into reading.

Literally. She reads a book and suddenly she’s inside it. And with each book, she’s a different character: a post-apocalyptic heroine, the lead in a YA rom-com, a 17th century wench in a corset.

It’s alarming. But also . . . kind of amazing?

It’s the perfect way to live out her fantasies. Book after book, Josie the failed star finds a new way to shine. But the longer she stays in a story, the harder it becomes to escape.

Will Josie find a story so good that she just stays forever?

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: book lists, ya, ya fiction, Young Adult

June 2020 Debut YA Novels

June 22, 2020 |

It’s June! Deep into June, in fact. That means it’s time to dig into this month’s debut YA novels.

 

 

This round-up includes debut novels, where “debut” is in its purest definition. These are first-time books by first-time authors. I’m not including books by authors who are using or have used a pseudonym in the past or those who have written in other categories (adult, middle grade, etc.) in the past. Authors who have self-published are not included here either.

All descriptions are from Goodreads, unless otherwise noted. If I’m missing any debuts that came out in June from traditional publishers — and I should clarify that indie/small presses are okay — let me know in the comments.

As always, not all noted titles included here are necessarily endorsements for those titles. List is arranged alphabetically by title. Starred titles are the beginning of a new series.

Note: for some reason, the 2020 debut groups that have been so helpful for me in the past in compiling these lists seem to be scant this year. Likewise, those groups which do exist don’t have book titles or publication dates readily accessible. Here’s my repeat plea for making that easily located, not just for me but for any reader, librarian, and teacher who wants the essential information without having to click a ton of links.

I’m aware some book releases have been shifted, but this list is as up-to-date as is possible. This should be the last roundup really impacted by the flurry of publication date shifts.

June 2020 Debut YA Novels

Beyond the Break by Heather Buchta

Manhattan Beach native Lovette has two rules in life. One: no surfing. Not after her brother’s accident. Two: absolutely, no dating. And going into her junior year of high school, she’s pretty happy with that arrangement. She has friends, her church youth group, and God to fall back on when things get dicey. But after Jake Evans walks into her life, following these two simple rules gets a lot more complicated.

Jake is the boy from Lovette’s childhood who grew up. Handsome and sweet, he unlocks the part of Lovette that wants nothing more than to surf the waves again. And as their relationship grows, she begins to question what it means to be faithful: to her family, to God, but mostly, to herself.

Told with humor and heart, Heather Buchta delivers a sparkling debut that asks the question: Can you fall in love, be a teenager, and also be a good Christian?

 

*Court of Miracles by Kester Grant

In the violent urban jungle of an alternate 1828 Paris, the French Revolution has failed and the city is divided between merciless royalty and nine underworld criminal guilds, known as the Court of Miracles. Eponine (Nina) Thénardier is a talented cat burglar and member of the Thieves Guild. Nina’s life is midnight robberies, avoiding her father’s fists, and watching over her naïve adopted sister, Cosette (Ettie). When Ettie attracts the eye of the Tiger–the ruthless lord of the Guild of Flesh–Nina is caught in a desperate race to keep the younger girl safe. Her vow takes her from the city’s dark underbelly to the glittering court of Louis XVII. And it also forces Nina to make a terrible choice–protect Ettie and set off a brutal war between the guilds, or forever lose her sister to the Tiger.

 

 

 

 

The Falling in Love Montage by Ciara Smyth

Saoirse doesn’t believe in love at first sight or happy endings. If they were real, her mother would still be able to remember her name and not in a care home with early onset dementia. A condition that Saoirse may one day turn out to have inherited. So she’s not looking for a relationship. She doesn’t see the point in igniting any romantic sparks if she’s bound to burn out.

But after a chance encounter at an end-of-term house party, Saoirse is about to break her own rules. For a girl with one blue freckle, an irresistible sense of mischief, and a passion for rom-coms.

Unbothered by Saoirse’s no-relationships rulebook, Ruby proposes a loophole: They don’t need true love to have one summer of fun, complete with every cliché, rom-com montage-worthy date they can dream up—and a binding agreement to end their romance come fall. It would be the perfect plan, if they weren’t forgetting one thing about the Falling in Love Montage: when it’s over, the characters actually fall in love… for real.

 

Goddess In The Machine by Lora Beth Johnson

When Andra wakes up, she’s drowning.

Not only that, but she’s in a hot, dirty cave, it’s the year 3102, and everyone keeps calling her Goddess. When Andra went into a cryonic sleep for a trip across the galaxy, she expected to wake up in a hundred years, not a thousand. Worst of all, the rest of the colonists–including her family and friends–are dead. They died centuries ago, and for some reason, their descendants think Andra’s a deity. She knows she’s nothing special, but she’ll play along if it means she can figure out why she was left in stasis and how to get back to Earth.

Zhade, the exiled bastard prince of Eerensed, has other plans. Four years ago, the sleeping Goddess’s glass coffin disappeared from the palace, and Zhade devoted himself to finding it. Now he’s hoping the Goddess will be the key to taking his rightful place on the throne–if he can get her to play her part, that is. Because if his people realize she doesn’t actually have the power to save their dying planet, they’ll kill her.

With a vicious monarch on the throne and a city tearing apart at the seams, Zhade and Andra might never be able to unlock the mystery of her fate, let alone find a way to unseat the king, especially since Zhade hasn’t exactly been forthcoming with Andra. And a thousand years from home, is there any way of knowing that Earth is better than the planet she’s woken to?

 

Hood by Jenny Elder Moke

You have the blood of kings and rebels within you, love. Let it rise to meet the call. 

Isabelle of Kirklees has only ever known a quiet life inside the sheltered walls of the convent, where she lives with her mother, Marien. But after she is arrested by royal soldiers for defending innocent villagers, Isabelle becomes the target of the Wolf, King John’s ruthless right hand. Desperate to keep her daughter safe, Marien helps Isabelle escape and sends her on a mission to find the one person who can help: Isabelle’s father, Robin Hood.

As Isabelle races to stay out of the Wolf’s clutches and find the father she’s never known, she is thrust into a world of thieves and mercenaries, handsome young outlaws, new enemies with old grudges, and a king who wants her entire family dead. As she joins forces with Robin and his Merry Men in a final battle against the Wolf, will Isabelle find the strength to defy the crown and save the lives of everyone she holds dear?

 

If We Were Us by KL Walther

Everyone at the prestigious Bexley School believes that Sage Morgan and Charlie Carmichael are meant to be….that it’s just a matter of time until they realize that they are actually in love.

When Luke Morrissey shows up on the Bexley campus his presence immediately shakes things up. Charlie and Luke are drawn to each other the moment they meet, giving Sage the opportunity to steal away to spend time with Charlie’s twin brother, Nick.

But Charlie is afraid of what others will think if he accepts that he has much more than a friendship with Luke. And Sage fears that things with Nick are getting too serious too quickly. The duo will need to rely on each other and their lifelong friendship to figure things out with the boys they love.

 

 

Keep My Heart in San Francisco by Amelia Diane Coombs

Caroline “Chuck” Wilson has big plans for spring break—hit up estate sales to score vintage fashion finds and tour the fashion school she dreams of attending. But her dad wrecks those plans when he asks her to spend vacation working the counter at Bigmouth’s Bowl, her family’s failing bowling alley. Making things astronomically worse, Chuck finds out her dad is way behind on back rent—meaning they might be losing Bigmouth’s, the only thing keeping Chuck’s family in San Francisco.

And the one person other than Chuck who wants to do anything about it? Beckett Porter, her annoyingly attractive ex-best friend.

So when Beckett propositions Chuck with a plan to make serious cash infiltrating the Bay Area action bowling scene, she accepts. But she can’t shake the nagging feeling that she’s acting reckless—too much like her mother for comfort. Plus, despite her best efforts to keep things strictly business, Beckett’s charm is winning her back over…in ways that go beyond friendship.

If Chuck fails, Bigmouth’s Bowl and their San Francisco legacy are gone forever. But if she succeeds, she might just get everything she ever wanted.

 

*The Kinder Poison by Natalie Mae

Zahru has long dreamed of leaving the kingdom of Orkena and having the kinds of adventures she’s only ever heard about in stories. But as a lowly Whisperer, her power to commune with animals means that her place is serving in the royal stables until the day her magic runs dry.

All that changes when the ailing ruler invokes the Crossing: a death-defying race across the desert, in which the first of his heirs to finish—and take the life of a human sacrifice at the journey’s end—will ascend to the throne and be granted unparalleled abilities.

With all of the kingdom abuzz, Zahru leaps at the chance to change her fate if just for a night by sneaking into the palace for a taste of the revelry. But the minor indiscretion turns into a deadly mistake when she gets caught up in a feud between the heirs and is forced to become the Crossing’s human sacrifice. Zahru is left with only one hope for survival: somehow figuring out how to overcome the most dangerous people in the world.

 

*Little Creeping Things by Chelsea Ichaso

When she was a child, Cassidy Pratt accidentally started a fire that killed her neighbor. At least, that’s what she’s been told. She can’t remember anything from that day, and her town’s bullies, particularly the cruel and beautiful Melody Davenport, have never let her live it down.

But then Melody goes missing, and Cassidy thinks she may have information. She knows she should go to the cops, but she recently joked about how much she’d like to get rid of Melody. She even planned out the perfect way to do it. And then she gets a chilling text from an unknown number: I’m so glad we’re in this together.

Now it’s up to Cassidy to figure out what really happened before the truth behind Melody’s disappearance sets the whole town ablaze.

 

 

My Eyes Are Up Here by Laura Zimmermann

A “monomial” is a simple algebraic expression consisting of a single term. 30H, for example. Fifteen-year-old Greer Walsh hasn’t been fazed by basic algebra since fifth grade, but for the last year, 30H has felt like an unsolvable equation – one that’s made her world a very small, very lonely place. 30H is her bra size – or it was the last time anyone checked. She stopped letting people get that close to her with a tape measure a while ago.

Ever since everything changed the summer before ninth grade, Greer has felt out of control. She can’t control her first impressions, the whispers that follow, or the stares that linger after. The best she can do is put on her faithful XXL sweatshirt and let her posture – and her expectations for other people – slump.

But people – strangers and friends – seem strangely determined to remind her that life is not supposed to be this way. Despite carefully avoiding physical contact and anything tighter than a puffy coat, Greer finds an unexpected community on the volleyball squad, the team that hugs between every point and wears a uniform “so tight it can squeeze out tears.” And then there’s Jackson Oates, newly arrived at her school and maybe actually more interested in her banter than her breasts.

Laura Zimmermann’s debut is both laugh-out-loud funny and beautifully blunt, vulnerable and witty, heartbreaking and hopeful. And it will invite listeners to look carefully at a girl who just wants to be seen for all she is.

 

Smooth by Matt Burns

Fifteen-year-old Kevin has acne, and not just any acne. Stinging red welts, painful pustules, and massive whiteheads are ruining his life. In an act of desperation, he asks his dermatologist to prescribe him a drug with a dizzying list of possible side effects — including depression — and an obligatory monthly blood test. But when he meets Alex, a girl in the lab waiting room, blood test day quickly becomes his safe haven — something he sorely needs, since everyone, including his two best friends, is trying his last nerve. But as Kevin’s friendships slip further away and he discovers who Alex is outside of the lab, he realizes he’s not sure about anything anymore. Are loneliness and self-doubt the side effects of his new acne meds? Or are they the side effects of being fifteen?

Told in a bitingly funny first-person narration, this debut novel crackles with wry and wistful insights about the absurdities of high school, longing and heartbreak, and a body out of control. A surefire hit for teen boys and reluctant readers, Smooth gets under the skin of a tenth-grader who is changing — inside and out.

 

*Song of Wraiths and Ruin by Roseanne A. Brown

For Malik, the Solstasia festival is a chance to escape his war-stricken home and start a new life with his sisters in the prosperous desert city of Ziran. But when a vengeful spirit abducts Malik’s younger sister, Nadia, as payment into the city, Malik strikes a fatal deal—kill Karina, Crown Princess of Ziran, for Nadia’s freedom.

But Karina has deadly aspirations of her own. Her mother, the Sultana, has been assassinated; her court threatens mutiny; and Solstasia looms like a knife over her neck. Grief-stricken, Karina decides to resurrect her mother through ancient magic . . . requiring the beating heart of a king. And she knows just how to obtain one: by offering her hand in marriage to the victor of the Solstasia competition.

When Malik rigs his way into the contest, they are set on a course to destroy each other. But as attraction flares between them and ancient evils stir, will they be able to see their tasks to the death?

 

*The Stepping Off Place by Cameron Kelly Rosenblum

It’s the summer before senior year. Reid is in the thick of Scofield High’s in-crowd thanks to her best friend, Hattie, who has been her social oxygen since middle school.

But summer is when Hattie goes to her family’s Maine island home. Instead of sitting inside for eight weeks, waiting for her to return, Reid and their friend, Sam, enter into a pact—to live it up, one party at a time.

But days before Hattie is due home, Reid finds out the shocking news that Hattie has died by suicide. Driven by a desperate need to understand what went wrong, Reid searches for answers.

In doing so, she uncovers painful secrets about the person she thought she knew better than herself. And the truth will force Reid to reexamine everything.

 

What Unbreakable Looks Like by Kate McLaughlin

Lex was taken – trafficked – and now she’s Poppy. Kept in a hotel with other girls, her old life is a distant memory. But when the girls are rescued, she doesn’t quite know how to be Lex again.

After she moves in with her aunt and uncle, for the first time in a long time, she knows what it is to feel truly safe. Except, she doesn’t trust it. Doesn’t trust her new home. Doesn’t trust her new friend. Doesn’t trust her new life. Instead she trusts what she shouldn’t because that’s what feels right. She doesn’t deserve good things.

But when she is sexually assaulted by her so-called boyfriend and his friends, Lex is forced to reckon with what happened to her and that just because she is used to it, doesn’t mean it is okay. She’s thrust into the limelight and realizes she has the power to help others. But first she’ll have to confront the monsters of her past with the help of her family, friends, and a new love.

Kate McLaughlin’s What Unbreakable Looks Like is a gritty, ultimately hopeful novel about human trafficking through the lens of a girl who has escaped the life and learned to trust, not only others, but in herself.

 

Where We Go From Here by Lucas Rocha and translated by Larissa Helena

Ian has just been diagnosed with HIV.

Victor, to his great relief, has tested negative.

Henrique has been living with HIV for the past three years.

When Victor finds himself getting tested for HIV for the first time, he can’t help but question his entire relationship with Henrique, the guy he has-had-been dating. See, Henrique didn’t disclose his positive HIV status to Victor until after they had sex, and even though Henrique insisted on using every possible precaution, Victor is livid.

That’s when Victor meets Ian, a guy who’s also getting tested for HIV. But Ian’s test comes back positive, and his world is about to change forever. Though Victor is loath to think about Henrique, he offers to put the two of them in touch, hoping that perhaps Henrique can help Ian navigate his new life. In the process, the lives of Ian, Victor, and Henrique will become intertwined in a story of friendship, love, and stigma-a story about hitting what you think is rock bottom, but finding the courage and support to keep moving forward.

Set in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, this utterly engrossing debut by Brazilian author Lucas Rocha calls back to Alex Sanchez’s Rainbow Boys series, bringing attention to how far we’ve come with HIV, while shining a harsh light on just how far we have yet to go.

 

You Should See Me In a Crown by Leah Johnson

Liz Lighty has always believed she’s too black, too poor, too awkward to shine in her small, rich, prom-obsessed midwestern town. But it’s okay — Liz has a plan that will get her out of Campbell, Indiana, forever: attend the uber-elite Pennington College, play in their world-famous orchestra, and become a doctor.

But when the financial aid she was counting on unexpectedly falls through, Liz’s plans come crashing down . . . until she’s reminded of her school’s scholarship for prom king and queen. There’s nothing Liz wants to do less than endure a gauntlet of social media trolls, catty competitors, and humiliating public events, but despite her devastating fear of the spotlight she’s willing to do whatever it takes to get to Pennington.

The only thing that makes it halfway bearable is the new girl in school, Mack. She’s smart, funny, and just as much of an outsider as Liz. But Mack is also in the running for queen. Will falling for the competition keep Liz from her dreams . . . or make them come true?

 

If you haven’t yet seen this collection of highly readable YA nonfiction, either, a number are by debut authors and worth picking up. They’re super approachable and vital. I’ve only included the debuts here, but do take time to peruse the entire set. Two more are slated for October release.

Beyond the Gender Binary by Alok Vaid-Menon

In Beyond the Gender Binary, poet, artist, and LGBTQIA+ rights activist Alok Vaid-Menon deconstructs, demystifies, and reimagines the gender binary.

Pocket Change Collective is a series of small books with big ideas from today’s leading activists and artists. In this installment,Beyond the Gender Binary, spoken word poet Alok Vaid-Menon challenges the world to see gender not in black and white, but in full color. Taking from their own experiences as a gender-nonconforming artist, they show us that gender is a malleable and creative form of expression. The only limit is your imagination.

 

 

 

The New Queer Conscience by Adam Eli

In The New Queer Conscience, LGBTQIA+ activist Adam Eli argues the urgent need for queer responsibility — that queers anywhere are responsible for queers everywhere.

Pocket Change Collective is a series of small books with big ideas from today’s leading activists and artists. In this installment,The New Queer Conscience, Voices4 Founder and LGBTQIA+ activist Adam Eli offers a candid and compassionate introduction to queer responsibility. Eli calls on his Jewish faith to underline how kindness and support within the queer community can lead to a stronger global consciousness. More importantly, he reassures us that we’re not alone. In fact, we never were. Because if you mess with one queer, you mess with us all.

 

 

 

This Is What I Know About Art by Kimberly Drew

In this powerful and hopeful account, arts writer, curator, and activist Kimberly Drew reminds us that the art world has space not just for the elite, but for everyone.

Pocket Change Collective is a series of small books with big ideas from today’s leading activists and artists. In this installment, arts writer and co-editor of Black Futures Kimberly Drew shows us that art and protest are inextricably linked. Drawing on her personal experience through art toward activism, Drew challenges us to create space for the change that we want to see in the world. Because there really is so much more space than we think.

Filed Under: book lists, debut authors, debut novels, ya fiction, Young Adult, young adult fiction, young adult non-fiction

What I’ve Raved About On All The Books

June 15, 2020 |

Back in February, I highlighted eight books I’d raved about on Book Riot’s “All The Books” podcast.  Now that a few more months have gone by and I’ve now had the chance to highlight even more amazing new books, here’s a roundup of the titles I selected for March, April, May, and June.

Pooling these books into reviews like this is especially helpful now, as so many books released in these four months have fallen under the weight of the many things going on in the world around us. Here’s a reminder of what’s out there and why you should want to get reading. As always, I try to pick books that aren’t necessarily ones that get talked about a lot, though some of the below definitely have seen some talk (which is great!). There’s a mix of adult fiction and nonfiction, YA fiction and nonfiction, and maybe even a middle grade book or two. I like to think of these book picks to be a real glimpse into the ways my reading life moves.

 

March

The Story of More: How We Got To Climate Change and Where To Go From Here by Hope Jahren

One-sixth of the global population uses ⅓ of the world’s energy and half the world’s electricity. They’re responsible for ⅓ of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions, ⅓ of the world’s meat consumption, and ⅓ of the world’s sugar consumption. It’s statistics and data like this that Jahren breaks down for readers in a book that’s meant not to terrify readers about the overwhelming scope of global warming and climate change but instead, to instill hope that indeed, small changes add up over time. 

“Having hope requires courage” is her big message throughout the book, which was inspired by the classes she’s taught at universities. The book breaks down big topics, such as meat consumption, carbon dioxide emissions, energy creation and consumption, the growth in the use of plastics, and more, and looks at how just over the course of her own life the richest countries in the world have consumed more than their fair share and how that’s impacted less-wealthy countries, as well as the world as a whole. 

Unlike a number of climate change books, this one is data-driven and extremely accessible for the average reader. It doesn’t feel overwhelming — in fact, Jahren is reassuring that doing even the tiniest things adds up over the long haul. Can you go one night without eating meat? That can make a difference. Can you swap a flight for a trip on a train? What about purchasing lower-energy appliances, washing clothes with cold water, purchasing less stuff including food that you ultimately end up throwing away? 

By using less, we allow more resources to be better distributed among those on Earth. That, in turn, reduces creation of more, which can and does impact the overall vitality of the globe. 

Encouraging, accessible, and written conversationally, Jahren’s book should be a first stop for anyone interested in reducing their own footprint. It’s short, too, making it feel completely doable, as opposed to overwhelming and complicated. Start small, as she does with her students: dump open your briefcase or purse and count up how many of those items are made from plastic. What can you swap out for something not plastic when it runs the course of its life? 

And more, change in your own life doesn’t need to be global in scope, either. Choosing one area in your life to target for change is good work. If you change your consumption habits and swap soda for water at more meals, buy fewer processed goods, consume less meat (and she never says you need to go vegetarian or vegan, like other books preach), that does make an impact. 

The book doesn’t overlook the realities of living in a capitalist society and that it’s big corporations that have done this to us. That’s the binding thread throughout. But, by choosing to battle back with changes in our lifestyle as dictated by capitalism, we can better help our fellow inhabitants on Earth by sharing resources. 

 

Be Not Far From Me by Mindy McGinnis

The title of this book is inspired by Psalm 22, which is the verse prior to the one everyone seems to know. And that’s the most apt metaphor for what this book is, as well as who Ashley, our main character, is too.

Ashley is the main character in this story, and she’s got a hard and sharp edge to her. She’s a little rough, a little tumble, and she grew up with her father after her mom abandoned the family. They make do in a trailer, with very little money. It’s a small town in Tennessee and everyone knows everyone else. Tonight, Ashley is joined by her friends Meredith and Kavita for a party deep in the Smokies, where everyone will get drunk and do stupid things. That’s what you do when you’re a small towner on the edge of the wild. 

Except, as the party progresses and Ashley awakes needing to pee….she finds her boyfriend Duke having sex with someone who isn’t her. Drunk brain tells her the best course of action here is to run, so run she does. And that’s when things turn from bad to worse. 

She awakes deeply lost, with a mangled foot, and no idea where she ended up. She’s now on her own to find her way out of the woods and make her way back home.

Told over the course of roughly two weeks, we get to know not only Ashley’s current circumstances, we get to know her grit and determination. Turns out what can be off-putting in school can be extremely useful in the woods. She’s not afraid to make due with the things she finds, including a shelter in the form of a former meth lab, eating possum when there’s nothing else to eat, and using flint to remove parts of her own body so that infection doesn’t take over. But the longer she’s gone and further she attempts to feebly travel, she shares how and why it is she has these survival skills. 

Ashley’s experiences with religion play a fascinating role in her story, as does a relationship she fostered with a slightly older boy named Davey Beet.  He, too, was a person who liked the outdoors and respected it. Like Ashley, he found himself alone in the woods. But when he never returned, the community mourned his loss. No body was ever found, and Ashley keeps thinking about him and the lessons he taught her about survival as she herself fights for those very things. 

Perhaps Davey isn’t far away at all.

This one is pitched as Hatchet meets Wild and yes to both, except like I will forever argue, it’s a million times more compelling than Hatchet. You see the actions required to survive in such a place, but it’s not mundane or drawn out. We get to know Ashley very well, even though the story itself is pretty tight and fast paced. The tactics she takes can be pretty raw and unflinching but they’re absolutely in line not only with the realities of surviving in the wilderness alone, but also to who she is as a character. It’s a pretty insular read, insofar as we don’t get to know many other characters at all, save for Davey and Ashley’s father, both through flashbacks, but that is what makes it so compelling.

Hand to readers who like challenging protagonists, survival stories, and wilderness adventure books where things go really wrong. Then make sure you don’t go party too hard in the woods. 

 

Spirit Run: A 6000 Mile Marathon Through North America’s Stolen Land by Noé Alvarez

Noé grew up in Yakima, Washington, alongside his mother who worked in an apple-packing plant. As the son of two Mexican immigrants, he knew he was lucky to receive a scholarship to attend college, but a year into his program he is having a hard time fitting in and figuring out what it is he wants to make of himself as a first-generation Mexican American. This is a theme that will carry throughout the book, with no definitive ending, but along the way, Alvarez does a great job highlighting why this space of indecision, of opportunity, and of longing for connection and a place to fit in IS the immigrant story. 

At 19, Alvarez discovers the Peace and Dignity Journey, which is a movement by Native American and First Nations people meant to create cultural connections across the Americas through marathoning. He drops out of school as he realizes this is something he needs to do, and he begins his journey in Canada, where he runs along side individuals of a whole array of Native and Indigenous backgrounds and experiences. The journey takes him through all kinds of terrain, experiences of hunger and thirst and exhaustion, as well as land that has been stolen by colonizers and turned to profit at the loss of original culture, tradition, and pride. Throughout the marathon, he not only finds himself being pushed to his physical, mental, and emotional limits, but he faces being kicked out of the race over and over — which fuels his determination to fight harder, until the moment he knows he wants to end. 

When he finishes his race through Mexico and lands in Guatemala, Alvarez boards a plane and heads back home. He doesn’t have any answers, but he has found passion and connection with the land and the people of the land. 

What makes this book special is there’s actually very little about the race itself — something I could have read so many more pages on. Instead, woven into the runs are Alvarez’s anecdotes about his parents, about his home life, about the ways he’s lived what could be seen as a classic tale of a Mexican-American immigrant’s life. It’s a short read, but it’s packed with so much heart and soul, along with a tremendous sense of desire for finding one’s place in space and time, while understanding that being a person who isn’t white and privileged and living on stolen land in a country that isn’t his own makes finding oneself fraught and complicated. 

Readers wanting a story of an immigrant, of the child of Mexican migrants, will do well with this memoir. The ways it ties into Native American history and culture, too, adds a whole layer of complexity that’s necessary to better seeing immigration through a wide, thoughtful, and nuanced lens. Likewise, the marathon itself is a fascinating event and one I know I want to read a heck of a lot more about. 

 

Only Mostly Devastated by Sophie Gonzales

Before diving into the deeper parts of the book, I want to note this is the first YA book outside of my own where a character has polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) and talks openly about it that I’ve read. The description of it isn’t 1000% accurate, but that’s a thing only someone who has been seeing a specialist about it for a while and knows the ins and outs of the chronic and invisible illness would know — it is an incredible thing to see in a YA book, given it impacts 10% of those with internal reproductive organs. More please!

That said…

This is a queer riff on Grease. Ollie and Will had a whirlwind romance during  the summer when Ollie spent time in North Carolina with his family. He’s preparing to head back home to California for the new school year when his parents break the news they’re going  to be staying. His aunt, who has cancer, is really struggling, and being in North Carolina will be a way for them to help out with her husband and kids as she attends to appointments and caring for her own health. She will have ups and downs in the story, and it’s worth noting that she will die in the book. That’s not  really a spoiler nor something that impacts the romance here, but worth noting for anyone who might be tender about reading death. It’s handled extremely well. 

Ollie immediately finds a friendship with a group of girls at his new school — and immediately learns that, despite the fact Will doesn’t live in the same town he does, he does attend the same high school. But Will has stopped responding to texts and is cold at the sight of Ollie. What happened to their connection? Can it be kindled again?

Will isn’t out at school, among his basketball peers — many of whom are homophobic — and he worries that coming out will mean disappointment from his parents. This is why he’s keeping Ollie at arm’s distance and why, again and again, the two of them come close then once again fall apart. 

The thing is, neither Will nor Ollie can resist one another, and it’s this magnetism that keeps them working toward a goal of connecting, of finding the same romance they had  that summer. It will require Will being honest about who he is, as much as it will require Ollie to let down his preconceived notions of who he is and what it means to be a good partner in a relationship (for him, the challenge is understanding that it’s not only about his interests — he has to also participate in the interests and passions of his partner and show up for him). 

This is a capital-R romance, so Will and Ollie will have their happily ever after. It’s cute and sweet, but more than anything, this is a funny read. Ollie has a way with descriptions and words that is at times laugh-out-loud goofy, and his passion for Will is so whole-hearted. Given we see the world only through Ollie’s eyes, we don’t get the whole of who Will is or how he sees Ollie, but it is obvious Will wants to be with him, but he has to have a reckoning with himself and his world first to have that. 

Need a feel-good queer romance? This is a great pick. Even the loss is handled well and doesn’t make the book too heavy. The grief is explored thoughtfully, but not at the expense of what readers come to the book for: L-O-V-E. 

 

April

Goodbye From Nowhere by Sara Zarr

One thing that’s been consistent in Kyle Baker’s life is his family. It’s big, full of personalities, and every summer, they all gather at the Nowhere Farm to celebrate one another. This year, he’s bringing his serious girlfriend Nadia and cannot wait for her to meet them and get to know where he comes from. 

Things go well — Nadia loves his family and they seem to love her. But it’s not too long before everything Kyle thought he knew about himself and his family comes crashing down. His father breaks the news that his mother is having an affair. 

Kyle promises not to share that news with his sisters, but the silence begins to kill him. . . and it kills the relationship he has with Nadia, as he becomes distant and cold toward everyone. He’s struggling with how to process the news and it comes to a head the more he begins to think about the woman and child who are connected to the man with whom his mother is having her relationship. They don’t know, and when Kyle meets them both by chance, he’s further devastated carrying the truth around with him. 

So he does what feels right: he reaches out to his cousin, who helps him navigate the ups and downs of discovering family secrets and navigating what it means to see someone in a light different than one in which you’ve always held them. 

Sara Zarr’s latest book feels a lot like a Sarah Dessen book, and that’s a compliment. There’s tremendous real-world world building, with a complex family relationship that Kyle has to navigate. His relationship with Nadia at the beginning doesn’t last, though what we see of it is fascinating. They’re extremely mature on the outside, joking even about potentially getting married. But it becomes clear how immature Kyle is as he wrestles with the bomb his father delivered. He doesn’t seek support but distance, becoming cold and unapproachable toward someone he had such strong feelings for — as well as worries about what she might now think about the family he’d shown her to be something out of dream. 

This well-paced book is perfect for readers who love family stories, who love flawed but likable main characters — and Kyle is both of those things, even when he becomes extremely frustrating to watch — and those who want stories about what happens when the next generation of a family is poised to take over traditions that span their entire lives and the lives of their own parents. In the story, we learn that the Farm might not be around much longer, and this shift causes turmoil for Kyle and his generation who have to decide what stays, what goes, and what’s most important to hold onto when it comes to family. 

A quiet read that packs in a lot of really good stuff. I can’t recall the last time I saw a parental affair in a YA novel addressed quite like this, and I appreciate how much that will resonate with readers, both going through it or those who themselves have been through it. Kyle’s mom is certainly not given a pass here, but she is allowed to be a little more nuanced in regards to why she made the choice she did to pursue an extramarital relationship.  

 

Joy at Work: Organizing Your Professional Life by Marie Kondo and Scott Sonenshine

Even before the world descended into a pandemic, I saw little talk about Marie Kondo’s new book. I know we all read Life Changing Magic of Tidying Up, and without question, readers who loved that book are going to absolutely eat up her new title. But even more than that, I think this is a book that readers who are looking for a book about how to be their best at work or enjoy their job more will want to page through. It’s a shorty and reads quickly. 

The book flips between Marie Kondo sharing her insights and Scott Sonenshine, who is a business professor/researcher on organizational psychology — the study of how people operate in a workplace. 

Rather than give a blow-by-blow of this book, which is hard to do, here were some of the key takeaways for me while reading the book. I really and truly did take notes while reading and I plan on trying to implement or think about some of these things. This will likely apply more to white collar workers than those working in blue collar jobs or those in service industries, but chances are some of these principles will apply there, too. 

There are three key pieces of joy at work when it comes to what is on or in your desk: 1. It needs to spark joy personally, 2. It needs to be functional and aid in your work (these things might not spark joy), and 3. It needs to lead to future joy (things like receipts which lead to reimbursements).  When you focus on these three things, you’re better able to realize what your ideal work life looks like. 

When you sit down to clean, it’ll be through the same method as KonMari: books, papers, komono, and sentimental. 

The way that this book talks about organizing your digital work was especially helpful. Digital work includes documents, emails, and phone apps, and like with home KonMari, you’re instructed to thank everything you let go of for the service it provided. Recommendations included keeping the number of files and folders you have on your computer as low as possible. I loved a line about when it comes to social media, it pays to be choosy about who you follow, as that can help detract from overwhelm when it comes to cleaning out your profiles. 

Although this book is definitely about “stuff,” it’s much more than that, just as Tidying Up is. This is far more about the process of self-discovery than it is organizing, and it’s about the importance and power of choosing your things. That they offer how to look at what’s important in your work routines, meetings, and tasks is extremely helpful and straightforward: it’s a notecard methodology anyone can do. 

The biggest takeaway is that tidying should be part of your decision making process, and they give you the roadmap to make it so.

 

We Didn’t Ask For This by Adi Alsaid

Tonight is the night of the International School’s annual lock-in. It’s a beloved tradition and one that’s always legendary. All kinds of activities take place, from decathlons to dance parties, and  this year, Peejay is eager to be the master of ceremonies. His brother earned incredible respect when he was in charge, and Peejay is desperate to top him. 

Tonight, Amira wants to win the decathlon, keeping her passion for sports and her interest in other girls from her conservative mother. 

Omar wants to finally kiss Peejay tonight. 

Kenji wants to star in the improv show, proving acting chops are alive and well. 

And Celeste? As the new girl in the school, she’s hoping tonight she can make her first real friend since moving to another country from her Chicago suburban home. 

All of it looks like it should go on….until it doesn’t. Tonight, driven by her passion to make change in the world, Marisa Cuevas and a group of fellow environmentally-conscious students chain themselves to the doors of the school and refuse to let anyone else enter or exit the building until all of their demands are met. And those demands are many, ranging from the school banning single-use plastics to protective measures being enacted to protect a local island from destruction. 

As the night drags on, it becomes Marisa and her team won’t back down until their demands are heard — and not just heard, but met. 

One night bleeds into the next and then the next, and the protest goes on for a full week before things reach a breaking point. Students once  inconvenienced and angered by Marisa are now listening and even stepping up to help her. They know people who know people who can make change happen. So they do what they can now, hoping that meeting those demands not only gets them set free but also really does help change the world for the better.

It’s not smooth sailing, of course, as there’s a group within the school who are hoping to take down Marisa and her team, and they get closer and closer through the story.

Will all of her demands be met? How? And will everyone else be able to achieve the things they desperately hoped for when the lockin began?

Alsaid’s book is a smart look at standing up for what you believe in, and it’s really creative in execution. Marisa isn’t seen as a hero for championing these causes for a long time. She’s rather seen as the enemy until something drastic happens to her, and her peers not only begin to listen to her, but they begin to understand why it is she chose this as her hill to die on and why it is she chose to execute her protest during the lockin. 

I’ve read a ton of books this year on student activism and student activists, and this is a worthy addition to that collection. It’s especially noteworthy for the lack of immediate agreement seen among students, though — and this is an extremely diverse student body, as well as a student body with the means to make change happen, as they come from wealthier families. It’s a reminder that even though this generation of teenagers is vocal and stands up for their beliefs, it’s not universally agreed-upon or followed. It’s easy to forget that sometimes kids want to be kids and that in and of itself can be the challenge with making change. Are they supposed to be anything more? And why do we expect that? 

Creative, thought-provoking, and timely. 

 

Hidden Valley Road: Inside The Mind of an American Family by Robert Kolker

Trigger warnings on this one for mental health depictions that may be unsettling, for suicide, and for sexual assault and rape. 

Don and Mimi Galvin had 10 kids between the years 1945 and 1965, eight boys and two girls, who were the youngest of the family. Of the siblings, six of the boys were diagnosed as schizophrenic over the course of their lives, and this book explores how this family at this time and place highlight how far our understanding of schizophrenia has come, as well as how much is still largely unknown about it. 

The book alternates between telling the siblings’ and parents’ stories — how they came to have so many kids, the sorts of challenges they experienced with living with schizophrenia or being witness to it — with what science was doing in terms of researching schizophrenia through the generations. There’s a lot of argument about nature vs. nurture, and the Galvins became the first family ever studied by National Institute of Mental Health. They also became a way of understanding where and how schizophrenia may be genetic and along which bloodlines. Why was it none of the girls in the family experienced this illness but just the boys? 

Through the Galvin family, schizophrenia’s history and the treatment of those experiencing it are explored, from lobotomy to institutionalization to medication, and the fallouts of each of those treatments. Still to this day, the Galvin family DNA is being used in research to better understand the disease, and at the end of the day, even decades later, there’s still so little understanding. 

This book is extremely compassionate and empathetic, even as it delves into how troubled the Galvin family was outside of their mental health crisis. Don, the patriarch, turned out to be someone wholly different than anyone thought, while both of the sisters in the family and potentially a brother experienced sexual assault or rape from another brother. There’s the possibility some of the boys were victims of sesual abuse from a beloved church leader, as well. All of these things, combined with tremendous secrets Mimi kept from her kids about her own trauma growing up, only further make their story more fascinating, heartbreaking, and powerful. 

A slower read, but wholly immersive, this is an incredible well-done, balanced, and moving look at mental illness, schizophrenia, and a family that experienced the illness in many manifestations, ultimately highlighting the complexity, severity, and the need to continue researching what it is and how it works. 

 

May

 

Goldilocks by Laura Lam

The comps for this book are The Martian meets The Handmaid’s Tale and I don’t especially like either of those for comparison. This book is something different and, I suspect, given how eerily relevant and realistic it feels right now, maybe the marketing will be shifting, too.

Thirty years after the Atalanta took five pioneering women to space in hopes to settling a far-away planet named Cavandish, Naomi, one of  the Atalanta 5, is finally telling her story. It begins with grand theft spaceship — yes, the spaceship was stolen — and ends with Earth’s humans falling victim to a pandemic that may have been started purposefully. 

Naomi, who’d been raised by Valerie Black after the deaths of her mother and father, is deeply in love with the smart woman who invites her to be among the five women who will travel to the new planet in order to set up a new world, free of the flaws plaguing Earth. Right now, women’s rights have been decimated, the environment is collapsing, and the reality is there aren’t more than a few dozen “good” years left for it. Naomi, along with three other women, embark on the journey without permission from the government, but they believe in their heart of hearts they’re doing the right thing. 

Then Naomi finds out she’s pregnant, and the father is one of the people who might be able to help change the course of the future of planet Earth. But it won’t come easy and it won’t come without the power of these women to steer the ship right.

Wholly immersive and dark, this book is about what leadership is — and what it is not. Lam’s writing is captivating and engrossing, evoking a scarily close-to-home scenario of a global pandemic destroying the planet in conjunction with human consumption, climate change, and the revoking of liberties for women across the globe. What sounds like will ultimately be a utopian setting at Cavendish, though, isn’t: instead, the story takes a ton of twists and turns that are surprising and ultimately change what it is these women perceive to be good and flawed about human nature. 

When you’re destined to start something new, do you go for it? Burn down the past and try to forget it? Or do you learn from that past and build with the materials you have at hand to do better? 

Lam’s stand alone science fiction space novel grapples with a lot of big questions but does so in a compelling and interesting way. Naomi is a great character, and all of the motives of the women on board are parsed out just well enough to keep it clear that not everyone aboard has everyone’s best interests in mind. Will they make it to Cavendish and create the world they envision? 

I did a little poking around and this book was inspired by the Mercury 13, where a group of women went through the same battery of tests the men who want to join NASA did, and while the privately funded group who ran these tests found them successful, this was never actually a NASA program, no mission was taken, and the women never actually went to space. I don’t know much about it beyond that, but definitely plan to learn more and see the parallels with the book. 

We Dream of Space by Erin Entrada Kelly

I don’t read a lot of middle grade, but I do know EEK’s books always hit the spot when I do. Her latest is no different, as it follows a family in January 1986 experiencing a whole host of discontent and challenge amid the Challenger launch. 

Bird and Fitch — short for Bernadette and “Pitch a Fit” — are twins. Their older brother Cash has been having a hard time in school, and despite being older than them, he’s in the same grade, 7th, they are. Early in the story, things begin to spiral when Cash breaks his wrist and loses any and all interest in school again, threatening the chance he might have to move on to the next grade. Fitch spends his free time at the local arcade, winning at a game that’s been unpopular with his peers but which he defends to the death as a great game. He’s got a temper he can’t control or understand and it comes out at really inopportune times. Bird dreams of being the first female space commander, and she’s absolutely fascinated with machinery, which is something we get to see via her art in the book — but Bird worries she’s being overlooked again and again, disappearing behind her two brothers. 

Home life isn’t especially great. Mom and dad have a rocky relationship, which comes out again and again in unsettling ways. It impacts each of the kids, and the only way that the siblings are hanging on is through their shared science teacher who applied for the Teacher in Space program but didn’t get accepted. Fitch and Cash aren’t as invested in it as Bird, but it’s this teacher and space which keep all of the threads of this story together.

This slice-of-life book is aching and hard, and when the Challenger launches, all of the pain built up in each of the siblings explodes. Bird, feeling her dreams fall apart and feeling the immense weight of loneliness. Fitch has an extremely violent outburst in class because of how he’s been a bit bullied but also because of how much he’s packed in from home. Cash continues to withdraw, knowing that he can’t play basketball because of his grades and now the broken bone. 

The Challenger Explosion happened when I was 2, so I don’t remember it, but I do remember my mom talking about it when it happened. This book really captures that era, without being nostalgic for the 80s. Rather, it’s extremely contemporary in terms of how it approaches family challenges, without attempting to make it sound as if family problems weren’t common then — they were. The book reminded me a lot of a younger YA title from many years back that really captured some similar feelings and experiences when it comes to space and the possibility of what exists beyond this planet and how young people were impacted by the Challenger tragedy — Jenny Moss’s Taking Off. 

Readers who want feelings-heavy books will be enraptured with this one. All of the characters are compelling, complex, and sympathetic, and they all experience those really painful moments of what it is to be in 7th grade: first crushes, not being seen as whole but rather parts of a whole (there’s a moment when Bird is told she can’t be pretty and smart but she’s rather smart and not pretty — to which she responds by turning to an imaginary conversation with one of the Challenger crew women and is comforted with the idea that there’s no singular thing defining what “pretty” is, anyway), a family that’s shifting and fracturing and changing, the desire to be anyone and anywhere else, and so much more. There’s a great thread in the story about interracial dating that, while small, is a powerful reminder of the role parents can play in a young person’s perception of themselves and others, as well as a reminder that even in the mid-80s, interracial relationships were even more fraught than they can be now. 

Grab some tissues, but also know you’ll be loving these characters deeply, too. This is a literary middle grade title that I suspect will get some award buzz when that time comes around. 

War and Speech by Don Zolidis

One of my favorite YAs in recent years is the wildly underrated The Seven Torments of Amy and Craig. It’s funny, with spot-on teen dialog. This is Zolidis’s follow up to that book and I’m thrilled it has equally enjoyable dialog and wit to it, while also offering some real depth. Zolidis is a playwright and that is especially evident in the dialog he writes. 

Sydney’s father is in jail for a white collar crime, and she flunked out of her last high school. She’s starting fresh at a performing arts school not because she’s got the talent in her but because she resides within the school’s residential boundaries and can. She and her mom are living together in a tiny apartment and money is supremely tight. The girl’s got a mega chip on her shoulder going into school but it only grows bigger when she learns that her school is famous for its speech and debate team. The kids on the team are, in her perception, utter jerks and with her new-found friends, Syd devises a plan to take down the speech team and in particular, ensure the top stars of the team have their lights dimmed. Why do they get to be special? Reign supreme in school?

And when she shows up for her first practice, imagine her surprise when the teacher happens to be the man who ran informational programs about how to make money and scam people that got her father wrapped up in tax issues in the first place.

Sydney begins by doing a speech she finds online about becoming a heroin addict. She does really well, too — winning her first competition and finding herself earning a surprise elite status in the eyes of her coach. She begins to better understand the team and the stars of it, almost seeing them as humans who don’t deserve to be taken down…

Until she changes her speech, getting raw and honest about her father being incarcerated and how much that’s impacted her. Her mom has a new boyfriend and doesn’t want to visit her father on Saturdays like she does, and she’s alone to see her dad’s humanity and the way the system convinced him that having all the best in life was the purpose of life all together. He broke the law and is serving time for it, but he was caught up in a system that rewards others for the very same thing. Like her speech coach, who believes her speech about her dad needs more depth, despite it being popular with audiences. “Just make up stuff,” he encourages her. And it’s here — this moment of realizing he, along with his elite speech team members, Sydney discovers what it is she’s truly passionate about: speaking her truth and living fully into it, rather than believing she needs to be rich, polished, and a liar to get ahead. 

This book is very funny, while also being a smart look at social class. Syd and her family experienced wealth for a while during the time her father was evading tax laws, but then she and her mother became very poor, very quickly. Her mom works at the Mall of America, and Sydney, who hates the new man in her mom’s life, decides to get a part time job at the American Cookie shop at the mall too, thinking it might help them afford their apartment (spoiler — it won’t and doesn’t, but some of the cookie store moments are among the best in the book, as she chooses to write super snarky messages on the cookies and they sell like mad). 

At times, Sydney is downright mean, and some of the choices she makes to take down the fellow speech team members aren’t especially kind or justified. BUT she recognizes that along the way, and she realizes who the real enemy is — they’re collateral damage along the way to making her point about inequality and unfair preferential treatment. 

Smart dialog, which feels really teen and not adult-sounding-teen, with a teen who is sarcastic and snarky and also deeply hurting. She’s not especially likeable but that’s what makes her compelling: her rough edges don’t get softened, but rather, readers better see why she’s got those sharp parts. 

The speech and debate team and competitions being huge parts of the book were fun, even for someone who was never involved in either. Are they accurate? Who knows. What’s refreshing is it’s not a sports team being singled out for being treated as special at school but instead, a group that often doesn’t get that kind of golden treatment.

For readers who want humor, as well as a challenging main character. I especially found how she talked about Luke, her mom’s boyfriend, funny — and even though he’s pitted as an enemy in her mind, we discover he’s much deeper than she gives him credit for, and it explains why he  behaves the way he does. 

 

Almond by Won-Pyung Sohn, translated by Joosun Lee

This book is different, and it’s different in a way that’s purposeful as to leave readers wondering whether this was a love story or a complete tragedy. Maybe both? 

Yunjae was born with Alexithymia, which means his brain is wired so that he doesn’t know how to feel or respond to emotions. His mother and his grandmother love him despite his challenges, though he’s never been able to make friends. He’s an outsider, as others cannot relate with him and he, with others. He lives with his mother above the bookstore she owns, and she works to help him navigate responding to emotions with helpful sticky notes around their apartment. Yunjae isn’t especially bothered with his lot, but everything changes in one instant on Christmas Eve, when his grandmother and mother are victims of a random act of violence. His grandmother passes and his mother is comatose. Not knowing or understanding how to process emotions that are small, this big series of emotions lead Yungjae to withdraw.

That is, until he meets Gon. Gon isn’t nice to Yungjae, and in fact, he’s quite a bully. But Gon’s story is tragic as well, and it’s wrapped up in a favor that Yungjae agrees to with a man whose wife is on her deathbed. Yungjae may be a victim of bullying here, but he’s unable to stop wondering about — and being desperate to know — Gon and his story. He’s hot and angry, and by getting close to him, Yungjae hopes that he might be able to work through this emotions himself. Though we don’t get to know Gon through his own voice, we’re led to believe he’s bullying on Yungjae not because he’s nasty but instead because he’s impressed with how much he’s been through and never loses his cool. It becomes quite clear that Gon desires a friendship here, even if he doesn’t know how to approach making friends. Interestingly, the translator of the book put in the notes in the back of the book that she believes there might have been romantic feelings here, too, though in her translation she held back on pushing that narrative forward. It wasn’t until I read that where I could see it, but indeed, I could see it.

It’s through this friendship between two “monsters” that both Gon and Yungjae begin to really become themselves. Yungjae in particular begins to find he wants to spend time with a bookish girl named Dori who wanders into his life — something he never dreamed possible. Of course, pursuing that means his friendship with Gon takes a backseat. But when Gon’s life is in danger, Yungjae really pushes through all of his fears, all of the things he’s believed about himself, to step in and potentially become a hero in Gon’s story . . . as well as his own.

Don’t go into this one for plot. Go into it for fascinating character studies. It’s a short book, with small chapters, but each word and description is exacting and offers so much depth to Yungjae and his experience living with a disorder that doesn’t allow him to fully feel or express empathy, even though consciously he understands what it is. I wanted to blow through this one quickly because it reads quickly, but I found myself pausing a lot and setting it down frequently so I could think about it and think specifically about what it must be like to live like Yungjae. He’s far more than his traumas and he’s also not here to be a feel-good story of a character overcoming a challenging brain condition. That’s where, I think, this book is really smart. It’s complex, and the metaphor of the almond — referring to the shape of the amygdala — is apt. 

Almond is Sohn’s debut novel and an award-winner in Korea, and as the translator notes in the book (note: read the translator’s note!), this book being brought to the US market is a pretty incredible thing. It’s marketed as YA in Korea, and while it’s being marketed as adult in the US, it’s perfect for YA readers who want something literary and challenging. Readers who are familiar with the book Nothing by Janne Teller will for sure want to pick this up, but anyone who wants to read more broadly global literature, stories of adolescents that don’t often see the light, and stories of neuro atypical characters will find so much to enjoy here.

 

June

You Should See Me In A Crown by Leah Johnson

I LOVED this book. Loved it to bits and pieces. Loved reading it when I did, as it was the kind of hug in the shape of a book I needed. 

Liz Lighty cannot wait to leave her small Indiana town. She’s a poor Black girl, living with her grandparents after her mom has died and her dad disappeared. She also happens to be queer, but because of her situation, she’s not openly out. Liz cannot wait to get to Pennington College, three(ish) hours away from home, and she’s anticipating a nice scholarship to help her do it on her own, without the help of her grandparents. She’s got the grades and the extra curriculars to make it happen.

But when she discovers she didn’t get the scholarship, she doesn’t tell her grandparents. She will have to come up with another plan if she wants out of town and into a new life for herself.

Enter: prom.

The thing about where Liz lives is that Prom is a big deal. Think: big deal like football in small town Texas. There is a weeks-long competition for becoming part of the Prom court, and the king and queen of Prom earn a nice chunk of money for their future education. Getting on the court involves community service, grades, and being an upstanding citizen of the school community. 

It also means not being openly out and not attending the event with a same-sex partner.

Liz doesn’t want to do it, but because she so desperately wants to go to Pennington, she decides to run for Prom queen. It’d be good money, even if it means she has to hide who she is.

But things get even weirder when a new girl named Mack — Amanda, as we’ll learn Liz gets to call her — begins school mid-year and decides she, too, is going to run for Prom. She is part of a family legacy in town, so likely has good chances to get in. 

Instead of getting mad, though….Liz finds herself falling for Mack. And now, she’s crushing on her competition.

This is a sweet, fun, humorous story of a girl who wants to be so many things to so many people. She lost her mother to sickle cell, and her brother, who is only a year younger than her, struggles with it, too. She wants to protect him fiercely, while also being conscious of how little her grandparents have financially to help her go to school or to cover hospital bills or even the home they live in. She’s aware she’s among the less fortunate at school and even more painfully aware that she’s Black in a small town. So keeping her identity secret is important not just because of the rules for Prom, but also because she doesn’t want to stand out anymore than she does. 

Many readers will want to know there’s an outing in this book, but it’s not cruel. It doesn’t break Liz, though she certainly has to deal with the ramifications of being outed. Will she lose her chance at Prom queen and, ultimately, money to go to college over it? Or will she be further marginalized? 

This book has so much heart and it is swoony. Liz and Mack have a great relationship, as does Liz with her family. Her relationship with her brother is especially great, and the fact that Liz doesn’t know how much people rally behind her and want her to succeed feels authentic to someone in her shoes and, I think, more broadly to so many teens. 

I never went to prom and had no interest. But this book about prom, outlandish promposals (oh, the promposals are a hoot here), and a girl who just wants to go somewhere bigger where she can be her whole self is one I ate up. Leah Johnson’s writing is fun and easy, with plenty of references to today’s pop culture — including the title — that will be especially appealing. 

 

Again Again by E Lockhart

What if you made other choices? What if your life was playing out in a different way in another reality? I cannot believe how wildly close to today’s reality Lockhart’s new book was and it was such a refreshing return to her writing that I loved. I wasn’t a fan of her thrillers, but this….felt very much like the E Lockhart I found so compelling before.

Adelaide is at a boarding school, Alabaster Prep Academy, where her father is a teacher. Her mother and younger brother Toby are living still in Baltimore, hours away from her father. The why of this remains quiet for a while in a book, but it is revealed that Toby has a drug addiction and their mother is staying there to help ensure he finds a way to recover. Adelaide and her father move so he can continue to make an income for the family and so she can get a good education.

Except it won’t be that way. Or at least not in this reality. 

Adelaide and her boyfriend broke up, and she’s feeling lonely and sad while walking the dogs she’s watching this summer. She meets Jack at the dog park and he looks familiar to her, but she can’t really place it. But she knows immediately she likes him and begins to pursue him hard. 

In the mean time, she’s failed to turn in a major project to her set design class and her teacher isn’t thrilled. Yes, it’s summer. Yes, it’s break. But she’s been given more time to complete it anyway, since her teacher believes she has talent. Set building is, you see, about executing an idea in a way that isn’t necessarily the real image of the thing, but as true a rendition as possible so the audience understands what it is. 

In Adelaide’s experience, the people in her life are the set, but none of it is real to her. She’s walking through it, but none of it is real, alive. 

Mired in grief and sadness, worry and fear, Adelaide begins to attach herself to Jack who isn’t interested in her in that way. When her ex reaches back out, in desperation, Adelaide feels compelled to forgive him. 

That’s the story in one reality. 

But this book is about the multiverse, or the idea of multiple realities. So the story plays out in a number of different ways throughout the book. Sometimes Adelaide and Jack are together. Sometimes Adelaide is a good sister to her sick brother. Sometimes, she’s a nasty human being — and in each of these realities, we see a complex picture of who she is.

This is a love story but the romance is no where near central. It’s purposefully peripheral, as it’s there as a means of Adelaide waking up to how she behaves towards others in her life and specifically, those people who are closest to her. She’s privileged and healthy, but she can’t take those blinders off to see the bigger picture and to see where she herself is falling apart or too dependent upon others to give her reason and purpose. 

Clever, unique, and packed with emotional moments, depth, and philosophical fun, Lockhart’s book is one that will delight many readers. It packs in a lot without saying too much — this is a slight book, with chapters written in broken-apart dialog and texts — and doesn’t rely on anything cheap to pack a punch. 

Fun fact: Alabaster Prep is where The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau Banks was set as well, and Jack from this story was inspired by Jack in Lockhart’s short story in the “21 Proms” anthology. I love those little Easter eggs and more, love this book had signature Lockhart writing and smoothly-executed wit. 

Some of the marketing suggests this is funny, and it’s not really. It’s clever, but not necessarily funny. And important to note: none of the dogs die or get hurt. 

 

The Language of Butterflies: How Thieves, Hoarders, Scientists, and Other Obsessives Unlocked the Secrets of the World’s Favorite Insect  by Wendy Williams

It’s almost universal that people love butterflies. It’s almost equally universal people don’t like moths. But the difference between a butterfly and a moth isn’t what you might think it is. Instead, it’s a small body part that controls how the wings move and that’s about it.

If that has you intrigued, this book will be your jam like it was mine.

Set up in three parts: past, present, and future, Williams — who writes in a super approachable, delighted manner, but with great research to buoy the book — takes a deep dive into the butterfly and her allure. We go back deep into history with how Victorians became obsessed with collecting these creatures and highlight a few women who were leaders in butterfly research and discovery and yet never had their stories shared because sexism. The book highlights parts of the US where butterfly studies became hot beds and what made the ecosystem in those places so supportive of a vast array of butterfly species.

In the present section, Williams goes deep into the monarch. I loved this section in particular as someone who has a native garden meant to attract pollinators, and who, last year, watched a handful of monarchs reach maturity and make their lengthy trip down to Mexico. It digs into the reason why butterflies and other insects choose to eat milkweed, which is exceptionally toxic. If you have milkweed in your yard like I do, you know it’s not just the monarchs but a few other insects and they all share something similar: a bright orange coloring. It’s a warning of the insect’s toxicity to other creatures. 

The final section about the future traces the flight path of the monarch from the north to the south — at least in the central US. Not all monarchs make that journey, as those on the west coast take a different one, while even those in warmer climates like Florida may migrate while others may stay. And it’s this wide range of migratory habits that are fascinating to researchers and citizen scientists, and Williams digs into how wild these creatures truly are in terms of the incredible lives they live. They go from places they know they can find food to traveling thousands of miles, stopping along the way in unfamiliar places and still finding things they enjoy eating and that will fuel their travels. 

A wholly fascinating book, I learned so much about butterflies. Their wings are actually made of scales, which I didn’t know, and more, the blue butterflies that are so highly prized are such because they are among the few things in nature where blue is an actual hue, as opposed to a reflection of light upon their wings. Williams doesn’t go into the thievery of butterflies as much as I’d hoped, but with name drops, I know there are a ton of people whose stories and crimes I’ll be Googling later. I also had no idea the black on the wings of the monarch are actually veins. Oh, and the book digs into how horrible the male monarchs are toward the females when they want to mate . . . at least in the early generations. Once they’re onto the fourth generation, or the ones that will migrate, the females are much more safe, as the males have lost a lot of their machismo. If you’re unfamiliar with the ideas of monarch generations, you’ll get up to speed here, too.

Williams is delighted by everything she learns, and by turns, it makes the reader delighted, too. This isn’t an especially long book, and while it’s well-researched, it’s a breezy read. In the author’s note, Williams mentions being almost 70 (or in her 70s, I can’t entirely remember). I don’t remember the last time I read a book by an author who was older, so bonus points for that. It was neat to experience the world of butterflies through her eyes, and frankly, I’ll never look at them the same way through my own. 

I’ve always loved these little creatures, but for sure, now I might become even more in love with them. 

 

The Black Flamingo by Dean Atta

Michael is half Greek-Cypriot, half-Jamaican, and he lives in London with his mother. Dad isn’t in the picture, but early on in his life, a stepfather comes around for a bit, which brings to his life a half-sister named Anna. This book in verse begins from Michael’s young age — he’s six in the first section, coming to understand his mixed race heritage, as well as his family’s unique structure. 

As the book progresses into Michael’s teen years in high school, it becomes clearer and clearer that Michael is queer. He’s super lucky in that his family is mostly supportive, particularly his mother, who at times oversteps in trying to provide Michael a safe place to explore and express his identity while he’s not quite ready to step into it entirely himself. 

The book progresses then to Michael’s first year in college when everything changes — he’s eager to try on a new identity, eager to find people like him at school in a very queer-friendly college and community. And while he sidesteps the opportunity to take part in the Greek club and the LGBTQ+ club….he signs himself up for Drag Society, which plays deeply into his interests in acting and performance. He’s immediately overwhelmed by the idea of performing drag, but, as he begins to come into his drag identity as The Black Flamingo, Michael also begins to come to understand his identity can shift, can sway, and it can be whatever it is he desires it to be. And it’s the first Drag Society performance — one he almost misses — which helps him to this realization and allows him to become deeply, fully himself.

The Black Flamingo won a Stonewall Book Award last year, which I thought was interesting, given that this book wasn’t even available in the US. It was out in the UK first, and it hit shelves here last week. But I see why and how it was seen as such a vital addition to queer literature for young readers: Michael is a compelling character grappling with the intersections of his mixed race identity with that of his queerness. Although he doesn’t use the language in the book, it’s clear he’s not entirely sure he leans into being a cis man, and he’s pretty sure he’s not trans, either — instead, he starts to see all of the shades of identity between them and allows himself to be a flamingo in them.

This is a slice of life story, and it was great watching Michael from his young age to his coming-of-age. The poetry is fantastic, both that of which tells his story and that which he writes himself. The author, Dean Atta, is himself a performer and a poet, and those pieces of his own lived experience come alive in Michael. 

Though Michael’s mother and sister are supportive of him, as is the majority of his family, not everyone is, including some of the people Michael considers his closest friends. This isn’t one of those everything-is-rosy stories. It feels real and raw, and while Michael himself doesn’t make a lot of poor choices, his story is about not making many choices at all until forced to do so. So his coming into himself on stage is a huge moment for him, as well as readers, who understand how challenging — and how liberating — doing that is.

A great addition to the queer YA canon, as well as a great read for fans of Jason Reynolds and Elizabeth Acevedo. I’m super eager to see what Atta writes next, and I loved the setting outside of the US. We don’t get many UK imports to the YA market, and this one is a gem — a Black Flamingo, even.

Filed Under: Reviews, ya, ya fiction, Young Adult, young adult fiction

The Kinder Poison by Natalie Mae

June 10, 2020 |

For the first time in generations, the ruler of Orkena has called for the Crossing: his three heirs will embark upon a race across the desert, and the first to make it – and kill the human sacrifice at the end – will win the throne.

All Zahru wants to do is go to the kick-off party. She’s only a Whisperer, someone who can speak with animals, so she’s not qualified to be in any of the heirs’ entourage to help them in the race (like healers). She and a friend sneak in and plan to have a grand old time. But in the most unfortunate series of events I’ve read in quite some time (even exceeding that of the Lemony Snicket series), Zahru is marked as the sacrifice, and she’s dragged across the desert by the various heirs as they capture, lose, and recapture her, all with the intent of stabbing her through the heart at the end.

Seasoned readers of fantasy will be able to predict the basic structure of this story almost immediately. Events will occur in such a way that Zahru will spend some time with each heir; she’ll make several attempts to escape but all of them will fail; and the climax will involve her being stabbed, though she won’t die right away (cliffhanger!). Familiar stories are comforting, so this isn’t necessarily a bad thing. There’s enough new stuff in there – the class structure based upon magical ability, how magic fades and takes its toll on the user, tantalizing hints at political and military activities with the surrounding countries, genuinely interesting characters with a few surprising secrets – that readers should be interested throughout.

But – and this is a big but – the book’s description on the jacket flap gives away the first third of the book. Zahru doesn’t become the sacrifice and start the Crossing until pretty far in, and I found myself wondering when the promised story – not just what I already knew – would begin. Add this to the fact that once it did begin, I could predict a lot of it, and I found myself a bit disappointed.

Mae tries her level best to get her readers to believe that the heirs who are willing to go through with the sacrifice (and who aren’t particularly conflicted about it!) aren’t terrible people, really. They have their reasons. They’ve had sad lives, maybe, or they really are the best for the job and this is the only way, shouldn’t she want to die for her country? Zahru’s unwavering belief that if they just get to know her, they’ll change their minds and decide not to murder her is so naive it’s painful to read. The emphasis on kindness – so strong it’s half of the title – rubbed me the wrong way. Zahru does occasionally fight back against the people intending to kill her, but mostly she just tries to be really kind to them, to listen and be empathetic, and then figuratively crosses her fingers that her kindness will cause a complete personality shift.

What makes this idea especially off-putting is that the sacrifice is traditionally one of the lower-class members of their society, meaning that this problem of ritualized murder is structural. Zahru herself doesn’t belong to this lower class but is still considered lesser because of her undervalued magical ability. All this makes the idea of kindness as a panacea especially distasteful. Teen girls are often told that they should be kind, to the point that they aren’t given the proper tools to defend themselves or even recognize that they are being mistreated when they are harassed, abused, or assaulted (or, you know, threatened with ritual murder). Books like this do nothing to dispel this misguided notion that kindness is king, and in fact reinforces it, at some points even arguing that it’s a novel concept no one has tried before. Ultimately, The Kinder Poison is a fun read, but not one I’ll be recommending far and wide.

Review copy provided by the publisher. The Kinder Poison is available June 16.

Filed Under: Fantasy, Reviews, Young Adult, young adult fiction

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