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What's Up in YA

Romantic Retellings Are The Best Retellings

Hey there! Jess here, subbing in for Kelly while she’s off having fun without us. In my other life, I write Kissing Books, Book Riot’s romance newsletter, and generally talk about romance novels for a lot of time. But I love a good love story about people of any age, so in honor of the release of Only Mostly Devastated, a brand new Grease reimagining, I thought I’d talk about some romantic YA retellings that I’ve loved and some others I’m super looking forward to reading this year (now that I don’t have a gig that requires me to read All Romance, All The Time).

Retellings are my favorite kind of story, in part because they are a familiar story (even if I haven’t actually read the original version) and in part because they have to make something new and interesting out of that familiar story. I spent half of high school and all of college reading the same story over and over again (thanks, Pride and Prejudice, for setting me down the path of fandom and giving me the many worlds of fanfiction), and I am all about seeing what an author will do with something that already exists. Sometimes, it’s hardly recognizable, while other times you are living within the story that already exists and you can’t wait to see how a particular plot point will reveal itself. I still don’t know which one I like more.

Heart of Iron and Soul of Stars by Ashley Poston

Did someone say a Dreamworks’ Anastasia In Space? With a heist plot and an AI army? Ana and her best friend, the android D09 (who she calls Di), are on a mission to steal a very important artifact. When a Space Aristocrat beats her to it, they both end up on the run and have people from all walks of life after them. But there’s another secret that Ana doesn’t understand her connection to, and it might change everything. It’s less romantic than the others on the list, but there is a super slow love story happening throughout. And then, there’s a cliffhanger. So it’s a good thing Soul of Stars is out, because I had to suffer. A lot.

The Only Thing Worse than Me is You by Lily Anderson

There aren’t many retellings of Much Ado About Nothing, but this one is delightfully fun and nerdy. Trixie and Ben are at war, but their friends like each other. They snark at each other on school grounds, but develop a sort of rapport over comic books and other things geeky, to the point they aren’t sure they hate each other as much as they’d like. Lily Anderson’s second book, Not Now, Not Ever, which is related to this one but not technically a sequel, is based loosely on The Importance of Being Earnest. But at camp, not a summer house.

Pride by Ibi Zoboi

This retelling of Pride and Prejudice set in contemporary Brooklyn is a great look at how the concept of class that is central to the original story translates to a pair of teens living in the city. Zuri Benitez is very proud of her Afro-Latino heritage and the place it has in her Brooklyn neighborhood. But when wealthy Darius Darcy and his family move in across the street, he questions everything around them. The two clash immediately, but if you know the story, you know what happens.

The number of retellings of both classic literature and fairy tales with a twist is a constantly-growing space in YA, and there are a bunch that either came out recently or will be coming out this year that I can’t wait to check out!

The Princess and the Fangirl and Bookish and the Beast (June 16) by Ashley Poston

These follow-up novels to Poston’s Geekerella, which was probably my favorite book the year it came out, continue the story that started with a fan and the charming actor that she meets (and runs away from) at a Con ball with retellings of The Prince and the Pauper (but with lesbians) and Beauty and the Beast (but with a jerk Hollywood royal). Each can really be read on its own, but why not take advantage of all three?

Of Curses and Kisses by Sandhya Menon

This one is yet another Beauty and the Beast retelling, this one set in boarding school. There’s a curse involved, but since I haven’t read it yet, I’m not certain if there’s an actual curse or if the cursed character just thinks there’s a curse. Hopefully, there’s a real curse. I like curses. And the two characters, Jaya and Grey, are already members of feuding families before they start attending boarding school together, but Jaya determines that the best way to get back at the Emersons is to make Grey fall in love with her and then break his heart. We all know how that kind of thing goes.

Verona Comics by Jennifer Dugan (April 21)

When I heard “Romeo and Juliet meets comics shop” I came running. Jubilee works at her mom’s indie comics shop, and Ridley’s family owns a giant comics chain. There is yet another comic con ball involved (I’m loving how many con galas there are in novels; I’ve never actually gone to one!) and the two try to keep their relationship secret from their families. This one definitely needs a CW for anxiety, discussion of suicide, and possibly parental abuse (I’m taking the word of other readers on that last one). But I don’t think it ends like Romeo and Juliet so that is important to note.

So This is Love by Elizabeth Lim (April 7)

This is more of a bonus, because while I guess it’s a retelling, it’s not a retelling like the others are. It’s one of Disney’s Twisted Tales, this time (if you can’t guess from the title) about Cinderella. What if Cinderella never got the chance to try on the glass slipper at the end, and set off on her own? No longer under the visage of Lady Tremayne, she goes to work at the palace, and gets wind of some intrigue that must be solved. I love the twists and turns these stories take, in order to explore some question we might have had as we watched the classic Disney stories and had more “What If?” questions.

Oh, and speaking of retellings, there’s a giveaway on the site to win a copy of Anna K, a contemporary revisit of Anna Karenina. You’ve also got the rest of the month to enter to win a gift card to Barnes and Noble.


Do you like retellings? What do you like most or least about them? I’d love to hear your thoughts. Find me on Twitter @jessisreading to tell me your favorite romantic YA retellings!

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What's Up in YA

The Weekend’s Hottest YA Ebook Deals

Hey YA Lovers!

Vanessa here filling in for Kelly this weekend. I’m pleased to be bringing you a big batch of YA book deals today. Go forth and enjoy!

Note that these deals are active as of Friday, March 6.


A steel gray and blue cover with a 3D version of WARCROSS in the centerCraving dystopian romance and YA sci-fi? Check out Warcross by Marie Lu for just $2.

The Silence Between Us by Alison Gervais is an #ownvoices novel with deaf characters, and has a super pretty cover! $2.

Fantasy! Action! Romance! Blackmail! Sound up your alley? Pick up The Traitor’s Game by Jennifer A. Nielsen. $2

Adventure, magic, and mythology collide in Annie Sullivan’s A Touch of Gold. And that cover tho! $2

Stormrise by Jillian Boehme is epic fantasy inspired by The Twelfth Night, plus dragons! $4

Set in a near-future United States where Muslims are places in internment camps, Internment by Samira Ahmed was a little bit terrifying but such a great read. $2

Five Midnights cover imageFive Midnights by Ann Davila Cardinal is based on the el Cuco myth (basically the Latinx boogeyman) and set against the backdrop of modern day Puerto Rico. Such a great great work of YA suspense/horror! $3

Tiny Pretty Things by Sona Charaipotra and Dhonielle Clayton for $5. A soapy drama at an elite ballet school AND with diverse characters? Gimme!

Toil & Trouble edited by Tess Sharpe and Jessica Spotswood is one of my favorite witchy reads! Contributors here include Tehlor Kay Mejia, Nova Ren Suma, and Zoraida Cordova. $4

For a dark, twisted fairy tale, try Damsel by Elana K. Arnold for $2.

I love The Radical Element! An awesome anthology on heroines on the margins of history with a fantastic list of contributors: Meg Medina, Dhonielle Clayton, Mackenzi Lee, and Anna-Marie McLemore to name a few! $2.

cover image of Thirteen Doorways, Wolves Behind Them AllThirteen Doorways, Wolves Behind Them All by Laura Ruby is $3 and comes highly recommended by Kelly! Set during WWII, its main characters are two young women: one living, one dead.

Two girls use forbidden magic to fight for their country and for themselves in We Rule the Night by Claire Eliza Bartlett. $2

Watch Us Rise by Renee Watson and Ellen Hagan is a YA feminist anthem about finding and raising your voice. $2

The Sea of Tranquility by Katja Millay is $4. A lonely boy meets an emotionally fragile girl and they each learn of the mira­cle of second chances.


Thanks for hanging out with me today! I hope you find your next great read in these deals.

— Vanessa Diaz, @buenosdiazsd on Instagram

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What's Up in YA

YA Book News and New Releases

Hey YA Readers!

Sharifah here! I’m steering the YA ship while Kelly’s out. Let’s dig into the latest in YA news, as well as take a peek at the great new books that hit shelves this week.

YA Book News

Let’s catch up on this week’s YA news.

New YA Book Releases

Grab your TBR because it’s about to grow. A * means Kelly has read the book and recommends it!

*The Alcazar by Amy Ewing

Be Not Far From Me by Mindy McGinnis

Bone Crier’s Moon by Kathryn Purdie

*Chain of Gold by Cassandra Clare

Every Reason We Shouldn’t by Sara Fujimura

The Fire Never Goes Out by Noelle Stevenson

*The First Seven by Laura Pohl

Fly Like A Girl by Mary Jennings Hegar

Havenfall by Sara Holland

If These Wings Could Fly by Kyrie McCauley

The Kingdom of Back by Marie Lu

Light In Hidden Places by Sharon Cameron

Mermaid Moon by Susann Cokal

The Midnight Lie by Marie Rutkoski

The Moment of Truth by Kasie West

The Night of Your Life by Lydia Sharp

Only Mostly Devastated by Sophie Gonzales

Open Fire by Amber Lough

The Phantom Twin by Lisa Brown

*A Question of Holmes by Brittany Cavallaro

The Twin by Natasha Preston

The Vanishing Deep by Astrid Scholte

The Vanishing Girl by Josephine Ruby

*The Warrior’s Curse by Jennifer A. Nielsen

When We Were Magic by Sarah Gailey

*Wicked As You Wish by Rin Chupeco

The Winter Duke by Claire Eliza Bartlett

Witches of Ash and Ruin by E Latimer

This Week at Book Riot

Don’t miss the great talk over on Book Riot this week about YA, either.

 


Thanks for hanging out!

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What's Up in YA

Girls Make History in These Amazing YA Novels

Hey YA Fans!

Before getting into the books, I’ll be out of office for a little over a week and this here newsletter will be lovingly tended to by fellow YA fans and devotees. Get excited to hear from some new voices for the next few inbox treats.

As you likely know, March is Women’s History Month. It’s the perfect opportunity to share some amazing YA historical fictions that center girls. Here are a handful of favorites, all of which are worth picking up ASAP (and all of them are out and available now!).

Audacity by Melanie Crowder

This novel in verse is set in the early 20th century, at the beginning of the Labor Rights Movement in the US. It’s a fictionalized spin on the real life story of Clara Lemlich, whose family immigrated to the US from Russia. She becomes a leader in the movement, speaking up and out about terrible working conditions in factories, with a keen eye to the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory. Clara is a daring, badass girl who disobeys her family’s wishes in order to better the lives of those around her, as well as to better her own education and English skills.

Burn Baby Burn by Meg Medina

It’s the historical summer of 1977 when New York City is burning and a serial killer named Son of Sam is on the loose. Nora, our narrator, is Latina, and her best friend is a white girl. Both of them are deeply invested in feminism, but what Medina does is offer a look at the ways feminism isn’t necessarily inclusive, either in the late 70s or now. The setting is compelling, and the challenges that Nora experiences with her family are realistic and heartening — and she, as a budding feminist, comes to understand better where her experiences are in her world, as well as how far she can push herself.

The Downstairs Girl by Stacey Lee

It’s 1890 Atlanta. Jo, who is unafraid to speak her mind, lives with Old Gin — a man who took her in after she was “abandoned” by her parents — under the house of a local publisher who is unaware that they live there. When Jo overhears the folks upstairs talking about how agony aunt columns have led to newspaper sales soaring, she takes it upon herself to suggest a column and does so through a pen name “Miss Sweetie.” They’re game for it, and she begins to write these regular columns under the name and under strict anonymity. Sales are up . . . and so is interest in finding out who she really is. Immersive, with a really fascinating look at Chinese American history and the ways in which white feminism actively harms people of color.

Pulp by Robin Talley

This is a little less traditional when it comes to YA historical fiction, in that it’s primarily about a contemporary teen girl named Abby with the voice of a girl named Janet from the early 50s included alongside it. But what Abby finds is what makes it worth including on this list: pulp lesbian fiction that leads her down a road of understanding the history of queer people in America.  I knew nothing about the Lavender Scare, and vis a vis Janet and Abby, it becomes palpable and terrifying. I also absolutely loved that lesbian pulp — which I did know about — was woven in as the thread binding both Abby in 2017 and Janet in 1955 together.

Saving Savannah by Tonya Bolden

Bolden, who is a long-time writer for young people, brings readers to 1919 Washington DC in this story about an upper class Black girl who wants nothing more than to make something interesting of her life. Savannah knows she’s privileged in her wealth. But she’s worried she’ll never do something important or powerful in her life. Her brother has moved to New York City and has a photography shop, and she’s bored by her long-time friend and neighbor Yolande. When the housekeeper’s daughter steps in to clean the Riddle’s home, Savannah forms a quick bond with her, and it’s through her she finds her way to a school on the other side of town that helps less-privileged girls gain a solid education. Here she volunteers, but more, it’s here she meets someone who introduces her to the concepts of radicalism, socialism, and anarchy. At this pivotal time in history, Savannah finds herself with a few close calls to trouble, but when it gets too close, she and her mother connect over a history her mother never had shared with Savannah before. A great read about a Black girl who is privileged — far too rare in YA and rarer still in YA historical fiction.

A Tyranny of Petticoats and The Radical Element, both edited by Jessica Spotswood

Want to immerse yourself across a wide range of historical time periods and settings, filled with girls written by female and nonbinary YA writers? These two anthologies will be an utter treat. Each story is about a non-celebrity girl, though some are based on real people in history, and the details about setting and era are fantastic. Like all anthologies, these collections are made for reading either cover to cover or picking and choosing stories that call out to you and leaving others behind.


Whether you pick up one of these books or all of them, you’re in for a world of great stories about teen girls through history.

Thanks for hanging out, and I’ll see you again soon!

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

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What's Up in YA

YA Book News and New Releases

Hey YA Lovers!

Time to dig into the latest in YA news, as well as take a peek at the great new books that hit shelves this week.

YA Book News

Lots of news to catch up with this week, particularly when it comes to adaptations in the works.

New YA Book Releases

Grab your TBR because it’s about the grow. A * means I’ve read the book and recommend it!

*Bent Heavens by Daniel Kraus

Deadfall by Stephen Wallenfels (paperback)

Jane Against The World by Karen Blumenthal (nonfiction)

Rebelwings by Andrea Tang

Red Hood by Elana K. Arnold

Red Mantle by Maria Turtschaninoff (series, in translation)

The Shadows Between Us by Tricia Levenseller

The Sound of Stars by Alechia Dow

Soul of the Sword by Julie Kagawa (series, paperback)

The Truth App by Jack Heath (series)

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

 

This Week at Book Riot

Don’t miss the great talk over on Book Riot this week about YA, either.

 

It’s a good day to read YA, y’all. Why not tell everyone that all the time? Shirt available in tons of colors. $29 and up.

 


Thanks for hanging out, and I’ll see you again next week!

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

**Psst:  you can now also preorder my upcoming August release, Body Talk: 37 Voices Explore Our Radical Anatomy!

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What's Up in YA

🇺🇸 US or 🇬🇧 UK?: Which YA Book Cover Do You Prefer?

Hey YA Readers!

Do you pay attention to book covers across different countries? I know I love taking a peek at how different publishers choose to highlight their books.

For many years, books published in the UK took advantage of more illustrated covers. If you’ve walked a book store any time in the last couple of years in the US, you’ve likely seen this is much more common here now than photographic covers. But even though the styles tend to be more similar now between the US and UK than previously, they can still present a different image all together.

Let’s take a peek at some of the US and UK covers of new and beloved YA book covers. Which do you prefer?

What Momma Left Me by Renée Watson

This book’s US and UK covers deserve a little back story first. This was Watson’s first book and it published 10 years ago with these covers (hardcover on left, paperback on right):

The initial hardcover was illustrated, but it certainly looks young. This is one of those books that falls right at the YA/MG divide, but the cover gives it a younger look. The paperback offers us a photograph and uses empty space pretty cleverly. But the font also reads fairly young.

The cover on the left is the new US edition, which came out in 2019. It’s so lovely and appealing, both for middle grade and YA readers. The cover on the right is the UK edition, hitting shelves there for the first time. It captures a lot of the new US edition while also being wholly unique. I especially love the font for Renée’s name.

 

Clap When You Land by Elizabeth Acevedo (May 5)

Both of these covers are powerful. The US edition includes fire escape ladders, which gives it such an urban feel. On the right, that aspect is missing and while the planes aren’t as obvious on the UK edition, if you peek at the “A” in Clap, you’ll see it.

 

One Of Us Is Next by Karen M. McManus

The US cover on the left is really different from the UK cover on the right. Both convey the high school setting well, but it’s different. The UK edition includes a tag line which, for me, makes it a little more compelling than the visuals of the US edition (“Truth or dare turns deadly. Which would you choose?”).

Yes No Maybe So by Becky Albertalli and Aisha Saeed

I love the ways that the UK cover on the left and the US cover on the right connect and diverge. The teens on the covers wear the same outfits in each line, have the same stances in them, and yet, it’s not just the color change that makes them different. It’s the font and focus on the title.

I’d love to know about the choice to put the plant outside the door on the top of the UK cover, where it’s not present in the US edition (or a part of the story, as far as I remember).

Foul Is Fair by Hannah Capin

Both the US cover, featuring a maximalist palate of colors and shapes, as well as a fierce female on it, as well as the UK cover, with a little bloody lipstick, are eye-catching. It’s pretty clear this isn’t a rom com, I think, but rather, a story of revenge. I personally like the lipstick just a tiny bit more because of the way it’s so bare in execution and yet features a lot of clever little details (and the tag line helps,  too). But talk about a US cover that’s unlike anything else out there now, too.


What do you think? Do you prefer the US or UK covers for any of these books?

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

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

**Psst — you can now also preorder my upcoming August release, Body Talk: 37 Voices Explore Our Radical Anatomy!

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What's Up in YA

Stock Your Digital Shelves With YA Ebook Deals

Hey YA Fans!

Read your way into some fantastic YA ebook deals this week. Grab one, two, or all of these and fill your ereader with books that’ll satisfy your interest in every genre and style.

Deals are current as of Friday, February 20, 2020.

I love the cover for and description of All The Ways The World Can End by Abby Sher and need to get my own eyes on it. $3.

The Voice In My Head by Dana L. Davis is $2 and one I plan on snagging.

Add some YA nonfiction to your TBR with Steve Sheinkin’s Port Chicago 50. It’s $3.

Speaking of YA nonfiction, Kenneth C. Davis’s In The Shadow of Liberty is necessary reading. $3.

More nonfiction, you say? Grab March Forward, Girl: From Young Warrior to Little Rock Nine by Melba Pattillo Beals. $3.

Libba Bray’s The Diviners is $3.

If you want more dark fiction, Emily A. Duncan’s Wicked Saints is also $3.

Ibi Zoboi’s anthology Black Enough: Stories of Being Young and Black In America is one of my favorites, and you can grab it for $2. The array of voices and stories is just fantastic.

The Love and Lies of Rukhsana Ali by Sabina Khan is $2, too.

Renée Watson’s This Side of Home, mayyybe my favorite book of hers, is $2.

Readers who haven’t yet picked up Kekla Magoon’s How It Went Down can solve that by grabbing it for $3.

Bill Konigsberg is a master of queer YA, and The Music of What Happens is more than worth picking up for $2.

You can and should also pick up Becky Albertalli and Adam Silvera’s What If It’s Us for $3.

Sona Chariapotra’s Symptoms of a Heartbreak is $3.

Burn Baby Burn cover imageMore romance calling to you? I Love You So Mochi by Sarah Kuhn is $2.

For historical fiction fans, Julie Berry’s The Lovely War is $2. You can also pick up MT Anderson’s anthology Fatal Throne. And then grab one of my favorite historical YAs, Meg Medina’s Burn Baby Burn, for $2.


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

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

**Psst — you can now also preorder my upcoming August release, Body Talk: 37 Voices Explore Our Radical Anatomy!

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What's Up in YA

YA Book News and New Releases This Week

Hey YA Fans!

Let’s dive into the meat, tofu, or seitan and potatoes, kale, or chickpeas of the week in all things young adult books.

YA Book News

YA New Releases

Let’s dive into the new books that hit shelves this week. A * means I have read and recommend the title. . . and this week, it turns out, I’ve read none of the new releases (I record All The Books episodes for the second Tuesday of the month, so sometimes those third week releases are challenging to get to–it’s no indication of their merit).

All The Ways The World Can End by Abby Sher (paperback)

The Blossom and the Firefly by Sherri L. Smith

Break The Fall by Jennifer Iacopelli (I cannot wait to read this gymnastics book!). 

Fatal Throne by MT Anderson (paperback)

The Feminist Agenda of Jemima Kincaid by Kate Hattemer

Foul Is Fair by Hannah Capin

Girls With Sharp Sticks by Suzanne Young (series, paperback)

Glitch Kingdom by Sheena Boekweg

The Life Below by Alexandra Monir (series)

Miss You Love You Hate You Bye by Abby Sher

Of Curses and Kisses by Sandhya Menon (series starter!)

Solstice by Lorence Alison

The Upside of Falling by Alex Light

With A Star In My Hand by Margarita Engle

YA On Book Riot

So much great YA talk over on site this past week!


Thanks for hanging out, y’all, and we’ll see you again with some great ebook deals on Saturday.

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

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What's Up in YA

👻👻 Celebrate YA Horror: Bring a Little Spook To Your Season

Hey YA Readers!

It’s my new favorite time of year: time to shout about great YA horror books. In the middle of the winter, you ask? Yes, indeed!

For the season year in a row, I’ve been part of the Summer Scares committee, which works to pick three great horror books each year in three categories — adult, YA, and middle grade — and have all sorts of resources made available for highlighting horror to new readers. Though the program is aimed at librarians, there’s so much here for all readers, too. You can read more about the amazing resources and books selected previously here. We select backlist titles that should be readily available in libraries, making snapping them up ASAP possible.

On Valentine’s Day, this year’s winners were announced. It seems only right to talk a bit more about the three amazing YA titles selected this year. These would be perfect books for new readers of YA horror, as well as those who love this genre and want to expand their reading horizons. What makes this list, as well as the adult and middle grade lists, special is that they showcase a wide range of what horror looks like on the page, reaching readers who prefer no gore to those who want their horror dark and bloody.

The Agony House by Cherie Priest and Tara O’Connor

This hybrid horror story blends text written Priest with comics drawn by O’Connor. It follows Denise who, along with her mother and step-father, moves back to New Orleans after they left post-Hurricane Katrina. The family has purchased a run down home and plan to rehab it and turn it into a bed and breakfast. But things aren’t going well in the renovation, and Denise becomes doubly concerned when she stumbles upon an old comic book in the home’s attic, drawn by a famous artist who’d gone missing decades before. She takes it upon herself to discover what may be lurking — and what that disappeared artist has to do with it.

What makes this book special in addition to its format is that it’s really at heart about gentrification. Denise has to face the fact her family is attempting to make a profit off a gentrifying neighborhood and that those who’ve always lived in this less-prosperous part of the city are being deeply impacted by people like her family.

It’s spooky, smart, and a book that challenges expectations of what a horror book for teens can do. Perfect for readers who want their horror a little less gory and a little more chilling.

Devils Unto Daughters by Amy Lukavics

The moment I read Lukavics’s debut, I knew this book was a sign of a writer who had something special. Lukavics is a queen of dark, sinister horror.

Perhaps this book is best not talked about too in-depth, since the pitch for it is pretty much perfect: this is Little House On The Prairie meets horror. The house that the Verner family moves into is not good news, and what they experience is utterly terrifying. I still have nightmares about some of those scenes, and I read this book five years ago.

This is one for those who aren’t faint at heart and who really want their bones rattled.

paperback edition of Labyrinth Lost by Zoraida CordovaLabyrinth Lost by Zoraida Córdova

Here’s a little insider talk: this book was on the short list for last year’s inaugural Summer Scares, but I didn’t want to include it before knowing that the final book in the trilogy would be available. Guess what comes out this summer? Now is the time to start your adventure with these powerful brujas.

Alex is a bruja, but she hates having the power. She performs a spell to rid herself of her magic, but it goes horribly wrong. Her entire family disappears, and the only way she can get them back is to travel with a boy who she doesn’t like to Los Lagos, an in-between land. Along the way, we experience magic, witchcraft, a fiercely loving family, and a bisexual main character.

This one feels especially tailored to young readers. That doesn’t mean it won’t appeal to adults, but this has all of the hallmarks of a YA book meant to reach teens in particular, and the fact that it’s a trilogy will keep readers hooked. The final book Wayward Witch hits shelves August 1.


Thanks for hanging out, y’all, and I hope you’ll pick at least one of these fabulous reads up. See you again on Thursday!

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

**Psst — you can now also preorder my upcoming August release, Body Talk: 37 Voices Explore Our Radical Anatomy!

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What's Up in YA

This Week’s YA Book News and New Releases

Hey YA Fans!

Once you’ve come off your high from PS: I Still Love You on Netflix or whatever great book you’re into right now, catch up with the latest in YA news and new book releases.

In the YA deals newsletter on Saturday, I made a typo in an author’s name. I called CB Lee the author of The Epic Crush of Genie Lo. She’s not. She’s the author of Not Your Sidekick. FC Yee is the author of the Genie Lo series. The first is on sale, while the second one isn’t, but why not pick both up?

Now, onto the news!

YA Book News

 

This Week’s Book Releases

A * means I’ve read and recommend it!

500 Words or Less by Juleah del Rosario*500 Words or Less by Julia del Rosario (paperback)

Cloak of Night by Evelyn Skye (series)

The Girl King by Mimi Yu (paperback, series)

Hearts of Flame by Nicki Pau Preto (series)

Honor Lost by Ann Aguirre and Rachel Caine (series)

If Only You Knew by Prerna Pickett

Ink In The Blood by Kim Smejkal (series)

The Last Confession of Autumn Casterly by Meredith Tate

The New David Espinoza by Fred Aceves

Night Spinner by Addie Thorley

No True Believers by Rabiah York Lumbard

*The Rise and Fall of Charles Lindbergh by Candace Fleming — I highlighted this one on the latest episode of All The Books.

This Train Is Being Held by Ismée Williams

*Turtle Under Ice by Juleah del Rosario — I highlighted this one on the latest episode of All The Books.

*Watch Us Rise by Renée Watson and Ellen Hagan

The Wicked King by Holly Black (paperback, series)

YA Talk On Book Riot This Week


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

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

**Psst — you can now also preorder my upcoming August release, Body Talk: 37 Voices Explore Our Radical Anatomy!