Saturday, December 14, 2019

LGBTQ issues in new YA Novels

Sexual identity issues have always been a problem for teens, but today's society is more tolerant and students are more comfortable discussing them. Many schools have curriculums that include counseling students about being open to diversity in people’s sexual preferences.  Reflective of this tolerance is the growing body of young adult literature that focuses on this issue or includes it in a subplot. LGBTQ characters are routinely included in new young adult novels, regardless the genre.  A wildly popular new realistic novel, Red, White and Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston focuses on the bi-sexual son of the U.S. President, who falls in love with a British prince, who is a closeted gay.  Exile from Eden, Andrew Smith's sequel to the sci/fi award winner Grasshopper Jungle, finds Austin and Robby still living in the underground bunker with their son Arek and his best friend Mel. Kiersten White's new fantasy novel, The Guinevere Deception, reimagines the Arthurian legend where Lancelot is a gay female. 

In Red, White and Royal Blue Alex Claremont-Diaz, the half-Mexican son of the first female president of the United States, meets Prince Henry, backup heir to the English throne and it's hate at first sight.  After their verbal sparring at an international wedding leads to a scuffle and them falling into the wedding cake, they are required to pose as best friends on a publicity tour.  Not surprisingly, their hate turns to attraction and after their first kiss, they contrive to find ways to be together.  Of course, their bromance is eventually discovered and leaked to the press during Alex's mom's reelection campaign.  Strategizing how to handle their relationship evolves from denial to breakup to acknowledgement in this clever take on the rom/com genre.  The sexual encounters are fairly explicit, so I would recommend this for high school readers.

Exile from Eden: or, After the Hole, the post-apocalyptic sequel to Grasshopper Jungle, finds Arek, the son of Austin and Robby, crushing on his best friend Mel and living in the underground bunker with her, his two dads, mother and grandmother.  Ten-foot-tall praying mantises have wiped out most of the human population, but they are dying off. Austin and Robby set off in a small plane to find other survivors and when they don't come back, Arek and Mel go on their own RV road trip to find them.  Meanwhile in alternating chapters readers learn about earlier years in the hole, as well as the tale of a 12-year-old wild boy "Breakfast" and his chimpanzee friend, Olive.  Philosophical passages and reflection on the paintings of Max Beckmann mix with Arek's longing for Mel and his fear of his hyper-religious grandmother's threat to circumcise him. As with the first book, sexual longing is explored in detail, making this also a book for more mature readers. 

The Guinevere Deception, the first book in the Camelot Rising trilogy, alters many details in the Arthurian legend.  Lancelot is a woman, Mordred is Arthur's right hand man and Guinevere is an impostor sent by Merlin to protect Arthur.  Magic has been banned in Camelot, so Guinevere must wield her magical powers in secret, as she strives to discover threats to Arthur's well-being. Meanwhile, Arthur is out fighting battles, trying to save his kingdom. This fresh take on the Arthurian legend has a decidedly feminist twist and will appeal to fans of the original, if only to see how this very popular author changes it up. 

Monday, November 11, 2019

YA Historical Fiction

Historical fiction is defined as novels in which a story is made up but is set in the past and sometimes borrows true characteristics of the time period in which it is set.  Reading historical fiction is my favorite way to learn history!  This month I am recommending new young adult historical fiction novels.  The Downstairs Girl by Stacy Lee (Outrun the Moon) is set in the Reconstructionist South and focuses on a Chinese- American girl who anonymously writes an "agony aunt" column for the local newspaper. Across the Broken Shore by Amy Trueblood is set in San Francisco during the construction of the Golden Gate bridge and involves a young woman who aspires to become a doctor.  Enchantee by Gita Trelease is the first book in a new magical realism series set during the French Revolution. Camille uses "magic ordinaire" to disguise herself as an aristocrat, who gambles at the palace of Versailles.   

In The Downstairs Girl Chinese-American Jo Kuan lives in 1890 Atlanta with her guardian, Old Gin, in the abolitionist quarters underneath the home of the publisher of a failing newspaper. When she loses her job as a milliner's assistant, she returns to a job as a lady's maid to the cantankerous daughter of a society maven. She overhears the publisher talking about bolstering newspaper sales with an "agony aunt" column, so she begins anonymously submitting a column that offers advice on fashion, women's suffrage, and prejudice that sparks controversy and raises subscriptions.  Her sharp wit and questions about her identity are the talk of Atlanta. Subplots about Jo's parentage and her romance with the publisher's son complement her first-person narrative, which sheds light on the struggles of women and people of color in the Reconstructionist South.  The well-researched narrative raises important questions about how we understand the past, as well as the ways that understanding shapes the present. 

Across the Broken Shore is set during the fall of 1936 in San Francisco. Willa MacCarthy, who is plagued by guilt over an incident in the past, agrees to join a convent and make her Catholic family proud.  However, secretly she longs to be a doctor.  When her brother Paddy has an accident in the family bar, she hurries him to the family doctor, only to find the Dr. Katherine Winston has taken his place.  Willa, who has been reading Gray's Anatomy, jumps in to help with Paddy's treatment. Dr. Winston offers her a job and encourages her to follow her dreams.  Willa accompanies her to a field hospital to administer first aid for men working on the Golden Gate Bridge, and she also begins treating sick people in a Hooverville near the bridge. When Willa meets Sam, an ironworker on the bridge, she dares to dream of a different life.  The author says she was inspired by the history of the Golden Gate Bridge construction and by an actual female physician who practiced nearby. 

Enchantee, the first book in a new series, introduces Camille and her sister Sophie, who are struggling to survive during the French Revolution. After their ne'er-do-well brother steals their meager savings, the daring and passionate Camille uses her gift of magic to create a double identity.  As Baroness Cecile Descharlots, she games at Versailles, even as she is befriending nobility.  Her Indian aeronaut boyfriend, Lazare, and the nefarious Vicomte Sequin vie for her attention.   Meanwhile, the bourgeoisie are threatening revolt against the decadence of the French court of Louis XIV and Marie Antoinette. When Camille's double life begins to fray and Sophie disappears, she must take desperate measures to save their lives. Many realistic historical elements add to the story, including the decadent lifestyle of Marie Antoinette and Louis XIV, the outrage of impoverished Parisians, experiments with balloon aeronautics, and prejudice against queer and biracial characters.   Historical footnotes and a French glossary are included. The sequel Liberte will be released in 2020.





Thursday, October 24, 2019

Stories with a Soundtrack

Just as many movies have music soundtracks, more and more young adult authors are focusing on musicians and include music references that inform the plot and the setting of their books. Whether the author is referencing real life musicians, sharing lyrics for the book's musicians, or giving the reader insights into the music industry in general, the reader learns a lot about a variety of music genres while enjoying the story that unfolds. I am recommending four such novels this month.  Let Me Hear a Rhyme by Tiffany D. Jackson explores hip-hop in the era of Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G.  Spin by Colleen Nelson focuses on an aspiring female DJ, whose estranged mom is an international star.  Love Songs and Other Lies by Jessica Pennington is about a band "Your Future Ex" which competes in a reality TV show Battle of the Bands. Finally, Impossible Music by Sean Williams introduces a young heavy metal musician, who tries to redefine himself and his music after having a stroke which causes cortical deafness. 

Let Me Hear a Rhyme  focuses on rap music and explores the impact the publication of Biggie Small's music after his death had on the music business. After their best friend Steph is murdered, Quadir and Jarrell, two teens in the 1998 Bedford-Styvesant neighborhood in NYC (where Biggie lived and died) discover his music hidden under his bed and decide to make him a rap star beyond the grave.  With the help of Jasmine, Steph's younger sister, they promote his music under the name "The Architect" and attract the attention of a powerful music label rep.  As Steph's music becomes more and more popular, the three teens struggle to keep his death a secret, as well as find out who murdered him.  The story is told in first-person from the alternating perspectives of the three protagonists and includes flashbacks to life before Steph's death.  Lyrics from Steph's songs, as well as Jasmine's own burgeoning talent, make this a lyrical read, filled with tension and mystery.  The story is very personal to the author who grew up in Bed/Sty in the 90s. She call the book "a love letter to hip-hop, to Brooklyn and my childhood..."

Spin introduces Dizzy Doucette, an aspiring DJ, who lives with her father and older brother above their used record story, The Vinyl Trap.  Her father once toured with her mother, Georgia Waters, an internationally known singer, who left the family to pursue a music career. Dizzy, who is learning to spin records from her brother's best friend, is gaining a reputation as a real talent and wonders if her mother will hear about her.  Then signs advertising a Georgia Waters performance in town appear, intriguing Dizzy.  Will her mom want to see her? Can she help Dizzy's career? When her relationship to Georgia becomes public knowledge, Dizzy's life spins out of control.  The story is told from various family members' points of view.  Although the story involves the music industry, it is ultimately a story about family.  The author prefaces the story with a letter to the reader about her research on DJing and the music she discovered in the process.

In Love Songs and Other Lies, Vee, a talented song writer and musician, goes on a reality TV show competition tour with her best friend Logan's band, "Your Future Ex."  Formerly their manager and primary songwriter, she is excited to exercise her skills in public relations, until she discovers Cameron, her ex-boyfriend, has joined their band.  Their breakup issues are unresolved; she can't quite forgive him for not telling her about a horrible accident he was involved in a year before they met.  Told in alternating points of view, the story switches between the present and two years prior when she and Cam were a duo on and off stage.  As Cam tries to win her back, the reality show producers are thrilled with the sexy subplot to the Battle of the Bands competition and spin it as a love triangle between Vee, Cam and Logan.  Vee, who is a reluctant performer, gains confidence as the band begins to include Cam and Vee duets in some of their performances.  The novel is filled with poetic band lyrics, romance and intrigue, as the reader wonders what led to Vee and Cam's breakup and ultimately roots for their reunion, as well a victory for the band. The story feels like an inside look at reality TV and how the contestants are manipulated to create drama for audience buy-in.

Impossible Music focuses on Simon, an Australian teen who suffers a stroke and wakes up with cortical deafness.  He refuses to believe his dreams of a career in music are dead.  Formerly a heavy metal guitarist in a band with his best friends, he begins to explore a new kind of "impossible music" based on the relationship between sound and silence. He creates a performance series to alter the way the audience experiences music and at the same time uses it as an audition for a music composition program at the university.  As he struggles to deal with his diagnosis, he connects with George, a girl in his Auslan (Australian sign language) classes, who is deaf due to extreme tinnitus.  As Simon moves from anger and despair to reinvention, he is supported by George and his friends and family.  This is a thought-provoking examination of sudden hearing loss and how a young musician navigates what it means for his future.  Although the author is not deaf, he, too, was interested in majoring in musical composition. He references many real life musicians and lists albums that inspired him, including Arcadian Rhythms by Brendon Moeller and Skeleton Keys by Steve Roach, in his end notes. 

Monday, September 2, 2019

Grieving Teens

Coping with the death of a friend or loved one is not easy for people of any age. For children and young adults the experience may impact who they become as adults.  Reading about how the main characters deal with death in their lives may inform the readers about coping mechanisms and support systems that enable the young person to move on from the devastating experience. Four new young adult novels that deal with grieving teens will be my focus this month.  Long Way Down by Jason Reynolds, a novel-in verse that focuses on a young man seeking revenge for his brother's death, has won many awards, including the Walter Dean Myers award. How to Make Friends with the Dark by Kathleen Glasgow involves a girl who has a fight with her overprotective mother, who then dies of an aneurysm. How the Light Gets In by Katy Upperman is a ghost story about a grieving sister and The Art of Taxidermy by Australian writer Sharon Kernot is a novel-in-verse about a girl with a unique grieving process.

As Long Way Down begins, Will Holloman is consumed with grief when his older brother Shawn is shot and killed, while shopping at a store in a rival gang's territory. Adhering to "The Rules" - don't cry, don't snitch, and always get revenge - he finds his brother's gun and leaves his family's eighth floor apartment to shoot the murderer. However, as the elevator descends, it opens at each floor and people involved in the chain of violence that took his brother's life get in.  Each person - Shawn's best friend, a childhood friend caught in a drive-by shooting, his uncle who was gunned down, his father who avenged his brother's death - is actually a ghost who gives Will insight about the cycle of violence he is about to enter.  This powerful novel, which uses the poetic form for dramatic effect, will stay with the reader long after the last earth-shattering line. Additional honors include Newbery Honor Book, Coretta Scott King Honor Book, Printz Honor Book, the National Book Award for YA lit long list, the Edgar Award Winner and others. 


How to Make Friends with the Dark introduces Tiger Tolliver, whose loving but overprotective single mother shields her from life. She decides to take a stand when her crush asks her to a school dance. On the way to school she mentions the dance and her mother withholds her permission and hounds Tiger all day at school, blowing up her phone with calls and texts.  After ignoring her all day, Tiger finally answers the phone and says, "Why can't you f***ing leave me alone?"  Later that day, she is at the park, experiencing her first kiss, when her mother drops dead of an aneurysm.  Wracked with guilt, Tiger is thrown into Arizona's foster home system, where she is confronted with the harsh realities of many orphan's lives. Although her best friend Cake and her parents are willing to take her in, Tiger ends up with her 20-year-old half-sister, whom she hadn't previously met.  Tiger's mom left behind many unpaid bills and her "Jellymobile" business, which the girls resurrect. Needless-to-say the sister is a less than ideal parent. The trauma and grieving process are explored in effective second person reflections on Tiger's inner turmoil: "You'll look alive on the outside, but be dead on the inside." 


In How the Light Gets In Callie Ryan is still struggling with guilt and grief a year after her sister Chloe drowned.  Callie, gives up swim team, academics and her dreams for the future and spends most of her time smoking pot.  As summer nears, her parents give her the choice of going to grief camp or to her aunt's Victorian B&B renovation, where Chloe died.  When Callie arrives at the house, strange things begin to happen, giving her the feeling that Chloe is trying to communicate with her.  Although she tries to resist his charms, the landscaper Tucker Morgan breaks through her defensive attitude and helps her come to terms with her part in Chloe's death. He, too, has unresolved issues with his mother's disappearance, which is tied to the history of the house.  Together, they embark upon a journey of healing and a future together. 


The Art of Taxidermy, an Australian award-winning novel-in-verse, explores a German-Australian's girl's grieving process, as she mourns the death of her mother and sister, as well as her family's internment during WWII.  After Lottie's older sister drowns and her mother dies during stillbirth, Lottie becomes obsessed with taxidermy, which she views as an attempt at resurrection.  She begins collecting bodies of dead creatures and gutting them, which horrifies her Aunt Hilda, who is helping her dad raise Lottie. Her only friend is an Indigenous boy who bonds with her over their shared loneliness. He helps her with her collection and moving toward her dream of becoming a museum taxidermist. 







Saturday, August 10, 2019

YA Novels Involving Teens from Different Cultures

The School Library Journal Virtual Book Fair's theme, Knocking Down Doors, inspired me to focus this month's blog on books about teens from different cultures.  I recently read the keynote speaker, Samira Ahmed's book Love, Hate, and Other Filters, which introduces Indian American Muslim teen Maya Aziz, who struggles to follow her dreams, yet please her traditional Indian parents. Somewhere Only We Know by Maureen Goo involves a Korean American K-Pop star, who is on the verge of stardom, but longs for the freedom of anonymity.  Don't Date Rosa Santos by Nina Moreno is about a Cuban American teen who is dealing with a presumed curse on her family warning her to stay away from the sea.  Finally, Love from A to Z by S. K. Ali focuses on a hijabi teen who is suspended from school for standing up to an Islamophobic teacher.

In Love, Hate and Other Filters Maya Aziz feels the conflict that many bi cultural teens feel when attending American schools.  She wants to fit in and follow her own dreams, without alienating her traditional Indian parents.  She is a budding filmmaker, who unbeknownst to her overprotective parents, has been accepted by NYU film school.  They want her to attend a school in Chicago, so she can be close to home.  She is secretly crushing on Phil, the white high school quarterback, who is beginning to respond to her interest, whereas her parents want her to date Kareem, a charming Desi boy who is suitable marriage material. Maya finally gets up the courage to tell her parents about NYU, when a terrorist attack in nearby Springfield derails her plans. The presumed terrorist is also an Aziz and Maya's family experiences hate crimes motivated by the connection.  Her parents' acceptance of her decision to go to NYU is rescinded, and they now want her to live at home and go to community college.  Maya must decide whether or not to take a stand. A brief account of a looming terrorist attack, preceding each chapter of Maya's story, creates tension about what is to come.

Somewhere Only We Know introduces Lucky, a Korean American K-Pop singer who is kept on a tight leash by her handlers. Longing for a hamburger, she plays hooky after a big concert in Hong Kong, but gets lost and is rescued by Jack, an aspiring photographer.  At first he doesn't know who she is, and they begin a flirtation as they wander through the streets of Hong Kong. When he inadvertently discovers her identity, he realizes he could sell photographs of their time together to a tabloid magazine and launch his career.  Alternating between their first-person perspectives, the story reveals two teens who are struggling with expectations that are placed on them.  Jack's parents want him to study banking and her handlers expect her to be the next big star who must protect her image at all costs.  This re-imagining of Roman Holiday is filled with witty banter and romance, and I loved reading about the Korean K-pop development system that grooms talented teens to become K-pop stars.

Don't Date Rosa Santos involves a Cuban American girl who lives in a coastal town in Southern Florida and lost her father and grandfather to the sea.  Abandoned by her mother, she lives with her abuela and is cautioned to stay away from anything involving the sea, because her family is cursed. Then Rosa falls for Alex, a sailor who works at the docks.  Hoping to study abroad in Havana to explore her family roots, she is reluctant to date him because she is leaving. He, too, has plans to go on an extended voyage at sea.  Yet the more time she spends with him, the more she wonders if he is part of her destiny.  When her mother returns to town and agrees to paint a mural for the Latin Festival, Rosa wonder if she will stick around or leave her and abuela again to fend for themselves.  The Latinx culture informs the action of the story with traditions, Cuban Spanish language and complex family relationships.  Rosa is a compelling character who readers will root for as she navigates the turbulent landscape that is her life.

Love from A to Z begins with Zayneb Malik being suspended from school over an incident with an Islamophobic teacher.  Her parents allow her to go to her aunt's home in Doha, Qatar a week before their spring break trip was to begin.  On the plane she meets Adam Chen, who is returning home from university in London. He happens to notice that, like him, she keeps a journal of marvels and oddities, inspired by a book they both read.  Adam is an artist and after a recent diagnosis of multiple sclerosis, which killed his mother, he has decided to drop out of school and focus on his art.  Zayneb is passionate and outspoken, constantly railing against people who are prejudiced against her Muslim faith.  Adam is calm and quiet, drawing strength from his religion as he struggles to share his news with his fragile father and sister. Although Adam and Zayneb's relationship is fraught with obstacles, they recognize a need to be together.  The story is told in alternating journal entries of marvels and oddities.  Racism, the effects of war, Muslim cultural identity and prejudice are explored in great detail, and a note from the author adds to the readers' understanding of the struggles of Muslim youth in our society.


Thursday, July 25, 2019

New YA Fantasy Novels: Mind Games, The Devouring Gray and Song of the Abyss

Issac Asimov distinguishes science fiction from fantasy saying sci fi is grounded in science and is therefore possible, fantasy is not grounded in reality, thus is not possible. My taste in fantasy novels leans toward stories in realistic settings with fantastic elements, which make the three novels I'm recommending this month difficult to categorize.  Mind Games by Shana Silver is set in a school for geniuses which connects the community with a Hive Mind.  When someone begins erasing people's' memories by manipulating the Hive Mind, students must work together to save their futures.  The Devouring Gray by Christine Lynn Herman  is the first in a new series set in the town of Four Paths, where four families are responsible for keeping a monster imprisoned in a parallel dimension called The Gray. Song of the Abyss by Makiia Lucier is a standalone fantasy in the Tower of the Winds series, which introduces a new story line involving Reyna, an explorer and map maker, who must cooperate with Prince Levi from a rival kingdom to determine why pirates are attacking their ships and abducting the sailors.  Although Mind Games is classified as Sci Fi, The Devouring Gray as Paranormal, and Song of the Abyss as Fantasy, they all take place in realistic settings, but none of them seem very possible.

In Mind Games, Arden attends an exclusive school where the entire community is connected by a Hive Mind, a collective consciousness that allows them to share their knowledge, thoughts and resources.  Arden has figured out how to hack into the Hive Mind to copy memories from one student and give them to another.  She runs a lucrative business where she sells student memories to kids who didn't do their homework or want to experience something vicariously.  When a boy named Sebastian shows up whom she's never seen before but is supposedly her boyfriend, she realizes someone has been tampering with her own memories.  Not only has she lost blocks of time, but Sebastian has lost all his memories.  They were supposedly working on their final project together, but now on the eve of their presentation, there is no trace of the project in any student memories.  The race is on to find the hacker and get their memories back, before they lose all they have worked for and each other.  This action-packed YA debut is filled with suspense and romance and poses perplexing issues about identity.

The Devouring Gray is the first book in a new series set in Four Paths, a town in upstate New York which harbors a monster imprisoned in a parallel dimension called The Gray.  The town's founding families, the Hawthornes, Carlisles, Saunders and Sullivans, are tasked with keeping the Beast at bay.  When teens from each family turn 16, they must perform a ritual to reveal magical abilities, which will allow them to keep the monster contained and protect the town.  Violet Saunders, whose mother returns with her to Four Paths after her sister's death, is thrust into this drama just as her magical abilities are beginning to surface. She meets Justin Hawthorne, Harper Carlisle and Isaac Sullivan, who are at odds after devastating results from performing their rituals.  They each curry Violet's favor, thinking she is the key to defending the town against the beast which is killing townspeople with greater frequency.  The third person narration jumps between characters during simultaneous action and expertly manipulates revelations about the townspeople and their secrets.  Although reminiscent of Netflix's Stranger Things, the complexity of the family histories and the teens' magical abilities used to fight "the Gray" create a unique mystery that will make readers anxious to read the sequel.

Song of the Abyss, the followup to Isle of Blood and Stone (Tower of the Winds series), introduces Reyna, who is an explorer and mapmaker for her royal homeland of St. Jon Del Mar.  As the story opens, she is sailing home, when pirates attack her ship and take the sailors prisoner by bewitching them with a siren song.  Reyna escapes with her maps and swims to shore where she meets Prince Levi of Lunes, who is grieving the death of his father.  After hearing her story, he insists on taking her to her ship, which they find abandoned, aside from the corpses of sailors who were old or infirm.  Levi insists she return to Lunes with one of his men, but she, fearing he will steal her maps, escapes when they get to the harbor and boards a ship bound for home.  When the emissaries from her kingdom sail to the Lunerian king's funeral, they, too are abducted.  Together Reyna and Levi uncover the disturbing truth about all the missing men, who have been taken to a kingdom in the north.  They travel to the kingdom under the guise of delivering a shipment of clay and devise a rescue plan once they find the men.  This romantic sea-faring adventure, complete with ghosts, sirens, magic and romance, will keep readers on the edge of their seat.  Although set in the Tower of the Winds world with some recognizable characters, this book is a standalone fantasy with an exciting new plot and cast of characters.

Tuesday, June 18, 2019

YA Beach Reads: The Rest of the Story, Fame, Fate and the First Kiss, Rayne and Delilah's Midnite Matinee, When Summer Ends

Summer is here and it's time for beach read recommendations.  Several popular authors have new books out, including Sarah Dessen (Once and For All 2017), one of my all-time favorite authors.  Her latest, The Rest of the Story, focuses on a young teen, who finds herself staying with her deceased mother's family, whom she hasn't seen for years, at their low budget lakeside motel. Fame, Fate and the First Kiss by Kasie West (Love, Life and the List) follows Lacey Barnes, an aspiring actress who has just been cast opposite a teen heartthrob in a new zombie film. Rayne and Delilah's Midnite Matinee by Jeff Zentner (The Serpent King) introduces Josie and Delia who host a public access cable TV show featuring hokey horror movies. Finally, When Summer Ends by Jessica Pennington (Love Songs and Other Lies) explores the relationship between Aiden, a star pitcher who is losing his vision, and Olivia, an aspiring journalist with an absentee mother, as they work together at his family's boat rental business for the summer. 

In The Rest of the Story  anxiety-ridden Emma Saylor Payne is thrown for a loop when she is sent to stay with her dead mother's family on North Lake, while her dad is on his honeymoon with his new wife and her paternal grandmother is on a cruise.  Emma's parents met on North Lake when he was teaching sailing lessons at Lake North, the ritzy side of the lake.  Her mother, who grew up on the working-class side of the lake at her family's low budget motel, was a beautiful, but troubled woman.  She had never gotten over the accidental death of her best friend Chris, and after years of struggle with addiction, died of an overdose. Emma, who is called Saylor by her mother's family, finds herself enjoying working at the motel and flirting with Roo, Chris's son who was her childhood friend. As she gets to know her cousins, she realizes that the class conflict between the kids on the two sides of the lake hasn't changed much since her parents were there.  Learning about her mother's wild teenage years and the time she herself spent at the lake before her mother died, Emma enjoys a summer of self-discovery, uncovering family secrets and experiencing first love.  This terrific addition to Dessen's repertoire of books exploring social class, family relationships and budding romance is a must read this summer.
Fame, Fate and the First Kiss introduces Lacey Barnes, who gets a shot at stardom, when she is chosen to co-star with action-hero Grant James in a zombie movie. Grant, whose last film received vicious reviews, is looking to redeem his reputation with a solid hit.  Lacey moves to LA to live with her dad, who is not as supportive of her career as she would like.  He hires Donavan Lake, a straight-laced judgmental peer tutor, to make sure she is doing her homework.  Meanwhile, her onscreen chemistry with Grant is lackluster. (Could it be all the zombie makeup she has to wear?) and someone on the set seems to be sabotaging her on social media.  When she tries to figure out who it is, she turns to Donavan for help finding the saboteur.  Her female co-star Amanda, who is coaching her on kissing techniques, tells her to imagine kissing someone she likes when shooting scenes with Grant, and much to her dismay Lacey finds herself thinking about Donavan. Excerpts from the Dancing Graves movie script are peppered throughout the story to give the reader insight into the film.  This fun romantic comedy, filled with West's trademark witty repartee between Lacey and Donavan, is sure to be a hit with fans of wholesome teen romance. 
Josie (Rayne) and Delia (Delilah) are the hosts of Rayne and Delilah's Midnite Matinee, a public access cable TV show in Jackson, Tennessee, which features hokey horror movies, interspersed with the girls' humorous banter and silly skits. Josie, who hopes to pursue a career in television, has an opportunity to take an internship with the Food Network, but struggles with her feelings of loyalty to Delia. Delia is passionate about resurrecting the old horror movies she watched with her absentee father as a kid.  She secretly hopes he will someday see the show and reconnect with her.  When Lawson, a young MMA fighter, guest stars with his beagle on the show, Josie finds herself falling for him.  The three head to Orlando for the ShiverCon festival, where they plan to meet with legendary horror host Jack Devine, who might help them gain a wider audience. Delia also hopes to find her father, who is supposedly in Orlando.  Written from alternating perspectives, the novel paints a picture of two colorful characters, whose witty banter and heartfelt angst about the future makes them an unforgettable pair.
Told from dual first-person perspectives, When Summer Ends follows the lives of high school star pitcher Aiden, who is secretly dealing with a vision impairment, and aspiring journalist Olivia, who did not get the summer newspaper internship she was hoping for and is nursing her first heartbreak.  Securing a job at his family vacation boat rental store on Lake Michigan, Olivia begins to heal as she and Aiden work side by side and begin an innocent flirtation.  Then her absentee mother arrives in town, just as her custodial aunt tells her they are moving to Arizona for her senior year.  Aiden, who quit the baseball team at the end of their junior year without any explanation, confides in Olivia that he is losing his vision, which puts an end to his pitching aspirations. He now is focusing on his passion for art, but his high school teammates, including Olivia's ex, who are unaware of his diagnosis, won't stop pestering him about rejoining the team.  Olivia and Aiden decide to live summer by chance, using coin flips and rock, paper, scissors to make important decisions. They begin to fall in love as they each explore new possibilities, including a life together.  These two sympathetic characters will keep readers engaged and rooting for them until the very last page. 

Tuesday, May 21, 2019

New YA Mysteries: Two Can Keep a Secret, Serious Moonlight,The Vanishing Stair, and The Hummingbird Dagger

Mysteries are arguably the most popular genre in fiction. Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys have captivated readers for generations.  With summer just around the corner, I think it's a perfect time to recommend four new YA mysteries, complete with teen sleuths, for summertime escapist fun. In Two Can Keep a Secret by Karen McManus (One of Us is Lying) twins Ezra and Ellery solve a series of homecoming queen murders. Serious Moonlight by Jenn Bennett (Alex, Approximately) introduces mystery lover Birdie Lindberg, who teams up with an aspiring magician to  expose the devious activities of a reclusive mystery author. In The Vanishing Stair, the second installment in Maureen Johnson's (Shades of London) Truly Devious trilogy, mystery obsessed Stevie Bell continues to uncover clues to a triple murder at Ellingham Academy. The Hummingbird Dagger by Cindy Anstey  (Suitors and Sabotage) is a regency novel filled with romance and mystery, involving an amnesia plagued young woman who is the target of devious criminals.

In Two Can Keep a Secret twins Ellery and Ezra are staying with their grandmother in Echo Ridge, while their mother is in rehab.  Their mother's twin, a high school homecoming candidate, died there 17 years ago, the homecoming queen five years ago was murdered  and now threats against the homecoming court have again surfaced.  The twins are working at the Fright Farm, formerly known as Murderland, where the homecoming queen's corpse was found. Ellery, a true crime buff, is determined to solve the mysteries.  The story is told in alternating chapters from the perspectives of Ellery and Malcolm, the younger brother of a man suspected of the five-year-old murder. This fast paced mystery is filled with red herrings and shocking twists that will keep readers turning pages until the satisfying conclusion, that reveals not only the murderer's identity and motivation, but other town secrets as well.

Serious Moonlight introduces mystery-loving Birdie Lindberg, who finds herself working the graveyard shift at her new job at an historic Seattle hotel, with aspiring magician Daniel Aoki, after an awkward one night stand with him, which she initiated, but ultimately fled. Birdie, whose strict grandparents have kept her isolated from kids her own age, spends most of her free time hanging out at the Moonlight Diner, where she met Daniel, or with her free-spirited Aunt Mona. Daniel, hoping to break through Birdie's defensive behavior, suggests they investigate whether a guest holding secret meetings at the hotel is actually Raymond Darke, a reclusive bestselling local mystery author.  As Birdie begins to blossom, she and Daniel rekindle their initial attraction while sharing their individual vulnerabilities with each other.  He struggles with depression after an accident with a magic trick leaves him deaf in one ear, and she worries that she suffers from narcolepsy, which is especially troublesome for someone who works the night shift. The mystery is compelling, with each chapter opening with a quote from a famous literary sleuth, but it is the developing relationship between these sensitive teens that is truly memorable.

The Vanishing Stair, the second installment in the Truly Devious mystery trilogy, finds true-crime obsessed Stevie Bell, continuing to investigate an unsolved kidnapping and triple murder that rocked her school, Ellingham Academy, in 1936. After a classmate's murder at the academy, her parents make her come home, but then allow her to return at the urging of their employer Senator Edward King.  When she returns, she resumes a relationship with his rebellious son David, who initially lied about his identity. Unbeknownst to him she agreed to keep tabs on him for his father in exchange for her return. Hired by an academic to help research details for her upcoming book on the legendary murders, Stevie uncovers the answers to several of the long-standing riddles of the case.  The story, alternating between the past and present, resolves several elements of the mystery yet others go unsolved, leaving readers anxious for the final installment, The Hand on the Wall, coming out in January 2020.

As The Hummingbird Dagger opens, a near-fatal carriage accident near London in 1833 leaves a young woman with amnesia and in the care of young Lord James Ellerby of Hardwick Manor.  Calling herself Beth, the girl struggles to regain her memory and is terrified by a recurring nightmare of a hummingbird with blood dripping from its steel beak.  James and his sister Caroline, who were suspicious of Beth's shifty carriage companions and insist she recuperate at their home, try to help her uncover her identity, even as frightening occurrences continue to take place on and around the manor.  A romance between James and Beth slowly evolves as clues to the mystery begin to help Beth reclaim her past and defy those plotting against her. Those readers, who love historical fiction filled with intrigue and suspense, will enjoy this latest book from Cindy Anstey, a master of the YA Regency Novel.



Friday, April 19, 2019

NYC stories: The Falconer,The Poet X, and Hope and Other Punchlines

Frequently, in novels set in NYC, the city becomes a character that enhances the story-line. This month I'm recommending three new YA novels where this is the case.  The Falconer by Dana Czapnik follows Lucy Adler, a basketball player who is passionate about the game, her unrequited crush Percy, and NYC.  The Poet X, a novel-in-verse by Elizabeth Acevedo, is about an Afro-Latino poet living in Harlem and struggling with family expectations. Hope and Other Punchlines by Julie Buxbaum takes on the aftermath of the 9/11 tragedy, following "Baby Hope" who was immortalized when a photographer took a picture of her being carried out of her day care at the World Trade Center, as the first tower collapsed in the background.

In The Falconer:A Novel,  17-yer-old Lucy Adler, a smart, talented  basketball player at Pendleton Academy in NYC, calls herself a "Pizza Bagel" - an Italian, Jewish mutt.  Written from Lucy's first-person point of view, the rhythm of the story is like that of a sports commentator, which is not surprising as the author is a sports journalist.  Lucy spends a great deal of time on the basketball court playing pickup games with her best guy friend and unrequited love interest, Percy Abney, an ultra-rich boy trying to resist his blue-blood fate. She watches despondently,  as he has flings with and discards one girl after another, oblivious to Lucy's being in love with him. She also wanders NYC with her best girlfriend and teammate Alexis Feliz, waxing poetic about the city's wonders, and hangs out with her cousin Violet, a bohemian artist who lives with her girlfriend Max in Soho. Max's claim to fame is her pop-art installation of an American flag made of dildos, which was shown at the Whitney Biennial.  The girls talk endlessly about love, sexism, and art vs capitalism. Attending an Art vs Kmart demonstration, Lucy wonders, "Does art always win? If it did, the world would be a very different place."  The lyrical descriptions of NYC and the spot-on accounts of Lucy's basketball games will keep the reader eagerly turning the pages.  Even as Lucy suffers one humiliation after another, I had faith that she would ultimately land on her feet.  This coming-of-age in Manhattan story is being compared to Catcher in the Rye.

The Michael L. Printz and Pura Bellpre award winner, The Poet X, introduces Xiomara Patista, a girl living in a Dominican community in Harlem. She is frustrated by her inability to defend herself against her mother's hyper-religious demands, as well as unwanted male attention now that she has developed curves. Her twin brother Xavier, who attends a "genius school" is little support, as he is struggling with challenges of his own.  She pours her passion into her poetry, which she writes in a leather notebook.  When she and her lab partner Aman begin a sweet flirtation, she decides to skip confirmation classes, which have been dictated by her mother, to spend time sharing her poetry with him.  When her mother finds out, all hell breaks loose and Xiomara's only outlet is her poetry, writing "It almost feels like the more I bruise the page, the quicker something inside me heals."  Her English teacher prompts her to join the poetry club and enter a slam poetry competition.  Through her poetry she finds the strength to stand up to her mother and express who she really is. This novel-in-verse by an award winning slam poet also won the National Book Award and the Golden Kite Honor and is a must read for anyone who loves poetry.

Hope and Other Punchlines opens 16 years after Abbi Hope Goldstein became the poster child for hope, when she was photographed wearing a birthday crown, while escaping the collapse of the first tower at the World Trade Center. She is beginning to exhibit signs of 9/11 syndrome, including a bloody cough, which she is hiding from her parents.  She takes a job as a camp counselor a few towns away, hoping for some anonymity one last summer before she thinks she will die.  Unfortunately, a co-worker, Noah Stern, recognizes her from school and blackmails her into helping him interview other people who were in the infamous picture. One of them was his deceased father, whom he wants to learn more about.  Told from alternating points of view, the story illuminates the impact the tragedy had on survivors, as well as tells a tale of first love and resilience in the face of adversity.  Although this emotional journey is laced with quick-witted banter, the novel is ultimately a fairly serious examination of the aftermath of the infamous terrorist attack in NYC.

Friday, March 8, 2019

Romance from Alternating Perspectives: Field Notes on Love, You'd Be Mine and The Me I Meant to Be

Romantic novels often are told in alternating perspectives so that the reader gets the story from two' points of view. It gives the reader an opportunity to connect with the characters because their personalities show through their voices.  Frequently, the technique makes the reader feel omniscient in that it foreshadows what's to come. I am recommending three young adult romances this month, that employ this device.  Field Notes on Love by Jennifer Smith (The Statistical Probability of Falling Love) tells the story of Hugh and Mae, strangers who fall in love on a cross country train trip.  You'd Be Mine by Erin Hahn follows Clay and Annie, two country music singers, who fall in love while on tour.The Me I Meant to Be by Sophie Jordan explores the familiar dilemma of falling in love with your best friend's ex.

Field Notes on Love opens as Hugh Wilkinson, one of the famous Surrey Sextuplets, contemplates heading to University with his siblings and his breakup with his girlfriend Margaret, which has left him with two tickets in her name for a rail trip across the United States .  Looking for one last gasp of freedom before he is forced to head off to college (the scholarship he received is dependent on all 6 of the sextuplets attending), Hugh decides to advertise for another Margaret Campbell, so he can take the train trip. Mae Campbell, a distraught New York teen who has just been rejected from USC film school, sends him a video in response to his ad, hoping to gather material for a new film on the trip. They meet at NYC's Penn Station and after an awkward initial encounter, embark on their cross country trip in close quarters.  As they travel, she interviews fellow passengers and he struggles with his ambivalence toward his planned future.  His British charm and her no-nonsense tough girl persona make for fun feisty dialogue, as they fall in love through their shared experiences.  This is an enjoyable contemporary twist on the romantic trope of strangers falling in love on a train.

In You'd Be Mine  country music star Clay Coolidge won best new artist at the CMA's, but his bad boy behavior has him in trouble with his label. They insist that he include Annie Mather's band on his summer tour, or they will drop him.  Annie comes from country music royalty, but after her mother's overdose and her dad's suicide, she is understandably wary of the lifestyle.  Her passion for music wins out and she joins him on the tour, quickly eclipsing him with her standout performances.  From the start of the tour fans are rooting for them to become a couple, but Annie has seen the pitfalls of celebrity romances. The story alternates between their views about the tour and each other, highlighting the difficulties in celebrities having normal lives. Annie and Clay bring out the best in each other musically and personally and can't fight their mutual attraction. The story is set in the world of country music, but one doesn't have to be a fan to love this bad boy/good girl romance, which comes out April 2nd.

The Me I Meant to Be introduces best friends Willa and Flor, who just broke up with Zach, Willa's next-door neighbor.  Flor insists that her friends develop a "Girl Code," the first rule being that they stay away from a friend's ex.  Willa signs it, even though she has secretly been in love with Zach throughout their childhood.  After sharing an intense kiss with Zach at a high school party and finding out he has feelings for her, too, Willa is torn as to what's more important, love or friendship. Meanwhile, Flor is struggling with  her dad's relationship with a girl half his age and her failing grades, which threaten her spot as captain of the soccer team. She begins falling for her smart sexy math tutor, Grayson, who won't give her the time of day. Each chapter begins with a new Girl Code  rule, which is illustrated in the chapter.  Although the reader gets two romances for the price of one, the real story is about Willa and Flor's relationship and thus alternates between each girl's first-person narration.

Thursday, February 21, 2019

Colorado Blue Spruce Young Adult Book Award 2018 Winner and Nominees for 2019

The Colorado Blue Spruce Young Adult Book Award 2018 Winner is The Hate You Give by Angie Thomas. As co-chair of the Blue Spruce Award committee, I am particularly thrilled that this ground-breaking book was nominated and voted on by teens, recognizing its importance.  In addition to the Blue Spruce Award, the book received a Coretta Scott King Author Honor, a Michael J Printz Honor, the William C. Morris YA Debut Award, and the Goodreads Choice Award for best debut and best YA novel in 2017. For those of you not familiar with the story, African American Starr Carter, the main character in The Hate U Give, lives in a poor black urban neighborhood, but attends a suburban prep school where she plays basketball and has a white boyfriend.  She successfully navigates these two very different realities until the night she witnesses a police officer shoot and kill her unarmed friend Khalil, when they are driving home from a neighborhood party. Although her parents want her to stay out of the news, she is challenged to come forward about the injustices following the event. Khalil is painted as a drug dealing thug and the officer is not charged. Starr, who has known Khalil since childhood, realizes she owes it to him to speak out, even if it endangers her family. Thomas' debut focuses on topics that are very current, police brutality and racism in America, and examines them on a very personal level.
The 2019 nominees include four books previously reviewed in this blog, including Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi, Warcross by Marie Lu, Furyborn by Claire Legrand and The Sun is Also a Star by Nicola Yoon. Additional nominees are as follows.
Always and Forever, Lara Jean by Jenny Han
While helping plan her father's wedding, senior Lara Jean struggles with choosing a college and questions how graduation is going to change her relationship with her boyfriend (3rd book in the series.)
Dreamland Burning by Jennifer Latham
When Rowan finds a skeleton on her family's property, investigating the brutal, century-old murder leads to painful discoveries about the past.  Alternating chapters tell the story of William, another teen grappling with the racial firestorm leading up to the 1921 Tulsa race riot, providing clues to the mystery. 
Honor Among Thieves by Rachel Caine & Ann Aguirre
Petty criminal Zara Cole has a painful past that's made her stronger than most, which is why she chose life in New Detroit instead of moving with her family to Mars. Zara is recruited into the Honors, an elite team of humans selected by the Leviathan - a race of sentient aliens ships - to explore the outer reaches of the universe as their passengers. (The Honors, Book #1)
Scythe by Neal Shusterman
In a world where disease has been eliminated, the only way to die is to be randomly killed by professional reapers known as scythes. Two teens must compete with each other to become a scythe- a position neither of them wants.  The one who becomes a scythe must kill the one who doesn't. (Arc of a Scythe Trilogy, Book #1)
The Ship of the Dead by Rick Riordan
Magnus Chase, son of Frey, the god of summer and health, isn't naturally inclined toward being a brave warrior.  Still, with the help of his motley group of friends, he has achieved deeds he never would have thought possible.  But Magnus's biggest challenge will be facing his own inner demons.  Does he have what it takes to outwit the wily trickster god, Loki? (Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard, Book # 3)
Starfish by Akemi Dawn Bowman
Kiko Himura yearns to escape the toxic relationship with her mother by getting into her dream art school, but when things do not work out as she hoped, Kiko jumps at the opportunity to tour art schools with her childhood friend, learning life-changing truths about herself and her past along the way. 
They Both Die at the End by Adam Silvera
In a near-future NYC, where a service alerts people on the day they will die, teenagers Mateo Torrez and Rufus Emeterio meet using the Last Friend app and are faced with the challenge of living a lifetime on their End Day. 
Three Dark Crowns by Kendare Blake
In every generation on the island of Fennibirn, a set pf triplets is born: three queens, all equal heirs to the crown and each possessor of a coveted magic.  But becoming the Queen crowned isn't solely a matter of royal birth.  Each sister has to fight for it.  The night the sisters turn sixteen, the battle begins.  The last queen standing gets the crown. (Three Dark Crowns Trilogy, Book #1)

To read more about the award and find book talks for the new nominees go to  http://www.coloradobluespruceaward.org  



Saturday, January 5, 2019

New YA Realistic Fiction

After publishing the 2018 revision of What's New in Young Adult Novels? and Ideas for Classroom Use and before moving on to reviewing 2019 titles, I want to recommend four 2018 realistic novels, which explore the theme of being true to oneself.  Rachel Cohn's latest My Almost Flawless Tokyo Dream Life follows a 16-year-old foster child to Japan where she had been sent to live with the father she's never met. Unclaimed Baggage by Jen Doll focuses on three teens who bond while working in a store that sells unclaimed luggage from airports.  In Stephanie Strohm's Love a la Mode two students meet and fall in love in culinary school in Paris. Finally Christina Hurley Deriso's Things I'd Rather Do than Die explores the relationship of a Christian athlete and an agnostic intellectual, who bond after being held at gunpoint and then locked together for several hours after a robbery.

In My Almost Flawless Tokyo Dream Life Elle Zoellner, who has been bouncing around in foster care since her mother's incarceration, finds her life changed overnight, when she is whisked away to Japan to live with the father she's never met.  Elle finds herself living in a 49th floor penthouse apartment and attending a prestigious international school with uber rich kids.  Her father, who is a hotel mogul, is distant and her aunt and grandmother downright rude.  But Elle embraces her new life, joining the track team and ingratiating herself with the popular "Ex-brats," of whom her dad approves.  When Elle begins crushing on a fellow teammate, who is on the outs with the Ex-brats, things begin to change and she struggles to navigate her newfound privileged life.  I really enjoyed this unconventional rags to riches story.

Unclaimed Baggage introduces Nell, who is devastated when she moves to Alabama, leaving her Chicago high school friends and boyfriend behind. She takes a job at a store that sells long lost luggage from airports, where she meets Doris and Grant.  Doris is an outspoken agnostic, making her an outcast in her bible belt community. Grant, whose football career is in jeopardy after a drunk driving accident, is struggling to deal with his alcoholism.  The three form a tentative friendship and begin working on their personal baggage.  The story is told in alternating voices, giving the reader insight into what each teen is going through.  When Nell's biracial boyfriend visits, he is assaulted and the three must come to terms with small town prejudice and where their loyalties lie.  The characters are well-drawn and sympathetic, making this a charming read.

Love a la Mode is set at a culinary school in Paris, where Henry and Rosie fall in love amidst the pressures of competitive cooking.  He is trying to prove himself and his dreams of becoming a chef to his strict Korean mother, who has other plans for his future.  Rosie, a pastry chef from rural Ohio, wonders if she is up to the challenge, as she has little experience with main course cuisine.  Their romance is thwarted by her cooking struggles and her flirtation with a fellow pastry chef, who is the school's celebrity chef owner's nephew. Witty banter, delectable portrayals of food obsessions and a rich cast of characters make this a winning rom-com that is a cut above.

Things I'd Rather Do Than Die is a catchy title that refers to one of the topics of conversion between high school seniors Jade Fulton and Ethan Garrett, when they are locked in a workout studio after being held at gunpoint at the gym where she works.  For eight hours they share confidences and begin to realize the stereotypical attitudes they had about each other were unfair.  She isn't just an agnostic intellectual and he isn't just a bible-toting dumb jock, as they formerly believed.  Once they are rescued, they return to their normal lives, but the bond they have formed is difficult to ignore, much to Ethan's girlfriend's annoyance.  As they deal with personal struggles, including Jade's dad's terminal diagnosis and Ethan's dad's alcoholism, they begin leaning on each other for support. The theme of being true to oneself is explored as they both reevaluate their goals and relationships. As Jade says, "If there is a God, maybe what he really values is people keeping an open mind."  Their thoughtful conversations and struggles with following their hearts make this a compelling read.