Wednesday, February 1, 2023

Multi-Ethnic Cultural Identity

 Cultural identity is important to a person's sense of self and wellbeing.  Identifying with a particular culture gives people a sense of belonging and security, providing them with access to social networks which provide support and shared values and aspirations. Multi-ethnic teens struggle, not only with the usual coming-of-age problems, but also with the conflict between ethnicities with differing values. In Jasmine Zumideh Needs a Win by Susan Azim Boyer the main character is of Iranian/Irish American descent. She is hoping to be accepted at NYU to major in journalism, but the 1979 hostage crisis in Iran is a major roadblock to her success. Impostor Syndrome and Other Confessions of Alejandra Kim by Patricia Park introduces a Korean/Argentine American teen also looking for acceptance to a prestigious East coast college. The Cartographers by Amy Zhang finds a Chinese American teen deferring her college acceptance in the hopes of dealing with mental health issues brought on by pressures to live up to expectations. 

In Jasmine Zumideh Needs a Win Jasmine Katie Zumideh dreams of interviewing rock stars for Creem magazine. She thinks the way to achieve this is by getting a journalism degree at NYU and in the process reinventing herself. In order to pad her application, she says she is class president, although she has just declared her candidacy. She assumes the election is a slam-dunk because she is running against ultra-conservative Gerald whose platform includes reinstating school uniforms and saying the pledge of allegiance. But then Americans are taken hostage in Iran and Jasmine's brother Ali becomes radicalized, vocally supporting the Iranian protesters.  Gerald villainizes Iran in his platform, while Jasmine tries to distance herself from her Persian heritage, which is not easy with Ali staging protests at school. Her campaign managers convince her she must take the low road to win, which includes making ridiculous campaign promises, going by the name Jasmine Katie and revealing that Gerald's dad is in prison. Amidst the campaign controversies, she is also dealing with separated parents, friends cheating on each other and expecting her to keep it secret, and academic pressures.  The historical setting and realistic cultural details, especially focusing on middle eastern food, make this a real win.

Impostor Syndrome and Other Confessions of Alejandra Kim introduces a girl whose Korean ancestors moved to Argentina before immigrating to America.  Ale is a scholarship student a a private prep school in NYC.  Grieving her father's recent death under suspicious circumstances, she dreams of being accepted at Whyder College in Maine, along with her best friend and supporter, Laurel. When a guest lecturer makes a racist comment about her mixed heritage making Ale a shoo-in for college acceptance, Laurel begins circulating a petition to get the man ejected. Ale, who just wants to get through the year without making waves, is horrified about the attention she is getting, including a bogus "diversity award."  As she begins to question Laurel's motivations, Ale must come to grips with the racism and classism that threaten her self-esteem. Told in three parts in a distinctive narrative voice, this coming-of-age tale explores multi-ethnicity, friendship and privilege with a blend of humor and seriousness that make it an entertaining and thought-provoking read.

In The Cartographers Chinese American Ocean Sun struggles with depression and anxiety.  Rather than confessing her mental health issues to her demanding mother, she secretly defers her acceptance to a prestigious NYC university and moves in with two girls, Georgie and Tashya, looking for a roommate in Brooklyn. Although they quickly become her friends, they are distracted by their growing attraction to each other and leave her on her own at a nightclub on the night that the city loses power.  She heads to the subway to make her way home, when the lights go out. She is rescued by a graffiti artist known as Constant Brave.  He takes her with him on a spray-painting journey where he graffities subway maps on bare walls and spouts mythological musing that enchant her.  They continue their relationship via google docs, discussing life, society and their dreams.  Ocean frequently questions whether the life she is living is really a waking death.  Their poetic philosophical communications shed light on the desperation of anxiety and living up to others' expectations. Although Ocean sees him occasionally, most of their relationship is conducted online. All of the characters are seeking to map out their lives. listening to their own hearts. 

Friday, January 6, 2023

New YA Books for 2023

 The latest revision of my book What's New in Young Adult Novels? and Ideas for Classroom Use is now available.  Just click on the book icon in the upper right corner of my blog and it will take you to Lulu.com where you can purchase this book.  I would like to take this opportunity to thank NetGalley for providing ARCs of many of the new young adult novels that I review. Four new books that are coming out at the beginning of 2023, I categorize as candy bar books.  These are books that are fun reads about fairly superficial issues such as boyfriend/girlfriend problems, strict parents, or cliques/popularity issues. Frequently, they are told in first person and the voice is very characteristic of how teenagers speak.   Begin Again by Emma Lord finds Andie Rose, an aspiring advice columnist, transferring to her dream college, only to find her boyfriend has transferred to her community college to be with her.  As she navigates the struggles of a long distance relationship, she blossoms in her new role providing anonymous advice on a pirate radio station. The Love Match by Priyanka Taslim introduces Zahra Khan, who defers college after her father dies and begins working at a Pakistani tea shop. As her mother tries to find her a suitable match, Zahra finds herself attracted to a co-worker, a recent immigrant from Bangladesh.  The Wrong Kind of Weird by James Ramos explores the conflict between geek enthusiasm and the need to conform, as Cameron, a member of Geeks and Nerds United has a secret fling with his school's popular It-Girl. French Kissing in New York by Anne-Sophie Jouhanneau is a fun romp with an aspiring French chef, who is pursuing a NYC restaurant career, as well as a romance with a NYC boy she met in Paris.  After a magical night together, they agree to meet at midnight in Times Square one year later, ala An Affair to Remember.

Begin Again introduces Andie Rose, who hopes to study psychology at Blue Ridge State, where her deceased mother pioneered the college's pirate radio station. When she is rejected, she enrolls at Little Fells Community College, while Connor, her boyfriend, goes to Blue Ridge.  In a comedy of errors, she gets the opportunity to transfer, only to learn that Connor transferred to Little Fells so they could be together.  As they struggle to maintain a long-distance relationship, Andie finds herself blossoming when she gets the chance to headline the radio's anonymous advice program. As she navigates her problems, including a difficult statistics class and a demoralizing emotional mishap, she finds herself seeking out her surly RA, Milo Flynn, who always seems to appear when she needs help.  Although the romantic triangle is a familiar trope, the humor and sympathetic heroine make this a satisfying read. 

In The Love Match Zahra Khan, an aspiring author, defers her acceptance to Columbia University, when her father's death puts the family in financial straits.  She takes a job at a Pakistani tea shop Chai Ho, as her mother plots to match her with a suitable Bangladeshi boy, Harun Emon.  Though she and Harun have no interest in each other, they agree to fake-date to placate their families.  Meanwhile, Zahra begins secretly dating a co-worker, Nayim Aktar, a recent arrival from Bangladesh.  But as her romance with Nayim heats up, she begins to find herself growing closer to Harun.  The author authentically explores diverse South Asian Muslim identities, describing genuine practices that she experienced growing up in a Bangladeshi community in New Jersey.  In this delightful Bengali Natok (drama) the question looms, "Will Zahra choose obligation or herself?"

The Wrong Kind of Weird finds Cameron Carson and his best friends members of a school club known as Geeks and Nerd United (GANU). After a clandestine summer romance with coffee shop co-worker Karla Ortega, the schools' queen bee, she and Cam agree to keep their hookups secret, while working together on the school's production of Pride and Prejudice.  When he begins bonding over similar geeky interests with Mackenzie Briggs, his former nemesis and newest member of GANU, he wonders if he should end his dalliance with Karla, who continues to snub him in public.  Although Cam's romantic entanglements are the focus of the story, the diverse cast of characters (black, Latine, queer, straight) make this an exploration of identity and learning to accept people across the divide of school cliques. The author, a self-proclaimed geek, realistically portrays geek enthusiasm conflicting with the need to fit in. 

In French Kissing in New York Margot, an aspiring chef from a small French town, meets Zach, a tourist from NYC and enjoys a magical night of romance in Paris. Without exchanging contact information, they agree to meet a year later in Times Square at midnight, believing they are "meant to be."  Margot is heading there after graduation to pursue her restaurant dreams.  Her father lives in NYC and with her mother's help she lands a job at her dream restaurant. Unfortunately, her first day on the job finds her washing dishes when she is supposed to be meeting Zach.  When she arrives late at Times Square, he is nowhere to be found. Heartbroken, Margot enlists the help of Ben, a line cook at the restaurant, to find Zach.  Together, they explore NYC, seeing the sites and sampling delectable cuisine, as they follow clues from her night with Zach.  This mash-up of the films An Affair to Remember and Serendipity is an authentic look at restaurant life, as well as a fun romp with a hopeless romantic, who is clueless when it comes to love. 

Thursday, December 1, 2022

Immigrant Issues: We Are All We Have, All My Rage, and Hollow Fires

 Immigration issues became even more complicated when the Zero Tolerance Policy was enacted in 2018. Asylum seekers now face criminal prosecution, regardless of their situation in the country they are fleeing.  Although the border issues with Mexico dominate the news, Muslim families who immigrate face the additional problem of being suspected of being terrorists by racists in their community.  Three terrific new books illustrate the traumas immigrants and their children face.  We Are All We Have by Marina Budhos follows the problems two Pakistani kids face after their widowed mother is arrested by ICE.  All My Rage, the 2022 National Book Award winner by Sabaa Tahir, finds two Pakistani American teens struggling to navigate grief, family abuse and poverty as the children of immigrants in Southern California.  Hollow Fires by Samira Ahmed tackles the issues of Islamaphobia and white supremacy in a story about an aspiring journalist who is trying to solve the mystery of a Muslim boy's disappearance after he was accused of being a terrorist. 

We Are All We Have takes place in 2019 Brooklyn. It opens with  immigrant Rania Hassan looking forward to heading to Hunter College after a relaxing summer vacation.  But an overnight ICE raid leads to her mother's arrest, even though Rania, her 8-year-old brother Kamal and their mother applied for political asylum after her journalist father disappeared in Pakistan.  Rania and Kamal are moved to a shelter where they meet Carlos, an undocumented teen who escaped a gang threat in Mexico.  After the Zero Tolerance policy was implemented by the Department of Justice, these asylum seekers now face prosecution.  The three decide to hit the road to find Rania's estranged uncle who could become their guardian.  They end up in a temporary sanctuary synagogue, where they must decide the next step in their search for safe haven.  This poignant story effectively illustrates how US immigration policies separate families and leave vulnerable children to fend for themselves.  Ghazals, Indian poetry which aspiring literature major Rania pens, beautifully express her anguish, as she and the boys fight to stay in the US.

In All My Rage two Pakistani American teens living in the California desert town of Juniper struggle as family crises threaten to derail their dreams.  Salahudin finds himself head of his family when his mother dies and his father disappears into alcoholism, as Sal tries to save the rundown motel they own. For years Noor was his best friend, but Sal distances himself from Noor when she declares her love for him.  She lives with an abusive uncle who saved her and brought her to America, when her home was destroyed in a Pakistani earthquake. Although she feels beholden to him, she wants to go to college, but her uncle insists she will work in his liquor store after high school. She, too, is grieving Sal's mother's death, as she was Noor's defender. Once supportive of one another, Sal and Noor find their way back to each other only to be torn apart again when he makes a desperate choice to pay off family debts.  Through alternating perspectives, the story navigates a variety of themes, including Islamaphobia, found family, abuse and trauma.  Songs referenced throughout the book add to this emotional journey of two marginalized teens. ("Despite all my rage, I'm still just a rat in a cage."  Smashing Pumpkins) 

Hollow Fires, a dual exploration of Islamaphobia and white supremacy, introduces high school journalist Safira, who is investigating several hate crimes in search of a connection.  A cyber-attack substituting a racist rant for her column in the school newspaper, vandalism of her mosque and her parents' Indian food store, and the disappearance of Jawad Ali, a 14-year-old student falsely accused of being a suicide bomber, seem too coincidental to be unrelated.  Safira begins to suspect a fellow classmate when he makes a Nietzsche-inspired comment in class, which alerts her to the Nietzsche quotes appearing in the rant, as well as the graffiti.  Meanwhile, Jawad's ghost is attempting to lead Safira toward his corpse, at the same time reflecting on his unwarranted school suspension for making a cosplay costume with a jet pack that a teacher mistakes for a bomb.  Even though his name is cleared, Jawad, now known as "bomb boy," continues to be harassed.  Readers are introduced to statements at the beginning of each chapter in the form of facts, truth and lies about racism, "ghost skins" (a white supremacist who refrains from openly displaying their racist beliefs for the purpose of blending into wider society and surreptitiously furthering their agenda), the role social media plays in fostering extremists agendas and more.  This impassioned murder mystery based on a true story, will leave readers pondering the impact the media has on impressionable youth, as well as the struggles immigrant families and their children face in our country. 

Tuesday, November 1, 2022

New YA Fantasy - Princess of Souls, A Thousand Heartbeats, and Crossed

 Young adult fantasy frequently includes an element of romance where the heroine is aided by her true love to overcome adversity. Together they defeat the evil entities that threaten them.  Princess of Souls by Alexandra Christo finds Selestra, a witch who prophesies peoples' deaths, rescued from imprisonment in a tower by Nox whose death in inextricably tied to her own. A Thousand Heartbeats by Kiera Cass is a star crossed love story where the princess is abducted by a soldier from an enemy kingdom, who ultimately falls in love with her. They join forces to bring a peaceful solution to the conflict between the two kingdoms.  Crossed by Lynn Rush is the first in a trilogy about an angel who falls to earth and the reclusive artist who comes to her aid to help her escape people who are pursuing her. 

In Princess of Souls, a reimagining of the fairytale Rapunzel, Selestra Somniatis spends her days imprisoned in a tower on Floating Mountain.  She is destined to replace her mother as the king's witch, who prophesies deaths in the Festival of Predictions.  Participants must survive three threats to their lives during a fortnight.  The first threat is predicted by the king's witch, giving the person a chance to avoid death.  If they die, which most do, their soul will be consumed by King Seryth to extend his immortality.  If they live, a wish will be granted, and they are given the opportunity to attempt to survive the remaining fatal encounters.  Seryth will cede his immortality to anyone who succeeds, which, of course, no one does.  Enter Nox Laederic, a Last Army soldier who hopes to kill Seryth in revenge for his father's murder.  Selestra, who can prophesy a person's death by merely touching them, is allowed to practice on Nox.  She foresees that Nox's death is intertwined with her own.  She convinces him to help her escape to an island safe from Seryth's rule, where a fabled sword is hidden that must be used to end Seryth's life.  Needless-to-say the escape is fraught with danger and adventure. Nox and Selestra's witty banter adds to this slow-burning romance. 

A Thousand Heartbeats, a Romeo and Juliet-esque romance, finds Annika, the princess of Kadier betrothed to her scheming cousin Nicholas for political gain.  When they leave the castle to tour the kingdom celebrating their engagement, she is kidnapped by Lennox, a Dahrainian soldier who believes that the Kaderian throne belongs to his family. Annika is dismayed to find that the stories of her family being chosen by the six clans to rule is a myth. Lennox tells her that when his father was executed for attempting to reclaim the throne, her mother was abducted and murdered in retaliation. Annika escapes her imprisonment in a dungeon only to be recaptured by Lennox, who then lets her go. Her father King Theron arranges a meeting on a nearby island with the Dahrainian leader Kawan to negotiate a truce. Annika is appalled to find out he is actually planning an ambush. In the ensuing battle Annika and Lennox face off in a sword fight that ends when a hurricane hits land and they end up sheltering together in a cave where they share their secrets and fall in love. When the storm subsides, they leave the cave and find that the survivors have retreated, and Annika's father and brother have been gravely injured.  Annika, who has been declared acting regent, wants to pursue peace and find out the truth about who should actually be King of Kadier.  In alternating chapters from Annka and Lennox's points of view, the action-packed story unfolds, filled with palace intrigue, conflicting histories and steamy romance.

Crossed, the first book in a new paranormal/fantasy trilogy, introduces Trinity Dawkins, who crosses between two parallel realms and lands in Berg, Minnesota, where she is rescued by reclusive artist Jayden Brown.  At first Trinity is blind and has amnesia, but she slowly regains her sight and memory. Jayden is amused by her unfamiliarity with life on earth and voracious appetite, but when she sprouts wings, he is mystified. Their mutual attraction becomes an unbreakable bond, when Jayden touches a gold bracelet she wears and a brand is transferred onto his wrist.  Then enemies from her world back home appear on Earth.  Jayden does everything he can to protect the mysterious angel who has become his muse. Ultimately, they find other angels on Earth who help them in their quest to defeat Trinity's enemies and seal the opening between realms. The sequels Winged (January 23) and Clipped (May 17) will be released in 2023.

Saturday, October 1, 2022

Young Heroines Searching for Identity

 Introducing quirky young heroines with overprotective parents is a popular way for authors to set up conflict as the girls try to break free and find their own identity. In Well, That Was Unexpected by Jesse Q. Sutanta a southern California teen's mother disapproves of her social life and whisks her away to Indonesia to find her a suitable boyfriend. The Epic Story of Every Living Thing by Deb Caletti  explores the world of kids with sperm donor dads, as a teen connects with half-siblings through social media. Long Story Short by Serena Kaylor finds a home-schooled genius sent off to Shakespeare Camp to prove her readiness for independence. 

In Well, That Was Unexpected Sharlot Citra's Chinese Indonesian mother catches her in a compromising position with her boyfriend and immediately takes her to Jakarta for the summer to get her away from him. To ensure Sharlot finds a suitable romantic partner, Mom starts an online conversation with George Clooney Tanuwijaya's father. George's dad is equally worried about his son's romantic endeavors.  Online each parent is pretending to be their teenage offspring.  Sharlot and George reluctantly meet for coffee and immediately butt heads. Neither resemble the online version of themselves that their parents created. However, George is the public face of an etiquette app for teen boys that is being launched by his family's wealthy business empire and he agrees to a fake dating situation. As they spend time together, Sharlot begins to warm to  Jakarta and George himself. This charming romcom is filled with humor and romance and an intriguing insight into the Chinese Indonesian culture. 

The Epic Story of Every Living Thing introduces Harper Proulx, who is pressured by her single mother to be an academic achiever who is always thinking about the future. She is addicted to Instagram and is constantly creating posts that are tweaked to perfection. Her boyfriend Ezra is so tired of being an extra in her Instagram life, that he breaks up with her.  Harper has always wondered about her sperm donor dad and when a chance comment online connects her with four half-siblings, she steps out of her comfort zone and embarks with them on a journey to find their biological dad. Beau Zane is a deep-sea diver who lives in Hawaii and is obsessed with solving the mystery of a sunken shipwreck.  At the beginning of each present-day chapter there are excerpts from 19th century letters, journals and newspapers about a seafaring expedition related to the shipwreck. Beau teaches the kids to dive and enlists their help with his project. As Harper puts down her phone and begins to connect with the real world, she is amazed at the beauty of everything living thing.   

In Long Story Short 16-year-old home-schooled math genius Beatrice Quinn has just been accepted at her dream college Oxford University.  Her parents, however, don't think their anxious socially awkward daughter is ready to live abroad alone.  Bea strikes a deal with them.  If she can spend the summer at a Connecticut Shakespearean Camp and come out of her shell, they'll let her attend Oxford.  They assign her tasks including making a friend, engaging in small talk, pulling a prank, among others.  When she meets her Black bi-sexual extroverted roommate Mia, she is one step closer to success.  Mia and Nolan, her gay best friend, help Bea achieve her goals and more.  She gets a part in a play, attends parties, and even enters into a Shakespeare-off with her crush/nemesis Nikhil Shah.  Bea's evolution from awkward math nerd to self-confident actor is handled realistically, and the enemies-to-lovers romance is predictable, yet charming, as the two wittily spar, using the Bard's works as fodder. 

Thursday, September 1, 2022

Young Adult Influencers

 The word influencer, meaning "a person with the ability to influence potential buyers of a product or service by promoting or recommending the items on social media," is new to my vocabulary.  Little did I know that teens can make a lot of money in this endeavor, but it seems to take a toll on them. The perfect imagine they project on their Instagram feed is hard to live up to, and the notoriety makes them vulnerable to jealous or obsessed fans trying to expose their secrets and jeopardize their sponsorships. Four new young adult novels focus on teen influencers, and interestingly they are all mystery thrillers. Never Coming Home by Kate Williams is a retelling of Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None, with ten young influencers being lured to Unknown Island where they are killed off one by one. Influence by Sara Shepard (Pretty Little Liars) and Lilia Buckingham is a behind-the-scenes look at the seemingly glamourous world of teen influencers, which evolves into a murder mystery. Lord of the Fly Fest by Goldy Moldavsky (The Mary Shelley Club) is  a reimagining of Lord of the Flies if it took place at the Fyre Festival. Live Your Best Lie by Jessica Weaver finds a popular teen influencer, who is publishing a tell-all memoir, dead with her best friends being the most logical murder suspects. 

In Never Coming Home ten young influencers are invited to Unknown Island for a luxurious all-expense-paid vacation.  They eagerly accept, hoping to increase their following and monetize their fame. However, when they arrive, all they find is a rundown hotel with few amenities, no staff and no Wi-Fi. They soon discover they were invited for reasons other than their influencer fame.  Each one has caused a person's death with no consequences and someone wants revenge.  As they begin dying off one by one, they struggle to decide who to trust and how to stay alive.  How each influencer rose to fame and the secret they are hiding creates interest and suspense.  With unexpected twists this page-turner will thrill readers until the final reveal. 

Influence sheds light on the dark side of the highly competitive teen influencer world, when Scarlett Leigh, a highly successful, but vicious, social media maven is murdered. There are a variety of suspects including Delilah or Lila D, who has just moved to LA, becoming famous after a video of her rescuing a puppy from a burning building goes viral. Lila has unwittingly struck up a romance with Scarlett's boyfriend, You Tube Star Jack Dono. When mega media star Jasmine Walters-Diaz invites Lila to an influencer event she is thrilled. There she meets Fiona Jacobs, an actress with a dark secret that is aggravating her OCD. Fiona suspects that Scarlett, who is competing with her for an acting job, knows the secret and is threatening to expose her. Jasmine has a secret as well.  She shared a kiss with a masked female influencer and begins worrying about how her attraction to girls will affect her fanbase. Mystery writer Sara Shephard has teamed up with real-life actress and teen influencer Lilia Buckingham to explore the pressures put on young social media stars to be what their fans expect and how far they will go to get ahead. 

Lord of the Fly Fest is a satirical thriller that introduces True Crime Podcaster Rafi Francisco, who is hoping to out musician River Stone as a murderer on her podcast Musical Mysteries. She follows him to the Fly Festival, which, like the real-life Fyre festival, promises to be a luxurious festival filled with music and opportunities to increase one's social media following.  The attendees arrive on the Caribbean Island and realize the advertising has been all smoke and mirrors.  There's is no staff to greet them and accommodations are FEMA tents left over from the last disaster.  Most of the guests are wealthy social media influencers and Rafi feels out of place.  But River Stone shows up and she is determined to get an interview with him and prove he murdered his girlfriend Tracy who disappeared.  When another girl goes missing after hiking with River, Rafi is sure she is right.  Meanwhile, rumors of the appearance of River's latest girlfriend Hella Badid keep festival goers from fleeing. The absurdities in the social media world are showcased by the cast of influencers who are with Rafi on the island.   Waiting for Hella to appear, they are monetizing everything from Wi-Fi access, which is fairly non-existent to poop beauty masks, for those stuck without their usual makeup and beauty supplies.  While the central mystery is suspenseful, it is really the silly influencers and their Lord of the Flies inspired antics that make the book an entertaining read. 

Although it doesn't come out until January, I wanted to include Live Your Best Lie, which much like Influence focuses on the murder of social media influencer.  Summer Cartwright goes missing during her Halloween party and her closest friends fear for her life.  Grace, her best friend, Adam, her gamer ex-boyfriend, Laney, her roommate from a recent influencer camp and Cora, her worshipful assistant, all decide to investigate.  Summer is planning a tell-all memoir which will reveal their secrets. Told from multiple points of view, the story reveals all are suspects, when Summer's body is found. She had been killed by an overdose of nicotine, which they had been talking about before her murder. Summer had already scheduled social media posts with excerpts from the book as teasers before the book's publication, which give hints as to why each would want to kill her. Once again the pressures that bring out the worst in teen influencers are explored in the form of a murder mystery.

Monday, August 1, 2022

Young Adult Intrusion Fantasy

 Intrusion fantasy is a subgenre of fantasy fiction in which magical events intrude on an otherwise-normal world.  High fantasy stories take place in fictional worlds that have their own sets of rules and physical laws.  Three intrusion fantasy novels caught my attention this month.  The Charmed List by Julie Abe adds a secret magical community that sells charms and enchantments in an otherwise realistic Palo Alto, California.  The Stars Between Us by Cristin Terrill sets a rags to riches romance on two different planets, but the space setting does little to impact the basic story. When the Stars Come Out by Scarlett St. Clair is set in a high school in Oklahoma where several of the students have the ability to see dead people.

The Charmed List introduces shy loner Ellie Kobata, who is part of a secret magical community in Palo Alto, California.  Even her only friend Lia is unaware of her powers.  Jack Yasuda, her estranged childhood buddy whose parents also run a magic shop, shares the knowledge, but for reasons unknown he ghosted her several years ago.  Prior to a summer road trip with Lia, Ellie decides to come out of her shell, starting with an Anti-Wallflower list of 13 challenges.  When #4, "revenge against Jack," goes terribly wrong, she finds herself at odds with Lia, who is angry about the magic, and going on the road trip with Jack instead.  Their parents are sending them to a magical convention to set up and man each family's magical display.  As they travel down the coast, Ellie finds herself completing many of the challenges, including falling in love.  The magical elements like an enchanted summer cottage and joy infused tea make this an unusual second chance romance. 

The Stars Between Us  is a space opera that involves Vika Hale, who lives on the poverty-stricken planet of Philomenus. A mysterious benefactor, Rigel Chapin, provides her with money for an education, and when Chapin dies, a young solicitor, Archie Sheratan, appears and tells her she is heir to Chapin's fortune, provided she marry his grandson Leo. She is flown to the neighboring wealthy planet Ploutos to meet Leo, where she learns that his rocket blew up on the way to meet her. A married couple, who were Chapin's servants, are revealed as the next in line to inherit, and they take her in and treat her as a daughter.  Meanwhile threats on Chapin's heirs  continue.  Her guardians hire an assistant, Sky Foster, who lives in her family's building on Philomenus and commutes each day.  Although Vika finds herself suspicious of him, he is helping her uncover the bomber's identity before she becomes his next victim. But Sky is hiding secrets, which if discovered, will change everything. The futuristic space setting impacts very little of the story and the mystery's resolution. 

When the Stars Come Out opens with Anora Silby moving from New York to Oklahoma to take on a new identity, hiding her ability to see the dead and capture their souls in a resurrection coin.  However, on her first day she both captures a soul and loses the resurrection coin, which gives others the ability to steal souls.  When a classmate is murdered, Anora is sure the coin is the weapon.  The Order, an organization that governs the dead on Earth, is looking for a mortal called the Eurydice to help them stop the loss of more lives.  Anora is befriended by Lennon, seemingly a mortal, Shy Savior, a classmate who is secretly a member of the Order and Thane, his former best friend.  Shy suspects that Anora is the Eurydice and is determined to protect her.  Shapeshifting as a raven, he patrols her house, but is unsure who is threatening her, which is the conflict that must be resolved.  This is the first book of a proposed four book series.  Although written in 2018, it was rereleased in July 2022 with the book When the Sky Falls listed as the sequel by Goodreads.  As of now, the sequel has not been released.  In the sequel Anora is cooperating with the Order, but when an Elite member is murdered, she is the prime suspect.