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Does Power Inevitably Corrupt?: New YA Books and Book News, August 4, 2022

Hey YA Readers!

Let’s dive into all things new paperbacks and YA book news for this first week of a new month in the second half of 2022.

Bookish Goods

stickers that say "reading is good for the soul"

Reading Is Good For The Soul Sticker by KapKapCo

This sticker screams summer days outside with a book, doesn’t it? Grab this retro-feel “Reading is good for the soul” sticker for $4.

New Releases

Here are this week’s new releases out in paperback. As always, you can grab the full list of paperback books out this week over here!

As always, you may need to toggle to the paperback edition from the link.

how moon fuentes fell in love with the universe book cover

How Moon Fuentes Fell In Love With The Universe by Raquel Vasquez Gilliland

Moon Fuentes’s twin sister is a social media influencer, so Moon accepts she’ll never be the cool girl, the seen girl, the girl who gets the attention. But Moon takes a job as a merch girl on a tour full of beauty influencers and is bunking with Santiago–a guy she is convinced hates her and who is both grumpy and very, very attractive.

Moon is convinced Santiago hates her, but the longer they’re together on this job, the more and more she’s falling for him–and the more she sees she’s the apple of his eye and, perhaps, not the background scenery she thinks herself to be.

i claudia book cover

I, Claudia by Mary McCoy

Does power inevitable corrupt? That’s what is at the heart of this award-winning novel about Claudia, who has been put in charge of Imperial Day Academy in Senate and Honor Council. While she wants to keep her power in check and do good by her fellow students, as she learns more about the scandals and politics at play in the school, she may not be able to keep that power suppressed.

If you’re looking at this cover and wondering–yes, it got a redesign from its original hardback. Clever how the rat is putting a paw on the Printz sticker.

YA Book News

As always, thanks for hanging out. We’ll see you on Saturday for your book deals.

Until then, happy reading!

— Kelly Jensen, currently reading Unmask Alice and Dead Flip

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Magic, Activism, and—Sorry!—🤡🤡🤡: New YA Books, August 1, 2022

I’m going to say something potentially controversial: for someone who loves summer — and I do! — I think August is one of the most annoying months of the year. Why? I don’t know. It feels like the January of summer in that it goes on and on, even if it has the promise of new things on the horizon.

What a way to launch a new month’s newsletter, eh? If you’ve felt this way, I wanted to validate your experience. If you love August, I hope you indulge! I envy that.

In either August-feelings camp, I hope this month brings plenty of outstanding reading into your life.

Bookish Goods

image of a bookmark in the shape of a ticket stub that reads "ya book club."

YA Book Club Magnetic Bookmark by mysecretcopy

Whether your YA book club is solo or a group, how fun is this magnetic book mark in the shape of a ticket stub? $4.50.

New Releases

I will say one of the best things about this month is the flood of new releases. Let’s look at two hardcover books hitting shelves this week. You can find the rest in the summer 2022 YA book release roundup.

a girl's guide to love and magic book cover

A Girl’s Guide to Love and Magic by Debbie Rigaud

First: swoon at that gorgeous cover. Second: first love, vodou, and the West Indian Day Parade in Brooklyn.

Cecily loves the West Indian Day Parade and this year’s no exception. She’s especially excited to catch eyes with Kwame and spend time with her aunt, who is a big of an influencer for fashion and known for Haitian Vodou. When Cecily’s aunt is possessed by a mischievous spirit before the parade, she must enlist the help of her best friend . . . and Kwame . . . to collect the items needed to perform the ceremony to un-possess her aunt.

I Rise book cover

I Rise by Marie Arnold

14-year-old Ayo’s mother has been a vocal, engaged civil rights activist for See Us in New York City. See Us focuses on police brutality and racial profiling in Harlem.

Ayo wants out. She’s been involved forever because of her mom, but all she wants are the “normal” teenage things.

When her mom is shot by police and put into a coma, protesters want Ayo to become the face of their movement.

This book about social justice and activism explores grief and the complexities of standing up for what you believe is right while also wondering if that activism can only look one way.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

I’m sorry in advance for those of you who, like me, have a fear around all things clowns. This week is apparently International Clown Week (who knew that was a thing) and thus, it felt appropriate to highlight two YA books about clowns. You know they’re horror.

As I was poking around, I found there were VERY FEW clown books in YA. I’m actually kind of surprised we haven’t seen a romance of some kind with a (friendly!) clown in it.

clown in a cornfield book cover

Clown in a Cornfield by Adam Cesare

This is easily one of the best YA horror books out there — selected as a Summer Scares title this summer — and indeed, it is a scary clown story. The sequel to this book hits shelves this month and I cannot wait.

Quinn and her dad have moved to small Kettle Springs, Missouri, for a fresh start. But Kettle Springs is anything but that. Ever since the corn syrup factory shut down, there has been a divide between the adults desperate to make Kettle Springs cool again and the kids who want to just get through school and get out of town.

Enter Frendo, the mascot for the defunct corn syrup factor. He’s alive and he’s coming for the kids in town, alongside a host of his killer clown friends.

Yes, this is a trope-y YA horror book. Yes, it’s a bit of a reverse Children of the Corn. More, it is a really savvy look at how different generations of people see and accept one another.

Frightmares book cover

Frightmares by Eva V. Gibson

Dave’s last summer before college involves working at a Florida tourist trap called Frightmares House of Horrors, a haunted house attraction on its last limbs. When a shift ends with an employee walkout and Dave takes over one of the roles a friend plays, he discovers a dead body. It’s not part of the set or the attraction. It’s real, and now, the killer may be coming for Dave.

I’ve not yet read this one, full disclosure, so while I know that the tourist trap involves some kind of ramshackle clown situation, I don’t know how active their role is in the story. But, I mean, this cover tells you plenty.

As always, thanks for hanging out. We’ll see you later this week with your YA paperback releases and YA book news.

Until then, happy reading!

— Kelly Jensen, @veronikellymars on Twitter.

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PAPER GIRLS Release Date, Warring Henna Shops, and More YA Book News and New Books: July 28, 2022

Hey YA Readers!

We’ve made it to Thursday and the weekend is on the horizon. Let’s take a look at this week’s new paperback releases and YA book news.

Before diving in: we’re matching up to $2500 in donations this week to the National Network of Abortion Funds. If you can drop a few bucks, join us. If you can’t, there are resources there for how you can help speak and act in support of access to vital healthcare.

Bookish Goods

support indie bookstores sticker

Support Indie Bookstores sticker by WitchfulResistance

Love indie bookstores? This cute lil sticker will be up your alley. $3.

New Releases

As always, you can grab the full list of paperback books out this week over here!

cover of Skin of the Sea by Natasha Bowen

Skin of the Sea by Natasha Bowen

Simi serves the gods she once prayed to, and her work as a Mami Wata (mermaid) includes collecting the souls of those who die at sea and blessing their journeys back home. But when a boy who is still alive is thrown overboard, she saves his life, going against ancient decrees which lead to swift punishment.

She knows she needs to make amends in order to protect the other Mami Wata, but the boy she saved knows far more than he lets on, and now, her life is on the line not just because of her actions but because of the shadow following her.

This is a West African twist on “The Little Mermaid,” and LOOK at that cover!

The Henna Wars by Adiba Jairgirdar

The Henna Wars by Adiba Jaigirdar

Coming out for Nishat would mean being disowned by her family. But when Flávia, a former childhood friend, comes back into her life, it gets harder for her to resist her feelings.

A school project invites students to create their own businesses and now, both Nishat and Flávia are running their own henna companies. They’re rivals, but they’re finding it near impossible not to have some sweeter feelings toward one another, too. Is Nishat willing to risk it? Can she?

Riot Recommendations

Love adaptations? You’re in for some great news.

As always, thanks for hanging out. I’ll see you on Saturday for some great YA book deals.

Until then, happy reading!

— Kelly Jensen, currently reading Dead Flip by Sara Farizan

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Disability Pride Month, Morally Gray Characters, and More YA Book Talk: July 25, 2022

Hey YA Readers!

I always find there is enthusiasm for a month-long celebration or awareness-building event when a month begins but it tends to wane near the end of the month. It makes sense: folks want to get the most out of the month, so putting the effort in at the front helps do just that. But there is a lot to be said about revisiting these things as the month progresses and, ultimately, as the month comes to an end and the discussions are no longer at the forefront of everyone’s mind.

Which is a preface to this saying that July is Disability Pride Month, and I wanted to make sure to highlight some great Disability reads before the month finished. I’m going to share a couple of books for your TBR, as well as a roundup of some links to keep your reading life — and your non-reading life — aimed at disability justice, awareness, and activism.

I always try to avoid self-promotion where possible, but because so many folks have been looking for specific representation of disability and invisible illnesses, I have to put a note out there that if you want essays and art exploring a wide range of human physical experiences, consider grabbing Body Talk: 37 Voices Explore Our Radical Anatomy. Among some of the pieces are those who’ve experienced ableism, Crohn’s Disease, PCOS, chronic pain, and more.

Bookish Goods

image of a disability pride flag spiral notebook

Disability Pride Spiral Notebook by Xenogenders

Keep notes on what you’re reading, learning, and experiencing with this Disability Pride spiral notebook. $14.

New Releases

Grab the entire list of new YA book releases over here.

beating heart baby book cover

Beating Heart Baby by Lio Min

When Santi accidentally leaked Memo’s song and it became an overnight hit, Memo — Santi’s best friend and romantic interest who he only knows from the internet — disappears. Santi’s heart is broken.

Three years and a new high school later, it’s possible Santi has found Memo, but in a way he never anticipated nor dreamed.

This one’s for fans of enemies-to-lovers stories and features a significant trans character.

violet made of thorns book cover

Violet Made of Thorns by Gina Chen

This is the first book in a series about Violet, a morally gray witch who has a lot of power within the royal court. She doesn’t mind lying. Prince Cyrus hopes to get Violet out of her role when he takes the crown at the end of summer, but when Violet launches a false prophecy on behalf of the king — one meant to show Cyrus his “one true love” for the royal ball — she accidentally unleashes a a curse…and she may be falling for the one person she can’t stand to fall for, too.

This one is described as perfect for fans of The Cursed Prince and Serpent and Dove and it sounds like a lot of fun. I love a good lying main character.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

Kendra, one of our contributing editors at Book Riot, is a disabled writer and has been putting out incredible stuff this month worth reading (and her work extends well beyond this month, but she’s developed a whole series specifically for Disability Pride Month):

Over on Instagram, Dogbuttsandbooks (what a great name!) developed a month-long disability pride reading bingo. It’s not too late to take part and more, this is an incredible tool for building a year of reading more disability narratives.

There are several roundups of disability in YA from the part few years on Book Riot, too, worth highlighting:

Not a list, but I’ve been increasingly annoyed by how few “inclusive” book covers feature disability in any discernible way. There are so many creative ways to do it, too!

And if you’re looking for some 2022 disability YA readers, here are some more lists from around the web:

As always, thanks for hanging out. We’ll see you later this week with your YA paperback releases and YA book news.

Until then, happy reading!

— Kelly Jensen, @veronikellymars on Twitter.

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Dashed Dancing Dreams, Love Letters, and More YA Book Talk and News: July 21, 2022

Hey YA Readers!

Grab yourself a drink of choice–I’m currently downing a (hot*) vanilla lavender latte from my local caffeine dealer–and settle in for some new YA paperback releases and a host of exciting YA book news.

*Anyone else have a weird temperature preference for their beverages? It should not make sense to need a hot coffee in the middle of summer, but I don’t like my drinks cold. I like to think of this as Big Main Character Energy. Or something.

Bookish Goods

Image of a sticker featuring eight colorful book spines. Each spine has a fantasy trope on it, including "The chosen one," "The dark lord," or "the mentor."

Love a good fantasy trope? This sticker would look great on your notebook or water bottle (or book cart!). $2.50.

New Releases

Let’s highlight two paperbacks that hit shelves this week. One will have you eager for some more sports reads and one will make you question everything you put in your luggage.

Want the full list of paperbacks out this week? Grab that roundup here!

the other side of perfect book cover

The Other Side of Perfect by Mariko Turk

Alina was a talented dancer and wanted a professional career in ballet. But a fall breaks her leg and her dreams.

She’s now transitioned to a normal high school, since her dance school days are gone, and she decides to get involved in the school musical. But now there’s Jude, who is so annoying…and for whom she is obviously falling.

This is a book about changing one’s dreams, as well as about racism and prejudice in elite sports and performance. It’s a romantic read with plenty of humor, too, and adds a peppering of what perfectionism looks like . . . and why it might not be a useful trait. The comps on this one are Sarah Dessen and Mary H.K. Choi.

the summer of lost letters book cover

The Summer of Lost Letters by Hannah Reynolds

Looking for a contemporary with a historical element? Reynold’s book follows 17-year-old Abby who is spending her final summer before senior year heartbroken following the end of her relationship with her first boyfriend. Her friends are all on adventures, so she’s feeling lonely and sad.

But when a box of letters arrives with the rest of her grandmother’s possessions, she begins to unravel a love story involving her grandmother, a man named Edward, and the history of her grandmother’s life after escaping the Holocaust. Abby ends up on a whirlwind adventure in Nantucket, where she might just find love, too, in an unexpected place.

This one is comped to Morgan Matson and Ruta Sepetys.

YA Book News

As always, thanks for hanging out. We’ll see you on Saturday with some fab YA book deals.

Kelly Jensen, who loves her drinks hot.

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Ghosts, Mermaids, and Hurricanes, Oh My!: YA Book Talk, July 18, 2022

Hey YA Readers!

A new week means more new books. Let’s hop right in.

Bookish Goods

Image of a white hand holding several bookmarks featuring pressed flowers.

I think pressed flower bookmarks are so fun. But you know what makes them even more special? When you can customize a theme or color. With these, you can! Grab a pressed flower bookmark of your choosing, starting at $12.

New Releases

This week, being the middle of the summer publishing season (but not actually the middle of summer and that’s a point I will fight), we’re quiet on new releases. This means both of the books highlighted today will be by white authors, since the books by authors of color out this week are paperback releases…meaning you’ll see ’em on Thursday!

Want the full roundup of books out this summer in YA? I’ve got you!

the comedienne's guide to pride book cover

The Comedienne’s Guide to Pride by Hayli Thomson

Taylor is funny. But comedy is a sore subject in her house, as her mother gave up a career in comedy to raise her and her dad, who is a comedian, left mom for another woman. Taylor wants to make it, though, and sneaks out of her house to perform. So now that she’s got a potential internship as a writer for Saturday Night Live…she’s going to have to be honest about it.

Oh, and there’s a very gay storyline here, too, involving a teen who plays the role of Abigail Williams at the Salem Museum of Witchcraft. Comedy + Salem + Queer Characters? Sign me up!

dont call me a hurricane book cover

Don’t Call Me a Hurricane by Ellen Hagan

I know I talked about this one last week and how it’s an excellent look at environmental activism.

Five years ago a hurricane completely ravaged the island Eliza and her family call home. Now, new developers have emerged, eager to create an island paradise for vacationers. Eliza and her friends, though, won’t stand for it — especially as a development threatens to destroy one of their treasured Reserves.

Told in verse, this one is about fighting for what’s right while also untangling trauma and grief.

Riot Recommendations

Let’s time travel a bit and look back at two fantasy books that hit shelves ten years ago. These are two very different takes in the genre: the first is horror and the second, mythology.

the diviners book cover

The Diviners by Libba Bray

Evie O’Neill found herself in trouble in her small Ohio hometown and has been shipped away to New York City with her occult-obsessed uncle. A supernatural power Evie has is why she’s been getting in trouble, and she’s worried her uncle might discover this secret of hers.

She did not anticipate being useful to the police in unraveling the truth behind the murder of a girl…and to several other people across the city.

This is a historical horror about ghosts, spirits, a string of murders, and a sassy, savvy, smart, sharp main female character. Bray took her time with this four-book series, and you can read them all back-to-back-to-back-to-back right now.

the vicious deep book cover

The Vicious Deep by Zoraida Córdova

Córdova’s trilogy follows Tristan, who is sucked into the sea by a tidal wave. It’s here that he learns his family legacy is not what he thought.

This is a funny, clever take on mermaids, and it plays with the Poseidon myth. I often find myself recommending this one to readers who love Greek retellings and those who have blown through TikTok fav The Song of Achilles.  

As always, thanks for hanging out! We’ll see you on Thursday with your paperback releases and YA book news.

Until then, happy reading!

— Kelly Jensen, currently reading True Biz by Sara Nović. While not a YA novel, it definitely has appeal to YA readers!

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Vampires, Spirits, and More YA Books and Book News: July 14, 2022

Hey YA Readers!

I hope that July is treating you okay, and that you’re reading your newest favorite book (well, that you’re reading it when you’re not reading your newsletters, at least!). I just got back from a long weekend out of town where I got to visit two fun indie bookstores and indeed, did some damage. I regret nothing.

Let’s dive into this week’s new paperback books and YA book news.

Bookish Goods

Image of a bookshelf pin. It has a witchy feel to it, with green wisps of smoke surrounding the shelf, and a moon at the very top. It's mostly purples, pinks, and greens.

I know it’s July, but for me, witchy season is every season, and the vibes of this witchy bookshelf enamel pin are just *chef’s kiss*. $7 (Note that this ships from Australia, so your shipping costs might be higher than average if you’re not there).

New Releases

The summer edition of the mega roundup of new YA paperbacks is up. Below, you’ll find two out this week, but you can find all of the rest hitting shelves this week through the end of September over here.

Note: you may need to toggle to the paperback edition once you click the link.

All These Bodies by Kendare Blake

It’s been a bloody summer across the midwest. Or, rather, it hasn’t been, though there’s been a lot of death. Each of the murders has been bloodless, victims found with a handful of slashes but without blood remaining in their bodies. Now the killer — or killers — has turned to Michael Jensen’s town in Minnesota, killing a mother, father, and high school student, and standing among them pooled in blood is Marie.

All signs point to Marie as the killer, but she refuses to talk to anyone except Michael. He’s an aspiring journalist and sees this as his opportunity to break a huge story. But the longer he talks with Marie, the less he begins to believe what happened to be clear, true, or easy. She’s convinced him that she worked alongside a vampire — nameless, faceless, long-gone from the crime scene — and she can’t help locate him. But the legal system in Nebraska is hot on the case, pressing for more and more details, hoping to extradite Marie back to Nebraska in order to charge her. The law there allows for conviction for accomplices to murder, not just the murderer, and this would bring peace and closure.

But as the truth….or the supposed truth…unravels, it becomes much more complex. Who is Marie? Where did she come from? What happened to her family and what did her stepfather do to her? And is that story or her relationship to her stepfather the narrative she wants in the news?

This is a clever take on vampires, but it’s also based loosely on two separate murder sprees in the midwest during this time. It’s got Midwest Gothic vibes, wrapped in an In Cold Blood style true fictionalized crime narrative.

cover image of The Taking of Jake Livingston by Ryan Douglass showing a drawing of a Black teen boy about to be grabbed by a ghost

The Taking of Jake Livingston by Ryan Douglass

It is bad enough that Jake isn’t as popular as his older brother, especially when both of them are among the only Black kids at their prep high school. But worse is that Jake sees dead people. They are mosssstly not harmful. But now, that’s about to change.

Sawyer begins to haunt Jake, and Sawyer’s backstory isn’t a pleasant one. He killed six kids at a high school the previous year, and now he’s out to tell his story. Jake, whether he likes it or not, will be the one to hear it.

This one is for those who like scary stories, and it features a queer Black boy main character.

YA Book News

Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll have your deals on Saturday.

Until then, happy reading!

— Kelly Jensen, @veronikellymars on Twitter.

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Environmental Justice, Big Lies, and More YA Book Talk: July 11, 2022

Hey YA Readers!

Let’s kick off another new week with a look at some new YA hardcovers hitting shelves, as well as two books tackling environmental activism.

Bookish Goods

Five brightly colored dinosaur enamel pins, each one featuring books either on their heads, under their chins, or as part of their body.

Do you have a favorite dinosaur? I sure do, and I would not only choose that dinosaur reader enamel pin, but I’d spring for this entire set. $4 each.

New Releases

The full roundup of new YA books hitting shelves this summer (the non-paperback list!) will be up later this week. In the mean time, here are 2 for your radar right now.

how maya got fierce book cover

How Maya Got Fierce by Sona Charaipotra

Want a story based on a series of lies? This is it.

Maya is the daughter of garlic farmers in small town California. Her life’s trajectory includes finishing up school, inheriting the business, earning an MBA, and marrying a nice Sikh boy. It’s a huge deal when she lands a spot in a summer camp for future farmers in New Jersey. But……then she gets kicked out. She can’t let her parents find out, and now she owes the camp a lot of money. It makes perfect sense she’d take an assistant job at a magazine in New York stealth-like.

The magazine, though, thinks she’s in her 20s, and now they can’t find out her truth, and neither can her parents. Oops.

wake the bones book cover

Wake The Bones by Elizabeth Kilcoyne

This newsletter’s theme is small towns (and figures on covers with their arms above their heads).

After dropping out of college, Laurel heads back to her family’s farm and hopes to just resume work as a tobacco hand and a taxidermist. Too bad a devil has shown up from her past and threatens to court her in the same way he did her mother before she died.

This is a stand alone horror about family secrets and doomed love.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

Let’s highlight two books exploring environmental justice, told in two very different communities.

dont call me a hurricane book cover

Don’t Call Me A Hurricane by Ellen Hagan

Five years ago, a hurricane completely ravaged the island Eliza and her family call home. Now, new developers have emerged, eager to create an island paradise for vacationers. Eliza and her friends, though, won’t stand for it — especially as a development threatens to destroy one of their treasured Reserves.

There is a romance here, and it’s with a boy who ultimately has a bigger role than love interest in Eliza’s story. Told in verse, this one is about fighting for what’s right while also untangling trauma and grief. If you liked the gentrification elements of Samantha Mabry’s A Fierce and Subtle Poison, pick this one up.

running book cover

Running by Natalia Sylvester

Mari doesn’t mean to start a revolution. Especially with her father running for President. But she knows how important it is to stand up for what you believe, and the fact her best friend is being impacted by water pollution created by a local real estate developer’s new project means she knows she needs to act now. Will it impact her father? Especially as he has a relationship with that developer and isn’t known for his environmental policies? Yes, but she hopes it’ll help him do the right thing.

This book features no romance at all, as well as a politically-wary teen who finds herself beginning a wide-spread protest to bring attention to environmental destruction. Her work runs parallel to her father’s campaign, and her Cuban heritage remains at the center of her story.

Mari isn’t a politically-active teen at the start, and it’s through better understanding someone who is vocal and active that she sees where and why her activism and passion matters, too.

Thanks for hanging out — I appreciate you being here, and I’ll see you again on Thursday.

Until then, happy reading!

— Kelly Jensen, @veronikellymars on Twitter.

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Haunted Tourist Traps and More YA Book News and New Books: July 7, 2022

Hey YA Readers,

Let’s dive into this week’s paperback new releases and YA book news.

Bookish Goods

Three bookmarks being held by a white hand. Each one is a stack of books, and the bookmark on the right has book titles written on the spine.

I really love bookmark reading trackers (see here) and this one is especially good. $6 and up.

New Releases

The summer edition of the mega roundup of new YA paperbacks is up. Below, you’ll find two out this week, but you can find all of the rest hitting shelves this week through the end of September over here.

clap when you land book cover

Clap When You Land by Elizabeth Acevedo

What does it mean to lose someone you love? What does it mean to lose someone you love who was a very complicated human and kept secrets from you? What if those secrets meant that in that loss, you discover you have a whole new family?

As always, Acevedo writes an emotionally-compelling, engaging, and immersive story of grief and love. Camino and Yahaira each have a distinct voice and we get to hear both sides of the story, of how their shared father kept his dual life a secret from them.

Frightmares book cover

Frightmares by Eva V. Gibson

Dave’s last summer before college involves working at a Florida tourist trap called Frightmares House of Horrors, a haunted house attraction on its last limbs. When a shift ends with an employee walkout and Dave takes over one of the roles a friend plays, he discovers a dead body. It’s not part of the set or the attraction. It’s real, and now, the killer may be coming for Dave.

Horror? Check. Ramshackle horror attraction? Check. This gives me all of the 90s Christopher Pike/RL Stine vibes.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

YA Book News

Because it is July–a notoriously quiet time for publishing–and we’re off a set of holidays, there isn’t a whole lot of news this week. Use the time to read!

Thanks for hanging out. I hope you take good care of yourselves and each other.

See you Saturday for some YA book deals.

— Kelly Jensen, currently blowing through Jumper by Melanie Crowder.

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YA Books and Teens in a Post-Roe America

Hey YA Readers!

If you’re off today for the holiday, I hope you’ve got some good reads planned for the day. If you’re not off, I hope the same thing. Let’s take a dive into the best new books on shelves this week and we’re going to have a frank talk about abortion, teens, and YA literature.

Bookish Goods

If you’re in the market for a new tank top, may I suggest this cute book lover option? $30 and up through size 2XL.

New Releases

My big roundup of upcoming books for the season publishes on site this week, so keep an eye out for that to catch all of this week’s new YA releases. Here are two to know now.

the charmed list book cover

The Charmed List by Julie Abe

No one knows who Ellie really is. That is, no one knows she’s part of a magic community. But the summer before her senior year, she creates an Anti-Wallflower List–13 items she wants to do to take more risks. But when one of the items goes horribly wrong and she finds herself in a car with her enemy traveling to a magic convention . . . she might unintentionally check off the “fall in love” item. This is a fun, magical enemies-to-lovers romance.

what souls are made of book cover

What Souls Are Made Of by Tasha Suri

A moment to pause for that cover.

This is a remix of the classic Wuthering Heights and is set in Yorkshire, 1786. Heathcliff is the abandoned son of a sailor from India, and Catherine is the youngest daughter of an estate owner who is preparing her for a life in high society. They connect with one another as they escape to the moors, working to build not only their budding romance but their connection to their cultural heritage. If you like broody, reclaimed classics with Gothic undertones, you’ll be into this one.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

YA + Abortion

Will it be okay to even talk about teens and abortion in some US communities anymore? As the US has nullified Roe and the right to a medical procedure for pregnant folks, I can’t stop thinking about teens who are in a position of needing an abortion.

This decision has shown itself in some stunningly awful ways in the past week. Right now, I’m watching countless right-wing groups itching to protest Scholastic–as in the entire publisher–and hoping to get their school districts to disinvite the annual book fairs hosted under the publisher’s name. Why? Because a senior editor dared tweet about wanting to publish more books about teens needing to make an abortion decision.

screen shot of parental group in Texas seeking to disassociate with Scholastic.
screen shot from "right books for kids" Instagram account.

I don’t know if I have anything eloquent or unique to say on this other than expect more book challenges on titles featuring abortion to start coming down the line. I’m already envisioning a fall where these books are purged from states with newly enacted abortion laws while they’re added to those states without, creating not only a massive gap in medical care state-by-state but a gap in access to information, too.

If you’re feeling as helpless as I am–and I say this as someone who is active, engaged, and regularly involved in advocacy in time, money, and energy–maybe some links to resources and intellectual grappling with the topics of teens and abortion can help.

A couple of other things you can do right now include borrowing abortion-themed books from your local library–fiction, nonfiction, whatever interests you most–and writing in support of those books to your local school library and public library. If you’re so inclined, a letter to your local paper might be worthwhile, too, both addressing your belief in access to healthcare and access to information about healthcare for people of all ages and genders. It might not seem like much, but a person in a tough position may feel comforted by knowing there is at least one person in their community who sees them and supports them.

I’d also recommend seeing what local mutual aid and networks are in your community. If you have the means to volunteer or donate to them, reach out. Groups like Planned Parenthood are great, but there are and have been local-level networks planning for this for years who are worth knowing and boosting.

Thanks for hanging out. Keep yourselves safe and healthy.

We’ll see you on Thursday for more YA book talk.

— Kelly Jensen