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YA for Disability Pride Month

Hey YA Readers!

Where June is known as Pride month, honoring, celebrating, and understanding the history and lives of those in the queer community, Pride continues in a different way in July. The origins of the celebration have been linked to more than one place and time — Boston held the first Disability Pride Parade in 1990, while New York City declared July Disability Pride Month in 2015, in honor of the 25th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act — but over the last few years, awareness and celebration of Disability Pride Month has grown.

The Disability Pride movement even has its own flag, designed by Ann Magill. You can see the influence other Pride movements have had in amplifying this celebration in it:

In honor of Disability Pride Month, in addition to educating yourself about disability — both that which is visible and that which is not — it’s the perfect time to dig into YA books featuring disability. I’ve included a couple of forthcoming titles for your preordering as well.

YA Books Featuring Disability

Disability Visibility edited by Alice Wong (Young Reader Edition) — October 26

Wong’s incredible anthology featuring an array of disabled writers exploring life with disability hit shelves last summer for adults. This fall, young readers will get the chance to pick up this powerful and crucial anthology.

The Disturbed Girl’s Dictionary by NoNieqa Ramos

This voice-driven novel follows Macy as she navigates her own tumultuous home life—one with an inconsistent mother, a father in prison, and a younger brother in the foster care system because of repeat CPS visits—with understanding why it is her best friend has been pulling away from her. These are teens living hard, hard lives and still managing to get up every day and go through the motions, much as it leaves an impact on them physically, emotionally, and psychologically. Macy has a psychological, potentially neurological, disorder that impacts her daily life and the relationships with her best friend and family.

A Face for Picasso: Coming of Age with Crouzon Syndrome by Ariel Henley (November 2)

This memoir is the story of twins Ariel and Zan, who were diagnosed with Crouzon Syndrome — a condition where bones in the head fuse prematurely. Ariel talks about the numerous reconstructive surgeries they had growing up and more, the mental and emotional realities of living with facial disfigurement.

Finding Balance by Katy Gardner

Mari and Jase both attend Camp Chemo annually, where they get to be fully themselves as cancer survivors. Jase keeps this part of his life buried except for camp and his annual oncologist visit; Mari, who is an amputee, chooses to live openly about her survivorship. They’re close at camp, but when Mari transfers to Jase’s school, his cover might be blown.

Two Girls Staring At The Ceiling by Lucy Frank

There are very few characters in YA—and in fiction more broadly—who have Crohn’s Disease. Told through the voices of Chess and Shannon, this novel in verse is about two girls dealing with Crohn’s Disease, one who has been working with the illness for a long time and one who, after an unfortunate incident with a boy she was beginning to like, is newly diagnosed.

Unbroken: 13 Stories Featuring Disabled Teens edited by Marieke Nijkamp

This much needed, vital anthology featuring disabled characters by disabled authors includes stories from authors like Keplinger, Stork, and Duyvis named above, but also Heidi Heilig, Dhonielle Clayton, Kayla Whaley, and more.

I’d be remiss not to also mention Body Talk: 37 Voices Explore Our Radical Anatomy, the anthology I edited, which features an incredible array of disabled voices, including Deafness, chronic illness, amputation, and so much more.

Likewise, some of these titles were pulled from a larger post on excellent YA disability books. Dig into this selection, as well as even more YA books about disability.


As always, thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you on Thursday!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram.

Thank you to the audiobook edition of Flash Fire by TJ Klune, read by Michael Lesley, for sponsoring today’s newsletter.

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What's Up in YA

Foodie Books, Summer Days, & Queer Love: Your YA Ebook Deals This Weekend

Summer is sizzling, so there’s no better time to grab a good book and enjoy it at the pool, beneath a shady tree, or somewhere inside beside a fan or air conditioner. There are so many outstanding ebook deals this weekend, so stock up and prepare for a lot of great reading to come.

The Girls I’ve Been by Tess Sharpe is a fantastic mystery/thriller about identity and revenge. One of my favorite reads this year! $3.

If you haven’t yet read Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi, snag it for $3.

Baby and Solo by Lisabeth Posthuma was one of my favorite reads over the last couple of months. It’s a coming-of-age workplace story, set in a video rental store in the 90s and explores grief, as well as the realities of suburban queer life at that time. $3.

Carry On by Rainbow Rowell, the first in the Simon Snow series that just wrapped up this week, is $2. Follow it up with Wayward Son, the second book in the series, for $3.

This One Summer by Mariko and Jillian Tamaki is an excellent graphic novel and perfect for summer. $3.

Mirage by Somaiya Daud is the first in a duology about a stand-in princess, set in a magical sci-fi world. $2.

Skyhunter by Marie Lu is a fast-paced, action-driven fantasy read and the first in a series by the beloved author. $3.

Haven’t yet read the work of David Arnold? The Electric Kingdom may be where to begin. $3.

A Taste for Love by Jennifer Yen is a new foodie rom-com, perfect for fans of Jenny Han. $3.

Speaking of foodie romances, Kisses and Croissants by Anne-Sophie Jouhanneau is also a new one, with a Parisian setting. $3.

Fifteen Hundred Miles from the Sun by Jonny Garza Villa just hit shelves, and it’s a coming-of-age story about coming out and finding love. Snap it up for $4.

Kosoko Jackson’s just-released Yesterday is History is the very specific price of $3.76.

The Wrath and the Dawn by Renée Ahdieh is a fantasy read launching a series. $3.

If you want to read a new take on vampires, The Beautiful by Renée Ahdieh will delight. It’s the first in a trilogy. $3.

Forged in Fire and Stars by Andrea Robertson is Game of Thrones meets Shadow and Bone. The first book in a series is $3.

The Radical Element edited by Jessica Spotswood, a collection of historical short stories about girls through history, featuring rockstar contributors, is on sale for $2.

Daniel Aleman’s recently-released story of a teen fearing his parent’s deportation, Indivisible, is $3.


I hope you found your next favorite read!

See you Monday,

Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram.

Big thank you to Epic Reads and My Contrary Mary for sponsoring this weekend’s newsletter.

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Poison Hearts & Horror Reboots: Your YA News & New Books, July 8, 2021

Hey YA Readers!

First, a giant thank you to the marvelous Tirzah for covering this newsletter while I was out. I’ve really enjoyed reading what she’s shared and hope you have as well.

This week’s roundup of news isn’t as robust as usual, thanks to the long weekend and holiday in the US. The same goes for this week’s new releases; it’s a little slower, but that just means more time to catch up on your reading.

YA Book News

New YA Releases This Week

Hardcover

Any Way The Wind Blows by Rainbow Rowell (series)

The Betrayed by Kiera Cass (series)

If You, Then Me by Yvonne Woon

It Ends in Fire by Andrew Shvarts

The Queen Will Betray You by Sarah Henning (series)

Rise To The Sun by Leah Johnson

Six Crimson Cranes by Elizabeth Lim (first in a series)

Summer in the City of Roses by Michelle Ruiz Keil

This Poison Heart by Kalynn Bayron

Where It All Lands by Jennie Wexler

Paperback

#NoEscape by Gretchen McNeil (series)

Avatar: The Last Airbender by F. C. Yee, Michael Dante DiMartino

Blood and Honey by Shelby Mahurin (series)

Cinderella is Dead by Kalynn Bayron

An Education in Ruin by Alexis Bass

Evolution by Teri Terry (series)

The Girl in the Headlines by Hannah Jayne

One Person, No Vote by Carol Anderson, Tonya Bolden (nonfiction)

The Princess Will Save You by Sarah Henning (start of a series)

Set Fire to the Gods by Sara Raasch, Kristen Simmons (start of a series)

The Voting Booth by Brandy Colbert

What We Devour by Linsey Miller

At Book Riot This Week


Thanks for hanging out. I’ve missed y’all, and I can’t wait to get back in the groove of talking books. I had the chance to read so many outstanding YAs lately. Currently digging into Anton Treuer’s Everything You Wanted To Know About Indians But Were Afraid to Ask (Young Reader Edition).

See you Saturday with YA ebook deals!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram


Big thank you to our sponsor Darling, by K. Ancrum, with Fierce Reads. Peter Pan remixes are hot this year!

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Your YA Book News and New YA Books: March 25, 2021

Hey YA Readers!

It’s a quiet time in the YA book news world this week, so prepare to settle in with some extra time for catching up on those new books.

YA Book News

New YA Books

You may need to toggle to paperback editions once you click the link.

Anna K by Jenny Lee (paperback, series)

Bruised by Tanya Boteju

Fadeaway by E. B. Vickers

Flamefall by Rosaria Munda (series)

The Follower by Kate Doughty

Girls With Rebel Souls by Suzanne Young (series)

Lost In The Never Woods by Aiden Thomas

Master of His Fate by James Tobin

My Name Is Not Peaseblossom by Jackie French (paperback)

Renegade Flight by Andrea Tang

The Secret Recipe for Moving On by Karen Bischer

Spellhacker by M. K. England (paperback)

The Theft of Sunlight by Intisar Khanani (series)

We Unleash The Merciless Storm by Tehlor Kay Mejia (series, paperback)

Who Put This Song On? by Morgan Parker (paperback)

With a Star in My Hand by Margarita Engle (paperback)

Your Heart, My Sky by Margarita Engle

This Week at Book Riot


Thanks for hanging out! I’m off for my parental leave and Tirzah will be taking over the YA newsletter until I’m back in July. Rock on, y’all!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram and editor of Body Talk(Don’t) Call Me Crazy, and Here We Are.

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(3/22) Rad Girls and Women in YA Collective Biographies

Hey YA Readers!

Earlier this month, I highlighted a handful of stand-alone YA biographies of rad women through history. Today, let’s look at some collective biographies that recently hit shelves or will in the near future.

What’s a collective biography, you ask? It’s a book made up of multiple short biographies. They tend to be thematic, meaning that you’ll see a book of collective biographies of female politicians or athletes, etc. These are such a wonderful way to learn about a lot of people in a short time and can easily lead down some deep rabbit holes — I always love how these books lead me to more stand alone biographies and put really fabulous people on my radar.

The below titles include a range of unifying themes, as well as women and girls of historical and contemporary significance.

Let’s dig in!

Girlhood: Teens Around The World In Their Own Voices by Masuma Ahuja

Of the books on this list, Ahuja’s might be the most contemporary in terms of who is highlighted — these are teen girls of today living “ordinary” lives around the world. It’s such a neat collection of experiences, wherein the teen girls were asked to journal about their day-to-day lives, and despite how many corners of the world they came from, there were so many connecting themes throughout. It’s a gorgeous book to boot!

Girls Who Run The World: 31 CEOS Who Mean Business by Diana Kapp and illustrated by Bijou Karman 

This book is a couple of years old, so some of the leaders highlighted may no longer be in the positions they were when it initially published, but what a treasure trove! Looking for inspiration when it comes to being a CEO of a big or small business? Kapp’s collection offers female-identifying leaders from makeup brands to startups to technology and more. Each entry offers what the individual does, but also grounds their lives in the sorts of things teens want to know — what are their bucket list dreams? What was their high school GPA? Paired with lovely illustrations by Karman, this is a fun one to peruse.

Native Women Changing Their Worlds by Patricia Cutright (April 27)

From historical to contemporary change makers, Cutright’s book is the ninth in a series of books that highlight Native and First Nations people. This collection showcases 12 women from a wide range of tribes and affiliations who’ve gone from any number of challenging backgrounds to become politicians, activists, educators, scientists, and more.

She Represents: 44 Women Who Are Changing Politics . . . and The World by Caitlin Donohue

A highly designed and readable collection of women in the United States and across the world who are political leaders, as well as community activists, grassroots change makers, and more. In addition to the women profiled, there are several more lists throughout the collection offering pathways into learning about other women rocking it in political change.

Thrill Seekers: 15 Remarkable Women in Extreme Sports by Ann McCallum Staats

The first book in a forthcoming series of collective biographies, this collection features 15 women involved in extreme sports. Among the athletes included are those involved in cliff diving, Formula 1 racing, wingsuit flying, and more. The women are international, diverse, and, of course, show the highs, lows, challenges, and wins that come along with extreme sports.

Women Discoverers: Top Women in Science by Marie Moinard, illustrated by Christelle Pecout 

An outstanding STEM read, this comic collective biography is all about rad women in science, past and present. Space, chemistry, computing, telecommunications, and more are among the fields these women have excelled. Global in scope, some of the women will be familiar to readers, while others will be new discoveries.


Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you later this week. If you haven’t heard yet, this week is my last week for Book Riot before taking maternity leave. You’ll be left in the capable hands of Tirzah for the newsletter until I’m back in July — and trust me when I say I plan on using this time to read awesome YA *and* board books with my new baby girl (I can’t wait until I get to introduce her to the women in the books above!).

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram and editor of Body Talk(Don’t) Call Me Crazy, and Here We Are.

Giant thanks to Quarto Press and the (badass!) This Book Is Anti-Racist Journal for making today’s newsletter possible.

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What's Up in YA

Sweet YA Ebook Deals This Weekend

Hey YA Fans!

Crack open your ereader and prepare your wallet. It’s time to grab some outstanding YA ebooks on the cheap.

Deals are current as of Friday, March 19, so snag anything you see now, as these could disappear at any time.

Have you read the highly decorated Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas yet? Grab it for $3.

Fable by Adrienne Young, first in a fantasy duology, is $3.

Speaking of fantasy duologies, King of Scars by Leigh Bardugo is currently $3.

I really enjoyed Kim Liggett’s The Grace Year, which is on sale for $3.

Need some horror? Zoraida Cordova’s fabulous Labyrinth Lost, first in a trilogy, is on sale for $2.

Anna-Marie McLemore’s Blanca and Roja, a fabulously lush magical realism story, is $3.

Ballet + Paris = Bright Burning Stars by AK Small. $2 and a great way to prepare for the adaptation!

Tara Sim’s Scavenge The Stars, first in a series, is $2.

Loveboat, Taipei by Abigail Hing Wen was unlike anything I’ve read before last year and it’s currently on sale for $3.

Lyla Lee’s I’ll Be The One is such a feel-good read featuring a fat, bisexual Korean American lead character and plenty of K-pop. $3.

Last, but not least, friendship and romance are at the center of The Summer of Impossibilities by Rachel Allen, a story to get you in that summer mood. $3.


Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you on Monday!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram and editor of Body Talk(Don’t) Call Me Crazy, and Here We Are.

Big thanks to Firekeeper’s Daughter by Angeline Boulley for making today’s newsletter possible (pick this one up if you haven’t!).

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Your YA Book News and New Books This Week: March 18, 2021

Hey YA Readers!

Let’s catch up on YA book news and this week’s new YA book releases. As a head’s up: I had a weird technical glitch this weekend and lost a ton of my bookmarks, so news is a little lighter than usual since I can’t remember or find everything I saved. Just means more time for the books themselves, right?

YA Book News

New YA Books This Week

All The Pretty Things by Emily Arsenault (paperback)

A Better Bad Idea by Laurie Devore

Bones of a Saint by Grant Farley

Dark and Deepest Red by Anna-Marie McLemore (paperback)

The Degenerates by J. Albert Mann (paperback)

Five Ways to Fall Out of Love by Emily Martin

I Hope You Get This Message by Farah Naz Rishi (paperback)

Kids on the March by Michael Long (nonfiction)

The Last Secret You’ll Ever Keep by Laurie Faria Stolarz

The Mirror Season by Anna-Marie McLemore

Namesake by Adrienne Young (series)

On This Unworthy Scaffold by Heidi Heilig (series)

Our Last Echoes by Kate Alice Marshall

A Queen of Gilded Horns by Amanda Joy (series)

The Seventh Raven by David Elliott and Rovina Cai

Sparrow by Mary Cecilia Jackson (paperback)

That Way Madness Lies edited by Dahlia Adler

Together We Caught Fire by Eva V. Gibson (paperback)

YA Book Talk at Book Riot


Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you on Saturday with YA ebook deals!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram and editor of Body Talk(Don’t) Call Me Crazy, and Here We Are.

Thanks to Chicago Review Press and Thrill Seekers for sponsoring today’s newsletter.

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Which YA Cover Design Wore It Better?

Hey YA Readers!

I love talking book cover design. Despite the saying not to judge a book by its cover, we do. It’s usually the first thing we see on a book, so it’s only natural that the goal of a designer and publisher is to make that cover appealing.

More often than not, the cover design you encounter on the hardcover edition of a book remains the same in its paperback iteration. But not always. Sometimes there’s a makeover which rebrands the author or series or there’s simply a better image to convey the story’s contents.

Let’s take a look at four recent/forthcoming hardcovers getting paperback makeovers. Which one wore it better?

For each of the below, the original hardcover design is on the left, while the paperback is on the right.

The Porcupine of Truth by Bill Konigsberg

The original cover for Koningsberg’s reads young to me. It’s bright and energetic, but it doesn’t necessarily showcase anything about the book itself. There’s a cute lil porcupine at the center, but the font for the book title is really the focus (at least on the word “Truth”). It’s in no way a bad cover; it just doesn’t share much at all.

The new paperback cover is a huge change. I love that it’s clear this story has some city element, be it a full setting there or as part of the plot. The two characters each have their own energy, and the expressions tell us there’s going to be a relationship story of some sort at the heart of the book. For me, the centering and de-emphasis on the title is a win here. I’m 100% focused on the girl in the car’s passenger seat.

Both covers are solid, though I think the paperback tells a little more of the story. That particular edition is available now.

The Midnight Lie by Marie Rutkoski

Marie Rutkoski’s newest series is getting a fresh look after the first hardcover, which you can see in the paperback. I like that some of the elements carried over, particularly the snake and the flowers (though it’s a different type of flower).

The paperback edition gives me a lot of The Diviners vibes, especially with the font used for the title. But otherwise, I think the hardcover on this one is much more appealing. There’s less going on, and the way the title is wrapped around the bottle at the center is clever. I’m also not sure I’m entirely understanding what the expression on the person is on the paperback — I’m not finding myself intrigued by that face in the same way I’m intrigued by the pair of snakes on the hardcover.

The new paperback will hit shelves in May, while the second book in the duology, The Hollow Heart — pictured to the left — will release in September.

When The Stars Lead To You by Ronni Davis

Both the hardcover and paperback editions of this debut YA novel are solid, strong, and intriguing to me as a reader. The first is clearly font-driven, but with the starry background and the person taking the space of the “O” in you, sitting alone on the beach, I’m drawn in with the mystery of what it’s about.

The paperback, which deemphasizes the title, instead emphasizes the main character is a girl of color. She’s got a dreamy look in her eyes, and the stars from the hardcover design carry over into her hair. The necklace makes me curious as well — what might it mean? Is that a piece of the story we’ll see?

I think both are solid covers, though the paperback makes clearer that the main character is a person of color. In a lot of communities and to a lot of readers, this will make it what stands out.

The Things She’s Seen by Ambelin Kwaymullina and Ezekiel Kwaymullina

This book’s been on my to-read shelf since I learned about it and I need to get to it. But I won’t go into what it’s about because I think looking purely at the covers is worthwhile in discussing that aspect of the book . . . and because I think both the original hardcover and paperback share quite a bit, too.

I adore that hardcover design. The butterfly melding into menacing birds? I don’t think I’ve seen something like that before, and I love how it sets the stage for what will be a thriller of a read. The font used for the title helps with that as well. The spare use of color — only the bottom part of the butterfly wings — gives a particularly eerie vibe.

The paperback takes the elements that give the book’s feeling and reimagines them. Though there’s no longer the metamorphosing butterfly-to-birds, the swirling, barren trees certainly capture that same slight sinister vibe. The only spot of color comes from the centered, straightforward font of the title and that it’s red only heightens the tension. Though the tag line is on the original hardcover image, it’s more pronounced in paperback: “Death was only the beginning.” That really pulls me in.

Both covers are rad, both give off the indication this is a thriller/mystery with some horror elements to it, and both would make me pick it up. The paperback *might* appeal more to adult readers than teens, if only because it mimics a lot of the designs we see in that genre for adults (and likewise, teens who love adult thrillers might gravitate toward this one for the same reason).

The new paperback is available now.


What do you think? Which covers draw you in a bit more? What makes a book cover *work* for you or for readers you might serve?

Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you again later this week!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram and editor of Body Talk(Don’t) Call Me Crazy, and Here We Are.

Thanks again to Sing Me Forgotten by Jessica S. Olson for making today’s newsletter possible!

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Your YA Book News and New Books: March 11, 2021

Hey YA Readers!

Let’s catch up on the latest in YA book news and check out the range of amazing YA books that hit shelves this week.

YA Book News

We’re light on news this week, but that just means more time to read new books.

New YA Books

The Alcazar by Amy Ewing (paperback, series)

American Betiya by Anuradha D. Rajurkar

Beast: A Tale of Love and Revenge by Lisa Jensen

Better Than The Best Plan by Lauren Morrill (paperback)

Blue Window by Adina Rishe Gewirtz

Can’t Take That Away by Steven Salvatore

City of Spells by Alexandra Christo (series)

The Devil’s Thief by Lisa Maxwell (paperback, series)

Fragile Remedy by Maria Ingrande Mora

The Immortal Boy by Francisco Montaña Ibáñez, translated by David Bowles

Into The Crooked Place by Alexandra Christo (paperback)

It’s Kind of a Cheesy Love Story by Lauren Morrill

This Light Between Us by Andrew Fukuda (paperback)

Noelle: The Mean Girl by Ashley Woodfolk (paperback, series)

Only Mostly Devastated by Sophie Gonzales (paperback)

Perfect on Paper by Sophie Gonzales

A Phoenix First Must Burn edited by Patrice Caldwell (paperback)

Sing Me Forgotten by Jessica S. Olson

The Small Crimes of Tiffany Templeton by Richard Fifield (paperback)

Sweet and Bitter Magic by Adrienne Tooley

Tell Me My Name by Amy Reed

Things That Grow by Meredith Goldstein

When We Were Infinite by Kelly Loy Gilbert

When You Were Everything by Ashley Woodfolk (paperback)

YA Book Talk on Book Riot


Yay books!

Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you next week.

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram and editor of Body Talk(Don’t) Call Me Crazy, and Here We Are.

Big thanks to Moxie by Jennifer Mathieu, with Fierce Reads, for making this newsletter possible! (Have you watched the adaptation yet?)

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5 Nonfiction YA Books About Rad Women

Hey YA Readers!

Let’s dig into some great books for Women’s History Month, shall we? I’ve pulled together a roundup of biographies of well-known — as well as lesser-known — women throughout American history written for YA readers. Find included a wide range of styles, voices, and perspectives, all united in their goals of highlighting the important work of female-identifying people.

Some of these are new books, while others pull from the backlist. There really is something here for every type of reader, and for those who work with YA readers, don’t forget the power of pulling books like these into lists, into assignments, and into gorgeous displays. Note that some of these YA biographies might skew younger, meaning they’d be great picks for your older middle grade readers as well.

These books are all stand-alone biographies, but keep your eyes on your inbox for a look at some recent collective biographies in a future edition of the newsletter.

Baseball’s Leading Lady: Effa Manley and the Rise and Fall of the Negro Leagues by Andrea Williams

Before Jackie Robinson, the only way for Black athletes to play professional sports was through Negro Leagues Baseball. Williams’s book is about Effa Manley, one of the successful business people who helped found and fund the League. Manley was co-owner of the Newark Eagles, who she helped lead to winning the Negro World Series in 1947. In addition to being about Manley’s savviness, this is a look at integration and the end of the Negro Leagues.

Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice by Phillip Hoose

Every year during Black History Month, there seems to be a big piece in mainstream media asking if anyone ever heard of Claudette Colvin and then breaking down how she refused to give up her seat on the bus to a white woman before Rosa Parks. The thing is: Hoose wrote this incredible biography of Colvin in 2009 and won a slate of awards for it, so indeed, many people have heard her story. If you haven’t — or you haven’t revisited it — pick up this outstanding biography of 15-year-old Colvin and her work toward Civil Rights, based on interviews with Colvin herself.

Fighter in Velvet Gloves: Alaska Civil Rights Hero Elizabeth Peratrovich by Annie Boochever with Roy A. Peratrovich Jr.

Fellow Book Rioter and YA reader Tirzah sent me the description for this book and asked if I’d heard of it. I hadn’t, but now I can’t stop thinking about how much I want to read it. Published by a university press for young adults, this is the story of Elizabeth Peratrovich, Alaska Native Tlingit, and her experiences of discrimination as a Native in Alaska. Her experiences led her to the Alaska Territorial Legislative Session, wherein she talked about growing up and being treated terribly, which helped lead to America’s first Civil Rights legislation: the Alaska Anti-Discrimination Act.

Photographic: The Life of Graciela Iturbide by Isabel Quintero, illustrated by Zeke Peña

This fabulous graphic biography follows the life of photographer Graciela Iturbide. While not American by birth — she was born in Mexico City, the oldest of 13 children — a healthy part of her career in photography took her through the United States. A fascinating read about a lesser-known artist and one that readers who love photography or dream of a life in the arts will want to pick up ASAP.

The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks: Young Reader Edition by Jeanne Theoharis and adapted by Brandy Colbert

Get to know the real history of Rosa Parks with this biography that challenges the notion she was but a quiet and innocent protester when she refused to give up her seat to a white person, launching the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Over the course of six decades, Parks was an activist and protester, and Theoharis, with the adaptation skills of beloved YA author Colbert, dive into the ways she worked to dismantle oppressive systems of discrimination.

Want even more YA biographies of awesome women through history? I did a big roundup of titles on my personal blog last summer worth digging into.


Until later this week, happy reading!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram and editor of Body Talk(Don’t) Call Me Crazy, and Here We Are.

Big thanks again to today’s sponsor, Lerner Books, publishers of The Secret Life of Kitty Granger, for making the newsletter possible.