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Dress Code Revolution, Disability Pride, and More YA Book Talk and News: July 6, 2023

Hey YA Book Lovers!

I don’t know about my fellow USians, but these middle-of-the-week holidays are, erm, the worst. It’s nice not to have to work, but it makes the week feel so much longer and confusing.

That complaint aside, it sure was nice to have some bonus reading time. I’m not going to make some grand proclamation about getting much done on my TBR, but…a chip is a chip is a chip, right?

Before we dive in…What do S.A. Cosby, Khaled Hosseini, Sarah Bakewell, and Yahdon Israel have in common? They’ve been guests on Book Riot’s newest podcast, First Edition where BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal explores the wide bookish world. Subscribe to hear them and stay to hear Book Riot’s editors pick the “it” book of the month.

Bookish Goods

colorful bookmobile bus stickers

Colorful Bookmobile Stickers by thegrantgirl

I gate kept these for a bit because there were only a couple of sheets left and I wanted to grab some myself. So now that they’re back in fuller stock, behold: how fun are these colorful bookmobile bus stickers? I am obsessed. $3.50.

New Releases

Let’s get into this week’s excellent paperback YA releases. It might be a quieter publishing week with the holiday, but the smaller pool is nothing short of great.

You can catch the entire roundup of YA paperback releases for summer 2023 starting tomorrow over here!

As usual, you may need to toggle the view from the links to see the paperback edition.

disability visibility young reader edition book cover

Disability Visibility (Young Reader Edition) edited by Alice Wong

Get to know more about disability activism and the reality of being disabled in today’s world through this young adult edition of Wong’s anthology of essays. There are 17 different pieces in the collection covering everything from ableism to inequality to pivotal moments in disability activism in the past and the present. It is a powerful and empowering book.

does my body offend you book cover

Does My Body Offend You? by Mayra Cuevas and Marie Marquardt

This one is tailor-made for readers who love Moxie and Watch Us Rise.

Neither Malena nor Ruby plan to launch a campaign against their school’s dress code, but what begins as discipline from the school administration because Malena goes braless in order to avoid the pain wearing one would cause her sunburn turns into a full-blown rebellion. The book explores sexism, double standards, and also allows both Ruby and Malena to explore who they are socially and culturally. Both bring a lot of history with them to this moment, and it’s through their history they’re able to step forward to demand better, more equitable rules for every gender in their Florida school.

This one doesn’t have easy answers, as Ruby is a white girl and Malenaa is a girl of color. White saviorism is called out here in a way that helps their commitment to change become much more real and impactful.

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

YA Book News

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

Until then, it’s Thursday if you’re reading this on July 6, and I hope you’ve got some happy reading planned.

— Kelly Jensen

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Murder, Menstruation, and International Cover Travel: YA Book Talk for July 3, 2023

Hey YA Readers!

I am positive this tells you my age, but whenever July comes around, one song gets in my head and lives there for the next 31 days. It came out when I was in high school, so it only seems fitting to include it in the YA newsletter for other elder millennials…and those who want to introduce the youth to some classic month-themed music.

What do S.A. Cosby, Khaled Hosseini, Sarah Bakewell, and Yahdon Israel have in common? They’ve been guests on Book Riot’s newest podcast, First Edition where BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal explores the wide bookish world. Subscribe to hear them and stay to hear Book Riot’s editors pick the “it” book of the month.

Bookish Goods

big book cart sticker in light oranges, pinks, and greens

Book Cart Sticker by Arimation1104

Whether you’re looking to go a bit meta with your own book cart or want a sweet new sticker for your favorite water bottle, this big book cart sticker is a beaut. $3.50.

New Releases

The mega roundup of new YA book releases for summer 2023 is here, and we can now officially celebrate hitting the halfway mark on this year. You can click the above link to get the whole juicy roundup of books, and you can peep two hitting shelves this week here.

With major holidays observed in both the U.S. and Canada this week, know this week is a quieter week on the release side.

love and resistance book cover

Love & Resistance by Kara H.L. Chen

Olivia is 17 and she’s at her fourth school in seven years; she wants to keep flying under the radar, but when the popular girl at her new high school makes a racist statement in her direction, Olivia has to speak up. She does, and now she’s joining forces with a group called Nerd Net at the school, who have been trying to stop the popular girl’s racism for months.

So much for flying under the radar.

This is described as a little bit of Moxie with a little bit of The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks with a little bit of Mary HK Choi.

murder on a school night book cover

Murder on a School Night by Kate Weston

Kerry does not want to go to a party, but her bestie, the outgoing and mystery-loving Annie, convinces her it is a prime opportunity to figure out who has been cyberbullying the most popular girl in school, Heather.

Things don’t get better when Kerry discovers the dead body of Heather’s best friend Selena just as she’s about to kiss her crush.

Murder story? Suffocation by menstrual cup.

So when a second student turns up dead, period pad plastered across their eyes, the ragtag duo of Kerry and Annie need to get to the bottom of this bloody trail of murder.

This one sounds like a romp, with comps to Fleabag and Truly Devious.

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

Gone International

We love a good book cover, don’t we? I know I love looking at book covers for YA books as they evolve, sometimes changing between their initial hardcover and their new paperback and sometimes changing when they’re rereleased in anniversary or special editions.

But today, let’s look at a few well-known, popular YA books from the last couple of years and see their covers outside of the U.S. I know I am especially a sucker for a good British design.

UK and US covers of Imogen, Obviously.

On the left is the UK edition of Becky Albertalli’s Imogen, Obviously, with the U.S. cover on the right. I like ’em both, though there is definitely something more romance-forward in the UK edition, even if the kind of romance is definitely not clear.

UK and US covers for Nic Stone's Chaos Theory

I love that the UK cover on the left is so similar to the U.S. cover on the right for Nic Stone’s Chaos Theory. I do miss the glasses Shelbi wears, though.

UK and US book covers for The Black Queen.

I have nothing bad to say about the U.S. cover for Jumata Emill’s The Black Queen, pictured on the right. But I will say this: it pales in comparison to the UK cover on the left which is just stunning and unique and perfect for the book itself.

If you’re thinking “wow, international is only U.S. and UK, huh?,” you’ll be happy to see the next one. It is worth noting that for many YA books, even the biggest buzzy ones, a non-UK international edition, especially one that needs to be translated, can take several years to publish. So, sticking to books released in 2022/2023 means there simply isn’t a whole lot yet to showcase, say, a Japanese or Brazilian edition for yet.

US and UK book covers for Violet Made of Thorns

On the left, the UK edition of Gina Chen’s stand alone fantasy Violet Made of Thorns and on the right, the U.S. I think both are super pretty, and frankly, as we do some more traveling, other designers kept the theme of “dang, it’s pretty” going.

Violet Made of Thorns Spanish and Italian covers.

Then we go to Spain for the cover on the left, moving west then to Italy for the cover on the right. I love how they’re JUST different enough to be different and yet it is clear they are all drawing from the same well of inspiration.

Violet Made of Thorns German and Dutch editions.

Finally, same vibes are happening here for the German edition on the left and the Dutch edition on the right. I do love the ways the different shades of purple give a different feel to the book.

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

Until then, happy readiing!

— Kelly Jensen, who just downloaded Murder on a School Night to soak in over the holiday.

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Genre Awards, Paradise, and More YA Book Talk and News: June 29, 2023

Hey YA Readers!

No fancy introduction today. I mean. June has been twelve thousand years long for all of us, right? Let’s get right to books and let everything else go for a few minutes.

Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more drawn from our collective experience as power readers, teachers, librarians, booksellers, and bookish professionals? Subscribe to The Deep Dive, a biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers, delivered to your inbox! Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level at bookriot.substack.com.

Bookish Goods

beam me up alien t-shirt

Beam Me Up shirt by booksrbtrthanreality

Honestly, I’ll go with the aliens at this point if I can bring some books. This shirt is fun, and I love the neon colors going on. $29, up to size 3XL.

New Releases

Grab your ever-expanding TBR and pop some more titles on there because why not? This week’s got a ton of great paperback YA releases, and you can catch the full roundup over here.

As always, you might need to toggle your view to see the paperback edition.

dustborn book cover

Dustborn by Erin Bowman

Delta of Dead River needs to save herself and her family from the hellscape of the Wastes where they live as a vicious dictator takes over. She’s got a secret though, and that secret is one that could get them all killed: on her back is a branding with a map to Verdant, aka paradise. Given the miserable conditions where they live, getting to Verdant would be life changing.

But the General, sent by raiders, is after her and her family, and she’s unsure whether or not she can even trust her long-long, former best friend. As much as she’s scared to trust anyone, things get even more unsettling once Delta and her family arrive in what they believe to be Verdant.

This one is a standalone western fantasy, described as a little bit Mad Max and a little bit Gunslinger Girl.

well that was unexpected book cover

Well That Was Unexpected by Jesse Q. Sutanto

Sharlot’s mother has caught her in a “compromising position” and decides the best solution is for them to head to her mother’s native Indonesia.

Meanwhile, George Clooney Tanuwijaya’s father – yes, he’s obsessed with American celebrities – is also trying to rein in his son. They are some of the wealthiest people in Indonesia and no way can anything mar the family’s reputation.

So when Sharlot’s mother and George’s father strike up conversation online, each pretending to be one another’s children, they think it’ll be so their children find the “right” kind of partner. But when the real Sharlot and George find out about what their parents are doing, they are horrified…and then maybe begin to actually fall for one another.

This one’s got fake dating, ridiculous parents, a romantic island adventure, and loads of humor.

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

YA Book News

Thanks, as always, for hanging out. We’ll see you on Saturday for your YA book deals, then again on Monday.

Until then, happy reading.

— Kelly Jensen, currently reading Just Do This One Thing For Me by Laura Zimmermann.

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Vicious Sirens, Queerly Pink, and More YA Book Talk: June 26, 2023

Hey YA Readers!

I don’t know about you, but I’m here and ready for summer. I feel like I have not gotten one moment to enjoy any of the last season, as I have not even hung up my hammock yet, despite ideal weather for it. Maybe this will be the week I finally can because I have a pile of books calling my name and cold lemonade in the fridge.

Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more drawn from our collective experience as power readers, teachers, librarians, booksellers, and bookish professionals? Subscribe to The Deep Dive, a biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers, delivered to your inbox! Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level at bookriot.substack.com.

Let’s dive into everything new books and Pride this week.

Bookish Goods

phone grip that says "books over people" with colorful flowers in the background.

Books Over People Phone Grip by IvyResinShop

I saw a TikTok claiming that young people think phone grips are a sign that a person is An Old and look: I don’t care. Today’s phones are made for men’s hands, not women’s, and as someone with extremely small hands even for a woman, I need one to be able…to hold my phone. I do go to bed by 8 p.m. and can’t have caffeine after 1 p.m., thanks for asking.

Anyway.

This awesome phone grip is for fellow fans like me who also want to make it a little more bookish. $27.

New Releases

We round up the month of June with even more excellent options across so many different genres and formats for new YA books. This week’s hardcover release highlights below include a memoir and a fantasy that will leave fans of the new The Little Mermaid film super stoked.

As always, grab the full list of this week’s releases over here. You’ll see the summer 2023 YA roundup hitting site — and here! — soon.

monstrous book cover

Monstrous: A Transracial Adoption Story by Sarah Myer

I’ve been around YA long enough to know how rare adoption stories were — and still are — and then to remember discussion of how few transracial adoption stories exist — and how few still exist. But we have gotten better, and we’re seeing more representation on this front from those who experienced transracial adoption.

Myer’s work is a graphic memoir about growing up as a Korean adoptee to white parents. It’s a story of feeling like never fitting in and always being stared at, but through a passion for fandom and art, found a community and understanding of herself.

This looks fantastic!

sing me to sleep book cover

Sing Me To Sleep by Gabi Burton

Saoirse Sorkova is a liar, and it’s how she survives. To her kingdom, where she’s a soldier-in-training, she claims to be a siren; this helps her avoid being executed. To the group of assassins she works for at night, she lies about identity. To her family, she claims her siren powers are perfectly under control and she never feels the urge to kill.

She’s a great trainee, but her lies mean she can’t let herself get into the spotlight. But when her sister is in trouble, Saoirse needs to become a personal bodyguard to the prince and will now be fully at the center of her kingdom’s attention.

Saoirse should hate Prince Hayes. But she actually can’t resist him, as he’s nothing like his segregationist father. She begins to fall for him, in fact, even as they team up to strike down the deadliest threat in their kingdom together.

What he doesn’t know is she is the one they’re after.

This is the first in a series and while it’s certainly darker than The Little Mermaid, readers itching for those under-the-sea tales led by characters of color will want to grab this one ASAP.

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

Riot Recommendations

Obviously, queer books are regularly recommended and highlighted in this newsletter all year long. But today marks the end of the ~*~ official ~*~ Pride lists for the month. We’ve talked about a rainbow of queer YA, queer YA comics, LGBTQ+ nonfiction for YA readers, and now we’re going to highlight all things pink.

These are your queerest books in one of the best queer colors: pink. All of these books have published in 2023, so you’re getting some very new, very pink LGBTQ+ fiction to enjoy. I have not included titles already covered in previous newsletters this June. This is not a comprehensive list, either, so not everything that can be mentioned is.

Let’s dive in.

another dimension of us book cover

Another Dimension of Us by Mike Albo

Described as The Breakfast Club meets Stranger Things, this book is told on more than one time line and travels more than one dimension.

In 1986 at the height of the AIDS crisis which filled the country with homophobia (more blatantly so), Tommy knows he’s falling in love with his best friend Renaldo. He knows he can’t share this. But one night Renaldo is hit by lightning and is no longer the person he once was.

It’s now 2044 and Pris Devree wakes up from a nightmare involving a boy named Tommy and a house in her neighborhood that has earned the reputation of “Murder House.” Pris needs to understand, so she goes to the house and stumbles upon a self-help book.

But it’s not what you might think. It’s a guide to trans dimensional travel, and now Pris and Tommy are working together to save Renaldo from a demon.

dear medusa book cover

Dear Medusa by Olivia A. Cole

Alicia is 16, and she’s subject to nonstop judgment from her classmates. It comes because she has sex, so she’s, of course, seen as easy. A slut. Every other name you can imagine for a girl like her.

Except: Alicia was sexually abused by a teacher. She’s a survivor. And of course, it’s a popular teacher who did that to her.

As Alicia begins to drop out of everything that brings her joy, she finds a series of letters from someone else at school. Someone who claims they’ve been a victim, too. Now, she wants to get to the truth of that story and her own.

This verse novel is one for readers who are itching for a compelling and powerful story of redemption, race, power, and maybe even love.

highly suspicious and unfairly cute book cover

Highly Suspicious and Unfairly Cute by Talia Hibbert

Bradley is an all-around good guy. He’s a football player, has his OCD pretty well managed, and he excels in school. Well, minus the class he shares with his former best friend Celine.

Celine is conspiracy theory obsessed. She’s a content creator and has built a following over things like aliens and UFOs and more. Problem is, despite how popular she is online, she’s not cool in real life. Even Bradley abandoned her for the cool kids when he could.

So when Celine signs up for a survival course, she’s surprised to see Bradley has, too. They’re forced to work together and as they join forces in order to win a big prize, they might discover they still have a lot in common…and maybe even start to feel some sparks.

This one is for readers looking for more bisexual representation.

imogen obviously book cover

Imogen, Obviously by Becky Albertalli

This is *easily* one of my favorite YA books this year and is one that captures the experience of never feeling queer enough and feeling as though the gatekeepers to queerness are holding people back from expressing who they truly are.

Imogen is the token straight friend among so many queer people. Or is she? When she spends the weekend with her best friend at her future college, Imogene is exposed to a world of queer joy she’s never experienced before, and this includes meeting a girl she might — possibly, maybe — start to catch feelings for. But she’s always been straight. She can’t possibly NOT be. 

This is a story of the complexities of identity and what happens when gatekeepers decide who can and cannot identify as a part of a particular community. Imogen is a bit naive but is lovable for it, and love interest Tessa is a wonderfully, fully-fleshed character who helps Imogene realize that the ways she’s been taught to think about queerness are, perhaps, quite limiting. Fun, funny, and heartening. 

then everything happens at once book cover

Then Everything Happens at Once by M-E Girard

Baylee has always had a crush on her BFF Freddie, but since she’s not his type, she’s 1. not made a move on him and 2. not bothered wasting energy on making something happen.

She begins to fall for Alex, a funny barista that Baylee meets online and has instant chemistry with. She’s perfect!

So when Freddie DOES start to engage Baylee in a way that’s clearly more than friends, she’s suddenly unsure what to do. That a virus has just shut down the world is not helping the situation.

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

Until then, happy reading!

— Kelly Jensen, currently reading Disorientation.

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Satanic Panic, Brutal Storms, and More YA Book Talk and News: June 22, 2023

Hey YA Readers!

This week is the summer solstice, which means you’re in the stretch now of the longest days in which to read. See if you can enjoy a bonus hour or two to do just that.

Let’s look at this week’s paperback YA releases, followed by this week’s YA book news.

Psst: Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more drawn from our collective experience as power readers, teachers, librarians, booksellers, and bookish professionals? Subscribe to The Deep Dive, a biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers, delivered to your inbox! Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level at bookriot.substack.com.

Bookish Goods

an enamel pin with a stack of rainbow colored books and the text "I'll aadd it to my TBR."

I’ll Add It To My TBR Pin by TheGeekandArtsyStore

How many times have you said those words? Because for me, it’s not easy to count.

Now there’s an enamel pin for it. $16.

New Releases

It’s a new roundup of paperback releases, and there is something for everyone. I’ve pulled out two very different titles to highlight here, but you can grab the entire roundup over here.

I’m elbow-deep in putting together the roundups for the next quarter, too, and let me just say: there are a lot of great YA books coming our way.

As always, you might need to toggle your view to see the paperback edition when you click the link.

the darkening book cover

The Darkening by Sunya Mara

Vesper Vale’s city lives in the center of a violent storm, and Vesper’s life has been anything but easy. She’s the child of failed revolutionaries. Her mother was taken by the queen’s soldiers and chose to die by the storm when given the option. Now, after 12 years on the run, the queen’s soldiers have caught up with Vesper’s father. She refuses to let her father have the same fate as her mother and will do anything to stop it.

She’ll use illegal magic. She’ll try to capture the attention of the prince.

Vesper will have to decide if, after learning more about the truth of her mother’s death, she wants to even save her city at all.

This is the first in a duology, with the second book hitting shelves soon.

the wicked unseen book cover

The Wicked Unseen by Gigi Griffis

This one is being comped to Fear Street, so if that’s your flavor of horror delight, you’ll want to TBR this one.

Audre and her family have moved to rural Pennsylvania, and from the moment she steps foot into town, she knows she’s not going to fit in. Everyone in town believes there is a Satanic cult in the woods around town, and Audre is much less into really believing those things than she is enjoying them via horror films.

She does begin to make a friend — maybe more than a friend — in Elle. So when Elle, daughter of a preacher, goes missing Halloween weekend, everyone in town is convinced not only that she’s been taken by the cult but that Audre is to blame.

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

YA Book News

As always, thanks for hanging out. We’ll see you on Saturday with book deals and on Monday with your new releases and one more list of Pride-themed books *for* Pride month (plenty to come after Pride, of course!).

Until then, happy reading.

— Kelly Jensen, currently reading Disorientation by Elaine Hsieh Chou

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Queer Trailblazers, Owls to Fear, and More YA Book Talk: June 19, 2023

And just like that, we’re more than half-way through June somehow. I don’t know about you, but until it is July 1, any “best of the year so far” roundups annoy me more than get me excited. The middle of the year is not officially until July 1 or July 2 — this year it’s the 1st — so those posts hitting in early June…no thanks. I get that “first” culture is real, but it’s also exhausting.

Ahem, anyway. Welcome to the middle of JUNE, not quite the middle of the year, and indeed, not even yet at the summer solstice.

Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more drawn from our collective experience as power readers, teachers, librarians, booksellers, and bookish professionals? Subscribe to The Deep Dive, a biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers, delivered to your inbox! Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level at bookriot.substack.com.

Let’s dive into today’s new YA releases, as well as a roundup of books to continue our celebration of all things Pride in YA.

Bookish Goods

image of a print that says raging readers night club, and it features a big pink disco ball.

Raging Readers Night Club Print by BookstoBooks

I stumbled upon this movie poster style print a couple of weeks ago and love how clever it is. Are you a raging reader? Do you consider THAT your raging nightclub vibe? You’ll want one for your book nook. $16.

New Releases

It’s another banger of a week for new YA releases. Let’s highlight two here, including one I read and enjoyed from start to finish. You can see the entire list over here — and it’s hard to believe but the third quarter roundups will be here before too long (see: not before the second half of the year).

an echo in the city book cover

An Echo in the City by K.X. Song

Phoenix is 16 and lives with parents who believe she needs to get out of Hong Kong. They’ve saved up money so she can go to a U.S. Ivy League and begin her American dream. Phoenix isn’t interested in this though, but she doesn’t know what she wants. At least she doesn’t until Hong Kong protests begin and she worries about the future of her community.

Kai, also 17, doesn’t see himself the way his parents do. He’s creative and wants to make art. When his mom dies, though, he’s forced to leave Shanghai to be with his father. Dad is a ranked and respected police officer in Hong Kong and Kai’s been enrolled without permission in the police academy. it’s not what he wants to do, at all, but he does want to acquire dad’s approval. So when he accidentally intercepts Phoenix’s phone and discovers plans for a major protest, Phoenix sees his opportunity to uncover an operation that would earn him many, many levels of respect. He will infiltrate the protest and tell the police what’s happening.

Too bad Phoenix and Kai start to catch some feelings and their feelings are built on a lot of lies and inaccuracies.

youre not supposed to die tonight book cover

You’re Not Supposed to Die Tonight by Kalynn Bayron

The owls are not what they seem* in this camp slasher horror.

Charity is spending the summer playing the role of the final girl at Camp Mirror Lake, a facility that is set up to be a game of terror. Guests come in and see if they can survive the night.

Things take a turn during the last weekend though, as several of the actors have stopped showing up. So when one of them does show up dead, Charity no longer thinks her role as Final Girl is just pretend.

This is a fast-paced horror that hits all of the beats of classic bloody summer camp story. It is a cast of characters of color, and it features a secret society, a sapphic romance, and a lot of creepy owls.

*Please, please tell me you get this one.

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

Riot Recommendations

We’ve highlighted a rainbow of queer YA, then talked about queer YA comics. It’s now time to highlight queer YA nonfiction, and I’m going to take this in a bit of a different direction than straight (haha) list of nonfiction. I’m going to highlight a couple of collective biographies that amplify queer voices from history to the present.

gender revels book cover

Gender Rebels: 30 Trans, Nonbinary, and Gender Expansive Heroes Past and Present by Katherine Locke, illustrated by Shanee Benjamin

You’ll have to wait until November for this one to hit shelves, but put it on your TBR and/or preorder now. This collection highlights 30 must-know people who explode the gender binary. It is a groundbreaker in highlighting trans stories, gender nonconforming stories, and intersex stories of real people and real lives.

queer heroes book cover

Queer Heroes: Meet 53 LGBTQ Heroes From Past and Present! by Arabelle Sicardi, illustrated by Sarah Tanat-Jones

How bold, bright, and appealing is this one by cover alone? Dive into the world of LGBTQ+ individuals past and present who have shown the world what it is to be who you are.

Among the slate of individuals included are Freddie Mercury, Alexander Wang, Sappho, Audre Lorde, Kristin Stewart, and more.

queer power book cover

Queer Power!: Icons, Activists & Game Changers from Across the Rainbow by DOM&INK

In addition to highlighting a range of LGBTQ+ trailblazers from past and present, this collection offers essays that focus on the realities of queer life, including mental health challenges, activism, what it is to come out, and more. Again, this one has such an appealing package to it — these collective queer biographies for teens are nothing short of celebratory, even when they take on some tougher stuff.

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

Until then, happy reading!

–Kelly Jensen, currently reading Belle of the Ball

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What's Up in YA

Heart Removal, Valor, and More YA Book Talk and News: June 15, 2023

Hey YA Readers!

It’s time to talk all things YA news and YA paperback releases. Let’s dive in….

Speaking of: if you’re looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more drawn from our collective experience as power readers, teachers, librarians, booksellers, and bookish professionals, subscribe to The Deep Dive. This is our new biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers, delivered to your inbox! Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level at bookriot.substack.com.

Bookish Goods

read queer books mug

Read Queer Books Mug by BookishlyUK

Read your favorite queer books with your soon-to-be new favorite mug that celebrates all things queer reads. $17.

New Releases

Today’s new paperback releases offer a little bit of everything in terms of genre and format. You can see the entire roundup over here, and below are two that sound excellent…and are VERY different from one another.

You may need to toggle your view to see the paperback edition of the book when you click the link.

dauntless book cover

Dauntless by Elisa A. Bonnin

If you want a Filipino inspired fantasy read, look no further. In Seri’s world, the Beasts hunt the People. It is the Valiant who ensure safety for the People by patrolling the world and killing the Beasts. Seri is an assistant to one of the best valor in the world and knows that it is not an easy job to keep the Beasts away and the People safe.

When Seri meets Tsana, things in her world no longer make sense like she has always believed. Tsana, a total stranger to this world, can communicate with the Beasts. As Seri and Tsana become closer to one another, the world around Seri and everything she thought she knew about it start to shatter. It’s a story about saving one’s home and also, maybe, about the risks it involves when love is also on the line.

Find: a unique magic world and some Sapphic feelings.

the faint of heart book cover

The Faint of Heart by Kerilynn Wilson

This graphic novel is being pitched as part Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind meets Severance with additional comparisons to Nimona and This One Summer. In other words, it’s a marriage of speculative fiction with realistic fiction.

The story follows what happens in a world where scientists discover all of the “bad” feelings — anxiety, sadness, anger — disappear when you remove your heart. Everyone decided to do it except for June, a high schooler. Now June is finding it extremely hard to have a heart. She feels lonely and isolated.

When June comes across an abandoned heart in a jar, it is both confusing and, well, heartening. Maybe there is someone else out there who feels.

When that heart brings her to classmate Max, June learns he may have a major secret of his own. That secret has the potential to completely destroy June and her heart.

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

YA Book News

  • The horror anthology A Banquet for Hungry Ghosts is going to see adaptation, with a projected first episode dropping in early 2024. This collection came out in 2009 and it’s GREAT if you love diverse horror and short stories. I can’t wait to see it play out on a screen.
  • While it has not yet had a major release, it is exciting to see Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe opened the Outfest Film Festival in L.A. this week. Of note in this story — something I did not know — is that the filmmaker is trans.
  • The Paramount+ adaptation of Loveboat, Taipei is currently being filmed.
  • I love Alex’s roundups over on Tor.com of upcoming YA science fiction and fantasy. Here’s the goods for May and June.

As always, thanks for hanging out. We’ll see you on Saturday with another mega roundup of YA ebook deals.

Until then, happy reading!

–Kelly Jensen, currently devouring You’re Not Supposed to Die Tonight by Kalynn Bayron

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What's Up in YA

A Magical Cooking School, A Rompy Queer Western, and More YA Book Talk: June 12, 2023

Hey YA Readers!

Another week into June and another week closer to the official start of summer. It’s been hot here now for close to a month–we skipped spring, minus that one rainy week–and though we are not dealing with the smoky air that some of you are, we had it pretty rough in May. I hope you’re staying safe and staying cool.

Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more drawn from our collective experience as power readers, teachers, librarians, booksellers, and bookish professionals? Subscribe to The Deep Dive, a biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers, delivered to your inbox! Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level at bookriot.substack.com.

Let’s dive into this week’s new YA releases and highlight some queer YA comics.

Bookish Goods

pastel colored "read the rainbow" t-shirt

Read The Rainbow tee by TheBonhomieShop

How fun is this “Read the Rainbow” t-shirt? It plays off the Reading Rainbow logo and also offers up a little bit of uniqueness with its pastel palate. $32 and up, with color options and sizes up to 3XL.

New Releases

There are a ton of great books out this week, including several LGBTQ+ titles that I know are on my TBR. You can catch the entire roundup over here.

I’ve pulled out two books I have seen little talk or promotion around, from two different genres. Let’s dive on in!

kismat connection book cover

Kismat Connection by Ananya Devarajan

Consider Madhuri Iyer doomed. The stars are saying it, her mother is believing what the stars are saying, and a family curse says she’ll be stuck with her first boyfriend for forever.

So she does what anyone would do in this situation: she decides she’s going to make the best of it and devise a relationship with her childhood friend Arjun Meht. She’ll never actually fall for him, so no doom and gloom to come.

You can guess what happens here. Madhuri begins to fall for Arjun and now has to decide whether to break his heart in order to avoid doom or whether to lean into it, knowing that love by the stars might not be the worst fate.

wolfpack book cover

Wolfpack by Amelia Brunskill

Nine teen girls are living in a cult. Then there are eight. What happened to the one who went missing? Did she wander or did something — someone? — take her down.

The remaining girls want answers.

Or do they?

This is a suspenseful thriller, with comparisons to We Were Liars. I know that’s a popular comp to catch the BookTok crowd, but I think the setting and insularity of the story might make it pretty apt.

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

Riot Recommendations

Let’s keep on trucking with some more great LGBTQ+ YA recommendations to read this month…and every month. Up this week are queer YA comics.

This is in no way comprehensive. I’ve pulled out a mix of titles I’ve read and loved with titles that may be well-known and lesser-known.

basil and oregano book cover

Basil and Oregano by Melissa Capriglione 

Take one part Great British Bake Off and one part Magic School, and you get this just-published comic. Porta Bella Magiculinary Academy is all about cooking with magic, and Basil plans to be the top student her senior year. But then in walks Arabella Oregano, daughter of a chef. Immediately, the two begin to grow close. Basil suspects Arabella is keeping a secret though, despite how much they’re working together in order to secure the top rank at school.

So when the secret is spilled, Basil is faced with one of the hardest decisions of her life.

belle of the ball book cover

Belle of the Ball by Mari Costa

Belle Hawkins is a wallflower and also the person who prefers to be beneath the mascot costume to keep herself at a distance. But it’s senior year and it’s now or never. She decides to remove the head of her costume and proclaim her long-time crush on head cheerleader Regina Moreno.

Problem? Regina has a girlfriend named Chloe Kitagawa.

Chloe is not doing great in English class, though, and Hawkins thinks this is her opportunity: offer to tutor Chloe in order to get closer to Regina. It seems to be going okay, until the moment that Hawkins and Chloe realize they know each other from their youth, when they were both very different people.

There is love here, but…it might be surprising where it happens.

Bloom by Kevin Panetta and Savanna Ganucheau

As much as Ari loves making bread, he can’t imagine doing it for the rest of his life. He’s interviewing new potential people to take over is job, and that’s when he meets Hector. Ari begins to train Hector and prepares for his escape from the work, except…he’s starting to fall head over heels for the new guy.

Flamer cover

Flamer by Mike Curato

Aiden Navarro is at summer camp before the start of junior high. It’s an intense summer of hanging out with his friends, navigating bullies desperate to make him feel bad about himself as a half Asian boy, and coming to terms with the fact he might be gay.

One night, when Aiden kisses his best friend and campmate, things shift immediately. Has he forever lost the trust of his friend Elias? Did that kiss mean anything romantic? Was it an accident?

This is a moving, heartfelt story and one that will resonate with younger (and older!) teens. It’s about traversing that tricky space between what faith might tell you is right, what it might tell you is a sin, and how you come to accept yourself as you are.

Mooncakes by Wendy Xu and Suzanne Walker cover

Mooncakes by Suzanne Walker and Wendy Xu

This graphic novel is about a teen witch who helps out at her grandmother’s bookshop, where she often hands out spell books and assists in looking into supernatural occurrences in her small town. During one of those investigations, she stumbles upon her childhood crush and wants to not only rekindle feelings, but also to help him reclaim his power. It’s about family, about the ways history can tie a family and romantic relationship together, and for readers who don’t usually like “horror,” it’s not especially gory. It’s about super-magical powers and spirits.

Xu’s art is perfectly suited to the story, with a wide color palette.

northranger book cover

Northranger by Rey Terciero and Bre Indigo

Sixteen-year-old Cade is in the closet because he has to be; he is a Latino living in rural Texas. His escape is horror movies.

This summer, he’s working at a local ranch to help make ends meet at home. He hates it though, save for the two teens who live on that ranch. Especially the very attractive Henry.

The two start to become closer over the summer, but Henry is dodgy about a lot of things, including his mother’s death. Cade worries there might be more that his crush isn’t telling him.

This is inspired by, as you might guess by the title, Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey. It is romantic and gothic and queer as heck.

squad book cover

Squad by Maggie Tokuda-Hall and Lisa Sterle

When Becca moves to a new, small, posh town, she’s immediately taken in by the popular crowd and ditches the lone fat girl at school who she had a quick connection with (that girl wasn’t cool enough). Soon, Becca learns this elite girl gang has a secret: under the full moon, they transform into werewolves who set out to destroy boys who are too eager to take advantage of girls. All seems well at first, as they plan their attacks outside of Piedmont, but when Becca accidentally destroys the boyfriend of one of her fellow girl gang members, their days are numbered.

This is Mean Girls meets Heathers meets Teen Wolf, and it will become clear why Becca acts as she does. Revenge is best served by teen girls.

stage dreams book cover

Stage Dreams by Melanie Gilmer

Flor, a Latine outlaw, and Grace, a trans runaway, are at the center of this story set in the wild west, where they must team up to put an end to a Confederate plot in New Mexico territory.

Stagecoach theft and heists ensue in this rollicking, wildly queer read.

As always, thanks for hanging out. We’ll see you later this week for more YA book talk and book news.

Until then, happy reading!

–Kelly Jensen, currently reading You’re Not Supposed to Die Tonight by Kalyann Bayron

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Queer Animals, Stealthy Teen Activism, and More YA Book Talk and News: June 8, 2023

Hey YA Readers!

I hope you’re enjoying a good book, wherever you are right now. I *wish* I were on a beach or at a park under a tree canopy. I…am not. But I am at least reading.

Do you know about The Deep Dive? The Deep Dive is a biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers, including fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more drawn from our collective experience as power readers, teachers, librarians, booksellers, and bookish professionals. Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level–including a free one!–at bookriot.substack.com

Bookish Goods

purple vinyl sticker that says "witches and wizards love trans people."

Witches and Wizards Love Trans People Sticker by Abprallen

You know the book series where the creator outed herself as hating an entire group of people? That’s unfortunate because, as the sticker here says, witches and wizards love trans people–why wouldn’t they? Snag this beaut for $3.

New Releases

It’s time to talk paperbacks! Let’s take a look at two new books out in the handy portable format this week. As always, you may need to toggle your view once you click the link in order to see the paperback edition.

queer ducks and other animals book cover

Queer Ducks (And Other Animals) by Eliot Schrefer, Jules Zuckerberg (Illustrated by)

This work of nonfiction is an awesome read. I did it on audio, but I know the print edition will be just as immersive and fun — and it includes illustrations.

Ever wondered about queerness in other animal species? Schrefer’s work is a look at animal behavior outside the heterosexual “norms” that have too often been placed upon them. Why do humans get to determine what is or isn’t normal sexual behavior, anyway? This book dives into all of these questions and more in a highly-readable, highly-quotable way.

vinyl moon book cover

Vinyl Moon by Mahogany L. Browne

Poetry, prose, and vignettes tell Angel’s story in Browne’s sophomore novel. Angel’s prior relationship with Darius felt like it was solid, but then the incident happened. No longer was Angel in California but in a new home in Brooklyn. She believes every one in her school knows what happens, but she finds tremendous solace — and healing — in the poetry and novels of powerful Black writers in her literature class.

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

YA Book News

We’re going to be light on YA book news, for all the reasons articulated in previous newsletters. So let’s start with something book-adjacent, teen-forward and go from there.

Before you go, I wanted to shout out another fun bookish good this week. I’m obsessed, deeply obsessed, with these tie dye sweatshirts and tees that emphasize the importance of trans books.

You can grab your shirt or sweatshirt or mug — that’s what I got — until Monday over on Bonfire, and bonus: the creator is queer, so your cash money goes right to them.

Thanks for hanging out. We’ll see you on Saturday with some awesome YA book deals — did y’all SEE the roundup last week?

Until then, happy reading!

–Kelly Jensen, currently devouring One’s Company by Ashley Hutson

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What's Up in YA

Thelma & Louise Meets Godzilla and More YA Book Talk: June 5, 2023

Hey YA Readers!

I was down for almost a week with a brutal case of food poisoning and let me tell you, being back upright and able to do things like read is so, so nice. You forget how much you miss a thing you love until you just cannot do it.

Now that we’re in June and we continue to see book bans raging at schools and public libraries across the U.S., we’ll be spending this month highlighting queer YA as much as possible. More later in the newsletter.

If you haven’t yet, consider getting our latest newsletter, The Deep Dive. The Deep Dive is a biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers, including fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more drawn from our collective experience as power readers, teachers, librarians, booksellers, and bookish professionals. Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level–including a free one!–at bookriot.substack.com

Bookish Goods

read diverse books bookmark

Read Diverse Books Bookmark by SelfCareMysteryBoxes

You will want to click the image to see it bigger, but this pro-diverse books bookmark is a beaut. $5.

New Releases

This week is a GEM with new releases, so narrowing my picks down to two was not easy. You can grab the entire roundup of new hardcover YA books over here. We’ll highlight two paperbacks on Thursday, per usual.

the library of the broken world book cover

The Library of Broken Worlds by Alaya Dawn Johnson

Within the tunnels beneath the Library — the one place where peace reigns among three different kingdoms — there is a secret waiting to take down society. Freida has the power to to uncover it, though, as the daughter of a Library god and her knowledge of the vast network of tunnels…and gods.

Things get more complicated when Frieda meets two individuals desperate to save themselves and their communities from persecution and destruction. She wants to help them, but to do puts her into danger and into parts of the underground tunnels she’s never explored before.

When she comes face-to-face with an ancient war god, Frieda knows she needs to destroy him before he takes down everyone else.

ride or die book cover

Ride or Die by Gail-Agnes Musikavanhu

The cover for this one is everything, isn’t it? It reminds me of Your Driver Is Waiting, another outstanding cover.

Loli Crawford and Ryan Pope have been trouble-making besties since kindergarten and that reputation has not changed throughout high school.

While they both love danger and chaos, it’s Loli who is the instigator. So when the pair decide to throw the wildest party their school’s ever seen and Loli meets a stranger boy who goes by the name X, she’s challenged to a game. Of course she’s up for it, even if it might test even her limits of thrills and danger.

As Loli and X continue to challenge one another, everything is at stake. Their lives, of course, and also Loli’s best friendship with Ryan.

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

A Rainbow of Queer YA

Would you call a rainbow of queer books a Pride? I plan to. Here are seven new queer YA novels that make up a rainbow of book covers, with a little bit of everything in terms of genre. Given that the last several years have been nonstop in terms of book challenges and bans, the bulk of which focus on queer (and BIPOC) books, this month’s YA newsletter spots will focus exclusively on all things queer YA.

book cover for the minus one club

The Minus-One Club by Kekla Magoon

Kermit knows what it is to grieve. He’s 15, and he’s lost his sister to a car accident and nothing can pause those immense feelings of loss.

When he gets a mysterious invitation at school, signed with a “-1,” he decides to take a chance and show up. It turns out to be a group of students of all backgrounds who’ve lost someone close to them. It’s a supportive space, and it’s one where Kermit begins to find himself and allow himself to get close to Matt. Matt is the only openly gay student at school and his gregarious nature is magnetizing to Kermit.

But as Kermit falls harder, Matt’s truth begins to crack open more and more, potentially putting both of them in danger.

monstersona book cover

Monstersona by Chloe Spencer

This one is pitched as Thelma and Louise meets Godzilla, y’all. I feel like leaving it at that, but I’ll give you more.

Riley’s parents have divorced and she’s forced to move from Portland, Oregon, to small town Little Brook, Maine. Little Brook is home to Titan Technologies, an international tech lab.

The night of the school’s homecoming game, Riley wakes up to a town on fire and she and her dog plop into their truck to flee town. As they’re leaving, they run into the only other person in town who seems to have survived: Aspen, a classmate that Riley’s been observing (/slash crushing on?). When they get to safety, they realize things are even worse than they seem, and every Titan Tech lab across the eastern seaboard has been attacked.

Riley and Aspen do what makes sense: road trip back to Riley’s hometown of Portland in hopes of safe escape.

But Aspen may not be who she seems…

teach the torches to burn book cover

Teach the Torches to Burn by Caleb Roehrig (August 22)

This is Romeo & Juliet but A WHOLE LOT QUEERER.

venom and vow book cover

Venom & Vow by Anna-Marie McLemore and Elliott McLemore

Transgender prince Cade is doubling for his brother while also vowing to protect Gael, an infamous boy assassin. Prince Gael plans to destroy Patrick, who is not interested in being heir to a kingdom. Add to the mix Valencia, a dama who attends to the future Eliana queen.

Gael and Valencia are the same person. Valencia, in her battles against Patrick, is actually battling Cade. So when Valencia and Cade are blaming each other for what’s happening with their families, they’re unaware just what is at stake for themselves and the kingdom itself.

Enemy kingdoms + curse breaking + being forced to work together? It sounds like a queerly good/devastating time.

chasing pacquiao book cover

Chasing Pacquiao by Rod Pulido

What happens when someone you look up to lets you down by declaring people like you are less than human? That’s a big part of this story, which follows a queer teen named Bobby who wants nothing more than to graduate high school safely.

Bobby’s school is notoriously violent, and he knows that being openly queer would make him the perfect target. This is made more true by the fact is Filipino community does not easily accept people like him. But when he’s outed without permission, Bobby realizes being quiet and unprepared is no longer an option. He turns to take up boxing in order to prepare himself were he to be in a fight.

Bobby looks up to champion Filipino boxer Manny Pacquiao. Pacquiao is his inspiration in all ways: he helps Bobby keep going when things get too hard. But then Pacquiao publicly declares that he does not support queer people, leaving Bobby wounded beyond words.

So where does he turn now?

take a bow, noah mitchell book cover

Take a Bow, Noah Mitchell by Tobias Madden

Noah Mitchell is 17 and a gamer (gaymer!). He doesn’t have a whole lot of friends offline, but he’s got a very close one in his gaming community with someone who goes by the identity MagePants69. Noah wants to meet them in person so bad, knowing they’d be true soulmates. Although Noah doesn’t know everything about MagePants69, he’s convinced that MagePants69 is performing at a local community theater. So Noah does what anyone who is smitten would do: sign up to be part of the community theater, even though it is so outside of his comfort zone.

But Noah’s plan to make MagePants69 fall in love? It’s going to be much harder than he thought.

the dos and donuts of love book cover

The Dos and Donuts of Love by Adiba Jaigirdar (out today!)

Shireen Malik might be mourning the breakup she’s had with Chris, but it’s not prolonged once she learns that she’s been accepted as a contestant on a new teen baking competition television show. Not only is Shireen stoked for the potential prize money but it’ll also bring attention to her family’s donut shop.

But you know this isn’t going to be easy.

See, Chris is also a contestant on the show.

And Shireen is starting to become close with the good-looking Niamh, first as friends and then as maybe something more.

Can she keep her eyes on the prize and avoid sabotage to win the competition? Or will love take all?

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

Until then, happy reading!

–Kelly Jensen, currently reading the nonfiction book Hey Hun on audio because messy MLM stories are so my jam.