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Category Archives: Fiction

Six sensational stories featuring prom

Our high school’s senior prom is about a week away. Junior prom was in May, so it got me thinking about books featuring prom and thus this list was born.

  1. Promposal by Raechell Garrett: Turn promposals into a business!
  2. Once Upon a K-Prom by Kat Cho: Old friend turned pop sensation who turns up at your door to ask you to prom? Hmmm, something smells deliciously fishy.
  3. The Weight of Blood by Tiffany D. Jackson: You can’t get any better than a contemporary retelling of Stephen King’s Carrie.
  4. Prom Babies by Kekla Magoon: A prom story with a message and mission.
  5. Impossible by Nancy Werlin: A perennial favorite that I recommend, this one is about the family consequences for the Scarborough women.
  6. Throwback by Maurene Goo: Who wouldn’t love to meet your mom when she was in high school?
 
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Posted by on June 6, 2024 in Fiction, Young Adult

 

Six sensational gaming stories

Between eSports and gaming as a hobby, video games are everywhere, so there are of course major plots of books for teens centered around it. Here are my favorites.

  1. Game Over: Rise of the Raid Mob by M. J. Sullivan: The first in a series, though I’ve only read the first so far. The integrated content is what got me hooked.
  2. Cat + Gamer by Wataru Nadatani: A twenty-something girl who games and a cat. It’s the most delightful manga.
  3. Slay by Britney Morris: I think this book was so well-plotted AND includes so much to talk about featuring Black girls in gaming.
  4. Bunker 10 by J. A. Henderson: This is one that doesn’t get as much love because it came out a while ago, but the teen geniuses holed up in a bunker with an *explosive* ending has the makings of an epic story.
  5. Ready Player One by Ernest Cline: Instant classic.
  6. Warcross by Marie Lu: A snarky, competent, do-it-yourself girl in Emika Chen and a massive empire collide.

 
 

Six sensational fashion-forward characters

I love a good dress. I definitely notice when characters in graphic novels have style or pay attention when the character is fashion-conscious or has designs (yup, I went there) on being in the fashion industry. Here are six favorites:

  1. Any Way You Look by Maleeha Siddiqui: A fashionista Muslim girl working at her mother’s custom shop has an eye for details.
  2. 100 Unforgettable Dresses by Hal Rubenstein: Recommended by a colleague who knows I love dresses, this one paints a portrait of 100 dresses from the past and present.
  3. Dressed in Dreams: A Black Girl’s Love Letter to the Power of Fashion by Tanisha C. Ford: A collection of items and styles that absolutely meets expectations.
  4. I Love You So Mochi by Sarah Kuhn: Kimi loves fashion and sees a future in it even when others might not. She perseveres during a trip to Japan and back to her roots.
  5. The Prince and the Dressmaker by Jen Wang: Enough said!
  6. The Okay Witch by Emma Steinkellner: If I’ve ever loved a character’s fashion sense, it’s Moth’s. Thank you to Steinkellner for creating her fabulous wardrobe.
 

Six sensational siblings stories

I realize that could probably do a second post of siblings stories because there are plenty of stories featuring siblings that I find special in some way. Maybe toward the end of the month I’ll revisit the topic again.

  1. Take Me With You When You Go by David Levithan and Jennifer Niven: A mystery in a runaway sibling leads to divulging plenty of dysfunction in their household.
  2. When Stars Are Scattered by Victoria Jamieson and Omar Mohamed: The ultimate support as two boys look out for one another in a refugee camp without their parents, trying to survive.
  3. Huda F Cares? by Huda Fahmy: The follow up graphic novel features Huda’s siblings prominently in a road trip, theme park visit. We all remember those car trips sandwiched in between siblings.
  4. Saints of the Household by Ari Tison: Max and Jay don’t want to be like their father, but did they just become him in an impulsive decision to help save a classmate. How they cope with the fallout is the the lyricism of the story.
  5. Out of Darkness by Ashley Hope Perez: Naomi returns to a “vipers nest” to protect her twin siblings even if it means putting herself in danger.
  6. Fighting Words by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley: Bonded in trauma, Suki and Della’s life consist of overcoming multiple hardships, but they want to be able to lean on each other though they might also have to let someone else in too.
 

Six sensational enemies to lovers

There are a plethora of romantic tropes to explore (and I might even get to a few more before the end of the month), but this one: enemies to lovers will be the next six sensational set of books.

  1. Twelfth Knight by Alexene Farol Follmuth: Mix gaming and Renaissance Fares in retelling Shakespeare in a high school and there’s no disappointment.
  2. Guava and Grudges by Alexis Castellanos: A generations-old grudge between families boils over in their Cuban bakeries with a new nephew in town and the daughter of the other.
  3. Stars and Smoke by Marie Lu: Excited for the sequel, readers are introduced to a pop star and covert operative who have to team up to take someone else down.
  4. I Hope This Doesn’t Find You by Ann Liang: Saying what’s on her mind hasn’t worked out well for Sadie now that her email drafts have been sent to the never-intended recipients including her academic rival.
  5. Dungeons and Drama by Kristy Boyce: An empowering story about a girl getting over an ex even though the new love interest started off as a contentious fake dating situationship.
  6. You Bet Your Heart by Danielle Parker: I love a good competition.
 

Mourning Monday

Memorial Day and Veteran’s Day are often confused and it’s frustrating that it perpetuates even with the gentle reminders. Inspired by today’s honoring the fallen I wanted to highlight several military stories that feature the death of soldiers both fictional and true.

 
 

The book had…

Cheeky displays in libraries that highlight patrons who come in looking for a book only by something they faintly remember about it such as a blue cover or the word “heart” in the title. I love those displays and have done a few of them myself. But what I love more are the actual readers advisory interactions with said patron to try to find the specific book they were looking for. This happened several months ago in our high school library and I haven’t gotten it out of my head.

I’m going to start by spoiling the ending– we found the book.

Specifically SHE found the book again by endlessly combing the shelves in the area she remembered it being after we both spent several afternoons going back and forth about what she remembered and where she remembered discovering it on the shelf one day after school.

She remembered the “diverse characters on the front cover” and that they were in a kind of “school setting” and that it was in “this specific area” in the fiction section.

In this case, I wasn’t much help, but she persevered. She ended up checking out the book because when she had first pulled it off the shelf she had only started a chapter or two and hadn’t checked it out then. I like that she ended up finding it herself, maybe if only to remind myself that I’m human. And I loved that there was a happy ending- a reunion of book and reader.

 
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Posted by on April 9, 2024 in Cover Love, Fiction, Young Adult

 

Teen sports books

With the one of the biggest nights in sports happening tonight, I wanted to highlight twelve teen sports books from the more nontraditional sports rather than the mainstream ones with an inspirational one-liner.

  • No Barriers: A Blind Man’s Journey to Kayak the Grand Canyon (Young Adult Adaptation) by Erik Weihenmayer and Buddy Levy about kayaking
    • There’s nothing you can’t do if you set your mind to it.
  • Life In Motion (Young Readers Edition) by Misty Copeland about ballet
    • Dance like you mean it.
  • Proud: Living My American Dream (Young Readers Edition) by Ibtihaj Muhammad about fencing
    • En garde!
  • Exit, Pursued by a Bear by E.K. Johnston about cheerleading
    • You’re stronger than you appear.
  • Press Play by Eric Devine about lacrosse (and football)
    • Don’t let the bad people win.
  • Leverage by Joshua Cohen about male gymnastics (and football)
    • Stand up when it matters.
  • Hockey Girl Loves Drama Boy by Faith Erin Hicks about girls hockey
    • Be who you are.
  • Blue Box by Kouji Miura about badminton (and basketball)
    • All’s fair in love and sports.
  • One Good Punch by Rich Wallace about boxing
    • If you get knocked down, get back up again.
  • The Fire, The Water, and Maudie McGinn about surfing
    • You have to start somewhere.
  • Peak by Roland Smith about rock climbing/mountain climbing
    • It’s in your blood.
  • Swim the Fly by Don Calame about swimming
    • Surround yourself with people who support you and make you laugh.
 

Last & first

I quickly finished a book that I wasn’t really feeling via audiobook early last night. But I didn’t want to end January with a book I wasn’t a fan of. I realized I had borrowed several last-minute titles via Hoopla before the end of the month a few days ago including a picture book award for Sydney Taylor at the Youth Media Awards called Two New Years by Richard Ho and illustrated by Lynn Scurfield.

And boy, that was a good choice to end January with. The book’s content was quietly celebratory and the illustrations perfectly complimentary to the text. What I loved most is the meditative short sentences that honor the Asian and Jewish heritage that readers find out is the shared heritage of the author, Richard Ho in the author’s note. In addition to the informative story, there’s additional explanation in the backmatter about specific foods, activities, and attire that compliment what was left out of the picture book but serve to add layers to a combined upbringing that, as he mentioned, have more similarities than anyone would think.

At the start of February, I’m only a few page in to The Fire, The Water, and Maudie McGinn by Sally J. Pla and I’m already hooked. It comes highly recommended both as a Schneider Family Book Award for middle grade at the Youth Media Awards but many librarians I know. I’m excited to report back when I’m finished.

 

Cheers near & far

Monday was the Youth Media Awards presentation in Baltimore, Maryland at the American Library Association’s LibLearnX (midwinter) conference. It is the yearly celebration of literature for children and teens. Committees work for a year or more to choose award winners in categories from the Sibert to Giesel to Odyssey to Alex. Don’t know what each of them is about? You can learn more on the website including watching the award ceremony or reading the press release for all of the honorees and winners.

I had the honor of being on the Alex Award through YALSA this year which meant we were reading loads of adult titles to find the best titles that have teen appeal. We create a top ten and will have a long list of an additional twenty titles. The long list will be published shortly. This meant that the ALA conference was extra special in being able to bond in person with most of the committee members (including sharing a meal while we made author calls followed by a champagne toast). Yet it’s also about learning. Over three days of programming, I learned a tremendous amount from librarians across the country whether it was in conversations, presentations, or in line. And there were the unique and inspiring speeches of the recipients of the I Love My Librarian award that kickstarted the event on Friday night amid a Baltimore surprise– snow!

While the librarian awards began the conference, the book awards ended the conference with the best bookends anyone could ask for. Sitting in the seats reserved for the committee, you’re surrounded by the other committees with their fun accessories (looking at you Odyssey with your matching white headphones) and cool slogans (read: “For the weird ones” on the back of the Printz tshirts) but I thought our Alex shirts, designed by a committee member and executed by another, were a cut above. Switching out the laurel for hot peppers, the tag line was “is this too spicy?” *chef’s kiss*

Whether watchers or listeners were in the room or across the country watching online, you could feels the vibrations of cheers near and far. It’s a special moment for the creators of these amazing stories. Without them, there would be no celebration. There’s a cacophony of excitement from their publishers and editors, their family, and anyone who read and loved their work.

It’s a magical, magical event. If you have the chance to be there live, do it. Or, you can be like one of my favorite colleagues and rally your elementary school in the gymnasium with their socks, and shirts, and posters rooting on their favorites several states away. Either way, cheers were heard near and far.