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Category Archives: Young Adult

Needing it, like, yesterday

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Certain books are felt so deeply that it usually takes another day or two to find the words to adequately express coherent thoughts about them. Punching the Air, a collaboration of Ibi Zoboi and Yusef Salaam is one of those books.

PunchingTheAirThanks for Edelweiss, I read a digital advanced copy and implore Balzer + Bray to fast track this book’s publication because I can’t possibly wait until September 1st to share Punching the Air with the teens (and staff) at our high school library. I think I have 12 copies on our order list and am debating whether to add more. Likewise, I’ve already mentioned it to a few art teachers about doing a collaboration using it.

With the combination of being told in verse and the powerhouse Zoboi penning it, the words are each tiny raindrops unleashing a torrential downpour of empathy. Amal is in lockup because the justice system is unfair. And the crudeness of his situation behind bars is exacerbated by his talent, thoughts, and loving relationship with his family that does not stop believing in him. That’s also where the book intersects with Salaam who, as one of the wrongfully convicted Central Park Five, uses the prejudice and injustices that transformed his life into a story that gives a mirror to so many black and brown boys.

I wrote down half a dozen lines that punched me in the gut (again from the advanced copy) to foster conversations about the school to prison pipeline.

“On the day of my conviction
I memorize
my inmate number
my crime
my time

On the day of my conviction
I forget
my school ID number
my top three colleges
my class schedule”

And it reminded me of the recent law that raised the age for teens convicted of crimes being punished through the adult legal system rather than a juvenile one in New York state, where I reside. Multiple passages were apropos of what I’m reading in the newspaper, seeing on the TV, scrolling through on social media.

My blog title says it all. I plead that Balzer + Bray push up the publication day because I can’t wait for September 1st. I need more people to read it so I can talk to them about it. I need it in the hands of my students. I can’t imagine that halfway through 2020, this book won’t get knocked off my top 10 for 2020.

 

Delightful Darius

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2019-01-28 08.48.38In January 2019, I was in Seattle, Washington attending the Youth Media Awards as a member of the William C. Morris Award Committee. The winner was Adib Khorram’s Darius the Great Is Not Okay. Fast forward to May 2020 and I had the distinct pleasure of reading an advanced copy of its sequel, Darius the Great Deserves Better. If it was still winter, it would be akin to sipping that morning hot cocoa while watching the fluffy snow fall but since it’s spring in our little area of upstate New York, reading Khorram’s follow up felt like the blooms of a magnolia tree. Brightness and beauty. 

DariustheGreatDeservesBetterDarius’s grandfather might not survive after their trip to Iran last year, the family’s financial situation sends Darius’s father to a project out of state, and the dream internship turned job that Darius has coveted might not be what he really wants. This is the backdrop where Darius’s romantic predicaments set the wheels in motion while he keeps up with school and soccer. The story is wholehearted. It’s big love. 

But if I stop to think about it, Khorram’s most valuable contribution is Darius’s constant questioning which provides a lens for teen readers to ask the tough questions of themselves and others. This internal dialogue mines the gold of Khorram’s personal storytelling. Authentic to the core.

And I can’t help but connect on a more personal level too in which the answer to anything in the Kellner family is tea. Their family is my family. And elementally, provides a mirror or window for how our cultures are who we are and we should embrace it: a celebration of our similarities and differences using literature.

It goes without saying that Darius the Great Deserves Better rises to the top much like Khorram’s debut because you can’t help but root for Darius. The writing is cerebral and emotional, using all of the senses which is the kind of experience that seeps into the cracks of our reading souls. I don’t ever want to leave Darius’s world– so whether Khorram decides to write a third or not, I’ll still feel satisfied that he’s bringing his A-game. Goooooooooooaaaaaaal. 

 

Dewey’s 24-hour readathon: Part II

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It’s so hard to say goodbye. Parting is such sweet sorrow. It’s not goodbye but see ya later. However you say it, the readathon is over for now. I’ll patiently await October and then if there’s a reverse readathon in the summer- I’m there. In the meantime, I’m celebrating my successes for the readathon and hope you’ll share yours if you participated too.

Here were my stats:

Time spent reading:

22 hours 38 minutes 02 seconds

Books read:

Junk Boy by Abbott (Digital)

Grown by Jackson (Digital)

Lunch Lady and the League of Librarians by Krosoczka (Digital)

The Season of Styx Malone by Magoon (Audiobook)

Ginger Kid by Hofstetter (Print)

Fifty Animals that Changed the Course of History by Chaline (Print)

Thomas Jefferson and the Tripoli Pirates (Young Readers Edition) by Kilmeade & Yaeger (Print)

The Cool Bean by John (Digital)

My Neighbor Seki by Morishige (Print)

Chicken Every Sunday by Taylor (Print)

Part of Girls of Paper and Fire by Ngan (Print)

Almost all of American Predator: The Hunt for the Most Meticulous Serial Killer of the 21st Century by Callahan (Audiobook)

Snacks and food consumed:

Saturday kickoff breakfast: overnight oats and tea,

Snacks: homemade chai tea biscotti, Sour Patch Kids, copious amounts of tea, Stewart’s Shops’ limited release peanut butter cookie ice cream,

Saturday dinner: Pulled pork and cabbage slaw tacos, Amaretto and cranberry

Sunday celebratory breakfast: chocolate milk, biscotti, and tea

Locations for reading:

Couch

Kitchen table

On the patio

On a bike trail

By the fire outside

Bathtub

 

Thank you to all who put it together time after time. There will be a change in lineup for next time as Heather and Andi will both step back while Gaby and Kate take the reins. Au revoir and welcome all in the same breath.

 

Ramadan & the case for the most epic book to accompany it

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How can I review a book that I just want to squeeze and hug? It’ll be tough to separate my feelings from a legitimate review– I’ll try– but you’re going to get the squealing schoolgirl with the professional librarian on this one.

OnceUponAnEidOnce Upon an Eid edited by S.K. Ali and Aisha Saeed with an additional thirteen contributors is a short story collection centered around the Eid celebration and going in to Ramadan, I can’t think of a better day to talk about it than today though the book doesn’t officially release until May 5th. I was able to get my hands on an early copy but look forward to purchasing my own copy (and dozens for my library) because there will be finalized artwork including G. Willow Wilson’s short story that is formatted as a comic.

I admit, I was also swept up in celebratory joy because I read it in between Christmas and New Year, so the excitement was doubled. From start to finish, the collection has an uplifting and fresh feel. It does grapple with socioeconomic disparities, illness, rigid traditions juxtaposed by newness while always providing positive vibes that ring forth on Eid. It embodies Rudine Sims Bishop’s much-quoted windows, mirrors, and sliding glass doors access that books provide.

Short story collections usually emit a glow from the get-go. There are many that even when one story may be weak, the entire collection carries to the finish line and doesn’t muddy the overall goal. There are some that are weak from start to finish. And then there are the gems where ever single story brings it’s own beautiful flower that put together becomes a most elegant bouquet: Once Upon an Eid is this kind of collection– an elegant bouquet. (How’s that for a gushy metaphor of admiration?)

The Muslim authors blend Muslim culture and religion. They share Eid fashion. Food. Relationships. The stories are told in comics, prose, and story. And this is its strength fortified by great storytelling and a rich knowledge to impart to others.

I can’t think of many books that I’ve actually re-read, but when I get the published copies I will re-read this one and place one on my personal bookshelf at home. I regret that when Aisha Saeed visited our high school this past November, that this hadn’t already come out to get a signed copy. So now, the new goal would be to see these two editors together, Ali and Saeed, to get them to sign the copy.

To close, Ramadan Mubarak!

And pre-order your copy of Once Upon an Eid, it’s the most epic book to accompany the Eid celebration to close the spiritual period of Ramadan.

 

Odds are

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This post was originally published on the Times Union Books Blog earlier today.

OneInTenNot everyone knows what a book birthday is but it’s not too complicated either. Simply put, it is the day that a book hits store shelves and digital devices everywhere– the publication date. In a two short days, local author, Eric Devine will be celebrating the release of his sixth book, One in Ten on April 21st.

To use the Goodreads synopsis: “Eric Devine crafts a novel about addiction and alliance, alongside a fight to find the truth within a government system selling one story while acting out another. It will leave readers questioning whether this is a near-future dystopian, or a prescient, contemporary tale” by following “Kenny Jenkins fresh out of his third heroin rehab at seventeen. He is among the last to be released before the U.S. government seizes control of all rehabilitation centers. It intends to end the heroin epidemic by any means necessary. Kenny fights to stay sober, afraid of what he faces if he can not, but his addict is stronger than his resolve and he ends up in the government program: One in Ten.”

In preparation of his book launch, I conducted an email interview and here is what Devine, a high school English teacher, husband, and father shared about his writing habits and ideas, audience, and the book itself.

As a seasoned writer does it get any easier to find ideas to write about and/or dedicate the time to write?

I believe writers, seasoned or not, always have ideas. We’re drawn to making up stories out of almost any situation. I’ve been doing that my entire life, so the idea portion isn’t a problem, it’s finding the one that is the best out of all of them and then trying to tell that story, which speaks to the time dedication end. You have to be disciplined with any craft, but simple discipline doesn’t result in phenomenal results, and in this case, stories. Trying new perspectives, or a different style, taking a different approach (like writing the ending first), all of those are necessary and non-linear and messy. They are vital and time-consuming as well. Therefore, the dedication changes. It’s not merely writing every day, it’s about how you write or even forcing yourself to pause to absorb more of the world around you in order to have the material necessary to write.

Like so many writers, you have a day job that prevents you from making writing your primary focus but if you had the choice, would you make writing your full-time profession? 

I would love the ability to write all day, but even for full-time writers, that’s not the writer life. If a publisher is investing in you for say a book a year, you are churning out work at a breakneck speed so you have time to edit it, and then get started on the next one, while also promoting the release of the previous novel. It’s difficult to manage, and the publishing world is fickle and capricious. You don’t really ever have control. I can’t live like that, so I’m perfectly content with my job and my writing.

You write primarily for a teen audience and this new book is no different, what drives you to write for this audience and have you considered writing for another? 

I enjoy writing for teens because they are the people who I see on a daily basis, as a teacher, trying to find their way. The more time I have spent with them, the more I have come to realize that there are very significant crossroads in one’s life as an adolescent. Having enough sense to choose wisely can change the trajectory of one’s life. Books have the power to deliver vicarious experience in a way that movies or a Netflix series do not. They are visceral and informative, and I believe can provide tools for teens. I like that I can help guide someone with a story. I like the ability to show the world in a way that many teens don’t know exists, and for those who do, recognize their struggle.

I have tried writing for a Middle Grade audience and I can’t. The work is too dark. I believe I could write for an Adult audience because much of my work trends toward the upper end of YA, but I don’t know if I have the perspective yet to connect with an adult world.

Your books have spanned realistic fiction and mystery and now you’ve got a science fiction title while many other writers “stay in their lane” and only write for one subgenre, what inspires you to change it up? 

I don’t like the expression of “staying in one’s lane.” I think that is a modern concept that should not be applied to artists. By nature we want to create whatever comes to mind and not be limited by genre or pigeonholed as writing particular stories. Those placeholders provide too much restriction and too much comfort at the same time. I like writing stories that grab readers’ attention and never let go. To do that today, especially with a teen audience, takes work. Therefore, I’ll bob and weave into whatever terrain I feel like in order to tell the story in the best way possible. The audience appreciates that, too. How many times have you read a book from a genre and it’s a carbon copy of the previous? It’s best to mix it up, for everyone’s enjoyment.

And particularly, what was the catalyst for writing this seemingly science fiction but creepily realistic discussion on addiction, rehabilitation, and surveillance? 

In all honesty, the series Black Mirror. I adore that show for the way it discusses how technology can both enhance and disrupt our society. The more I thought about addiction, particularly heroin and the opioid epidemic, the more I wondered how technology could be used, because we are not really treating people, we’re supplying Band Aids. Take it a step further, and what does it look like if our government were to take over to “fix” the situation with technology? Exactly, a hot mess, in which profit is the goal, and the people addicted are pawns in a game that is not about their lives, but the extension of technology. It may a bit too close to the bone for what we are watching play out in our country right now, which is why this story does not feel necessarily like Sci-Fi, but rather, near-future contemporary.

Your blog highlights your struggles with self-publication for One in Ten while the others were with a publisher, why is it important for you to share your story with others?

The Publishing world is a business and I think a lot of writers (myself included) are potentially misguided in their path toward becoming an author. As an agent of mine often said, “Publishing is the crossroads of art and commerce.” However, the reality is that it skews more toward the commerce end of the equation. Now, there’s nothing wrong with that. Business is business. But expression and art do not need to fall victim to that platform. In this age of connection and communication, no author necessarily needs a publisher. That used to be true, but if you have enough hustle in you, the entertainment industry is wide open. Therefore, I want people to consider what works best for them, and if my process can be an example, awesome.

Share your top five suggestions for what teens should be reading right now.  

I’ll suggest authors, because sometimes one title doesn’t connect, but another will, and I can’t only suggest five. Sorry. In no particular order:  A.S. King, Angie Thomas, Jason Reyonlds, Becky Albertalli, Julie Murphy, Libba Bray, Patrick Ness, Adam Silvera, Neal Shusterman, Jay Kristoff, Nicola Yoon, Tomi Adeyemi, Stephen Chbosky, and Adam Rapp.

Are you getting more writing done under social distancing quarantine? 

No, quite the opposite. I haven’t been able to read or write for the past three weeks. We are living through an historical event about which there will be a demarcation of before and after. I have to figure out how to write contemporary fiction that somehow incorporates all of what this moment means. I have ideas aplenty, and I will eventually move forward, but this goes back to the discipline of writing. Right now, writers need to take note, journal, and feel this crisis. If you don’t you will never be able to properly articulate what this is, what this has done, and what it will mean going forward.

What does your writing desk look like? 

I write sitting in my father-in-law’s overstuffed recliner. It needed a home after he passed, and once it entered my office, I knew that the desk was gone and this was where I was meant to sit and create.

If you’re yearning for more, follow Devine’s blog but without a doubt, check out One in Ten. It will be available for purchase or download knowing that until travel and businesses reopen, any events that Devine had scheduled will be postponed.

 

Other people’s books

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Librarians like to curate lists for sure, so I look forward to the monthly post on a listserv of what the upcoming month’s celebrations are both as a full month, weekly, and also daily celebrations. For instance, today is Husband Appreciation Day. So I started to think about his books but then other people’s books: their bookshelves, their reading habits, their likes and dislikes, and thought I’d share a few observations about other people’s books.

HowardSternComesAgain

My husband

… is a logical guy. Computer science major with a math minor. Army veteran. Thinker. Health nut. A grill-obsessed cook that approaches it like a grand science and taste experiment. His reading materials include magazines like Ask This Old House and Prevention. He’s currently bouncing around in his personal copy of Howard Stern’s new Howard Stern Comes Again featuring his biography alongside his best interviews.

My boys

… are 5th graders who love humor and adventure. One wants more silly so he’s a Dog Man and Stuart Gibbs’ FunJungle series, serially listening to them while doing origami. One likes adventure and history who has read the Harry Potter series twice and pays attention to any new books in the I Survived series.

Desire

My mom

… has collected bodice-rippers at garage sales forever and she regularly trades them with one sister-in-law too. Occasionally she’ll read a book if I’m obsessively talking about it or I have an author coming in that I’m particularly excited about. And she dived in headfirst to books about “life after retirement” before hers almost two years ago.

 

A work colleague

… who has taught English for about twenty years who has a voracious appetite for fantasy and science fiction which has led to a house ripping at the seams with books. Now, I confess to having never actually been in her house but her constant descriptions of dusting, cleaning, moving, and reorganizing her books leads me to believe that if I walked in to any room in the house, there would be at least one book in it.

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One technology guy in our district

… who I often trade emails and social media tags about books and reading with. And one he had shared probably sums up his books at home (I’m only speculating). It’s the Japanese word tsonduko which is the art of collecting books at home that you aren’t reading and likely won’t ever get to but must have anyway.

Everyone has their own taste and book collecting style. What’s yours? What are your favorite series? Do you buy or borrow or mix it up? Is there someone’s bookshelves or reading nook that you covet?

 

 

Virtually yours

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Santa Monica, California is usually a hotbed of book activity during the YallWest Festival. It features a beautiful backdrop and beautiful authors sharing their beautiful books, but this year needs to be different. Thus, they’ve re-branded for their sixth year: YallStayHome. What does that mean? All of the content they were building toward will now be yours… virtually.

YALL stay home imageOn Saturday, April 25th and Sunday, April 26th, they will be putting on virtual panels, smackdowns, and keynotes that you can individually register for based on your interests and author obsessions. Likewise, as noted in the graphic, they will provide giveaways, special events, and share live content via Instagram so it is best to follow them on their social media platforms in addition to checking their website. They can be found on Twitter, Tumblr, Facebook, and Instagram.

I have to admit that I’ve always loved the videos and photos that come out of an event that’s across the country that I’d probably never attend in person, so to be a part of it is a boon. Though I’ll also admit that I won’t be plugged in for the two-day event because I’ve already committed to the Dewey 24-hour readathon which I take very seriously.

Whether you’re going all in or just picking a few sessions, consider also sharing with the teens you serve (as I already have) the three contests that teens aged 13-19 can enter until April 19th. There’s one for fan art and two for writing.

When so many activities are at your fingertips while everyone is staying at home, choose this one because the content is rich and deep while bringing a much needed dose of happiness.

 

Just last week

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Just last week, Laura Lee Gulledge published her third graphic novel and solidified her place as one of my favorite author illustrators. Let me take you back to my obsession with 2011 publication of Page by Paige which I talked about in 2016 after finishing it to which I turned around and shared it with several students immediately who loved it as much as I did.

2020-04-09 19.14.14Fast forward to 2020 and my digital reading of The Dark Matter of Mona Starr which I had on my TBR on Goodreads since it was announced she’d be releasing a new graphic novel. Then boom. I sat down and in one sitting didn’t move an inch while I poured over the illustrations and words. I knew I’d be writing about it. My initial reviews always go up on Goodreads which are usually fresh and raw after reading (and as soon as I can string a somewhat coherent sentence together after being awestruck) and in that review I said that I needed Gulledge to do a series focused on female character struggles that can be used as guides just as both of these are.

Mona Starr is the protagonist and certainly the book’s most memorable character. She has depression and anxiety, using space imagery to work through verbalizing her issues because she refers to this internal messaging as her matter. There are psychological and medical professionals working with her and her parents to identify what Mona needs providing much needed help after her best friend moves away. Then Mona befriends a new girl that’s causing rise to additional anxiety too.

It’s hard to pin down any one memorable scene but I’ll share one specific page that provides all you need to know about how Gulledge creates magic on the page graphically. And I won’t even explain it because I don’t have to. Because she doesn’t have to.

MonaStarr

It’s the transportation of any reader in the heart, mind, and soul of the character and just the kind of experience that we want when we read anyway– it’s that Gulledge does it better. Every. Darn. Time. From reading the Author’s Note, Gulledge shares her own doubts about her creative energy while managing stressful situations leading to memorable quotes like this to provide inspiration amidst anguish and a definite contender for one of the strongest YA graphic novels of 2020, hands-down.

This time around I’m going to take care of this freckled potbellied imperfect weirdo overly sensitive body of mine… hang up my hangups. And shed my excuses. Because I want to actually LIVE this life.

The graphic novel is much more than words on a page and more than the illustrations too, it’s a feeling and a whole mood she can sweep me up in anytime. I advise everyone to get themselves a copy or three to read and share. But spend as much time as you need, with a cup of tea or chocolate or in the bathtub or on the blanket in the backyard, folded up in the story that Gulledge shares of Mona Starr. It feels like a personal invitation to look inside yourself and empathize with others. Then once you’re finished with all of those feelings, check out Gulledge’s website and her other work.

 

Flow

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2020-04-05 14.57.23Maybe it’s because I’m a woman or maybe it’s because I’m a librarian, but either way, I want to take a moment to celebrate books about periods. They’ve been kind of having a moment. And I knew I wanted to share a post about periods two days ago when I finished Lily Williams and Karen Schneeman’s graphic novel published by First Second this past January called Go With the Flow. It’s a celebration of menstruation and friendship alongside actively advocating for rights.

Memorable character: While Sasha is the new girl, she’s not the most memorable. Abby is the one that’s rocking the boat. She’s the girl that wants to get something done and she uses her voice and influence through a blog and face time with the school principal about why pads and tampons aren’t stocked in the bathrooms and why they should cost money in the first place. One of the harsher realities of friendship is ushered in when Abby goes rogue and ends up putting the other girls in a tight spot where their communication sees them through (and a good ol’ fashioned apology), but you can’t blame the passionate girl for her actions when she believes so strongly. It leads to the first of a few memorable panels interspersed throughout the book for a memorable quote Abby uses in her blog said by Gloria Steinem: “If men could menstruate, men would brag about how long and how much.”

2020-04-05 19.51.58But let’s also give it up for the most memorable scene where Sasha’s blood-stained pants are showing as the girls usher her to the bathroom and why the book works so well in its graphic novel format. Most can empathize or sympathize with her situation and it’s the kind of thing that is discussed in other books discussing periods: the truthful portrayal.

I advise graphic novel lovers, middle grade fans, advocates, and the like to read and purchase multiple copies of this book to share. It allows girls to be seen by showing the myriad of experiences with periods.

And once you’re done with Go With the Flow, I urge you to pick up others that cover the same topic. Here are some of my other favorites.

 

Reading time capsule: Part II

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Yesterday’s post was what I would put into a reading time capsule outside of the actual books themselves. Today I tackle what books I would want in the time capsule. And like picking your favorite dress or favorite child, it’s just impossible, but I’m giving it my best shot… and how big is the capsule??!?

  • Saga graphic novel collection by Vaughan and Staples. I just spent the last nine days re-reading a volume a day and loving every minute of it
  • Harris and Me by Gary Paulsen is the first book I remember laughing out loud at while reading
  • Every Ruta Sepetys book written and I’m going to go sci-fi here and say that when she writes another, just virtually drop it in there because I know I’ll want to read those too
  • Deathwatch by Robb White was the first book I remember recommending to a student as a first year teacher where the kid came back to thank me for my awesome recommendation
  • Reclaiming Conversation: The Power of Talk in a Digital Age by Sherry Turkle is a book I read several years ago and still bring up at least once a week in conversation. The number of Post-its sticking out of that book made it look ten times fatter
  • Crank by Ellen Hopkins. It’s verse style was somewhat revolutionary at the time and it’s loosely fictionalized version of her daughter’s experience brought so much out in the open. She became our first author visit at the high school that we hosted and we haven’t looked back in ten years
  • Darius the Great is Not Okay by Adib Khorram because I was on the William C. Morris award committee that named it the 2019 winner
  • Mudbound by Hillary Jordan had a whole mood and is one of the most impactful book written for adults when I live in a world reading mostly YA
  • Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson came out the year I graduated high school. I read it the following year in a YA lit class while I was studying English education and we met Anderson when she visited a local school district as a college class. Her depiction of high school brought back every sight, smell, and sound and who knew as a more than decades-old high school librarian that I would still be recommending it along with the graphic novel and companion Shout
  • You can’t not add a few classics: mine would be The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
  • The Virgin Suicides by Jeffrey Eugenides is another book that is full of big mood that skillfully and sinfully explores femalehood. I don’t have sisters, but I get the Lisbon girls and I remember connecting just as deeply to Sofia Coppola’s big screen adaptation (and buying the soundtrack)
  • The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold was the first book that I actually photocopied several pages out of to keep in a folder to go back and re-read whenever I wanted

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Do I have honorable mentions? Ones that I’d stuff in the crevices and crannies of the capsule. Here are a few of those that are less memories-driven but more emotionally-connected. Challenger Deep by Neal Shusterman, The Serpent King by Jeff Zentner, Hole In My Life by Jack Gantos, The 57 Bus by Dashka Slater, every Jason Reynolds book published, Ghosts of War by Ryan Smithson, The Vagina Monologues by Eve Ensler, North of Beautiful by Justina Chen, Flash Burnout by L.K. Madigan, Twilight by Stephanie Meyer, Rupi Kaur’s poetry, The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, and A Northern Light by Jennifer Donnelly.

What are some of yours?