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Week of Friday, December 13, 2024

Our 2024 Best Children's and YA Books list includes a wide range of topics and styles for children and teens. Early readers will find nonfiction titles about Roy DeCarava, an artistic collaborator of Langston Hughes, and Rosetta Wakeman, a young woman who fought for the Union in the Civil War, as well as fiction about poisonous plants, the miracle of puppy birth, space travelers, and more. Middle-grade readers can explore fantasy worlds, time travel, and even learn how to make some delicious barbecue. And our young adult picks feature surrealism, nonfiction, a hint of magical realism, and some utterly fabulous graphic novels.

Click through to read our reviews of the top kids' titles for 2024. (Shelf Awareness's Best Adult Books will be announced December 20.)

--Siân Gaetano, children's and YA editor, Shelf Awareness


Picture Book

Viewfinder by Christine D.U. Chung, Salwa Majoka (Tundra)
Emma Full of Wonders by Elisha Cooper (Roaring Brook)
We Are Definitely Human by X. Fang (Tundra)
Everywhere Beauty Is Harlem: The Vision of Photographer Roy DeCarava by Gary Golio, E. B. Lewis (Calkins Creek/Astra)
Sashiko's Stitches by Sanae Ishida (WorthyKids)
Guts for Glory: The Story of Civil War Soldier Rosetta Wakeman by JoAnna Lapati (Eerdmans)
Millie Fleur's Poison Garden by Christy Mandin (Orchard/Scholastic)

Middle Grade
The Juneteenth Cookbook: Recipes and Activities for Kids and Families to Celebrate by Alliah L. Agostini and Taffy Elrod, illus. by Sawyer Cloud (becker&mayer! Kids/Quarto)
Amil and the After by Veera Hiranandani (Kokila/Penguin)
The First State of Being by Erin Entrada Kelly (Greenwillow/Harper)
Wildful by Kengo Kurimoto (Groundwood)  
Impossible Creatures by Katherine Rundell, illus. by Ashley Mackenzie (Knopf/RHCB)
The Things We Miss by Leah Stecher (Bloomsbury)

Young Adult
Flamboyants: The Queer Harlem Renaissance I Wish I'd Known by George M. Johnson, illus. by Charly Palmer (FSG)
Pick the Lock by A.S. King (Dutton)
The Art Thieves by Andrea L. Rogers (Levine Querido)
Ash's Cabin by Jen Wang (First Second/Macmillan)
Compound Fracture by Andrew Joseph White (Peachtree)
Lunar New Year Love Story by Gene Luen Yang, illus. by LeUyen Pham (First Second/Macmillan)
Twenty-Four Seconds from Now...: A LOVE Story by Jason Reynolds (Atheneum/Caitlyn Dlouhy Books)

BEST BOOKS OF 2024 for Kids and Teens

Children's & Young Adult

Viewfinder

by Christine D.U. Chung and Salwa Majoka

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A young space explorer discovers the natural beauty of the abandoned Earth, left to grow untamed in this beautifully expressive, wordless picture book.

A pink-haired, round-faced astronaut steps from a small spaceship onto the deserted planet, greeted by swaying grass, a tall daisy, and the bright sun. The young space traveler, who has visited dozens of other worlds, is amazed to locate a viewfinder whose reel of sepia-toned photographs depicts the planet's past. A pseudo-treasure hunt commences in which the explorer sees each of the landmarks captured on the tiny transparent squares now overrun by odd mushrooms.

Christine D.U. Chung's boundlessly imaginative drawings take on a surreal quality with Salwa Majoka's dreamlike use of color and light. The Toronto-based artists nestle a cosmic escape in an earthly setting. Their protagonist meets a shy rat, rambunctious monkeys, and a mother and baby giraffe, all with aquamarine fungi sprouting from their fur. Viewfinder is a gorgeous, digitally sketched and painted picture book debut that welcomes the deeply curious to piece together a surprising and touching tale of what it means to find home. --Samantha Zaboski, freelance editor and reviewer

Tundra Books, $18.99, hardcover, 144p., ages 6-up, 9780735268753

Emma Full of Wonders

by Elisha Cooper

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How is Emma, a dog, full of "wonders"? By literally being full of puppies! In the blindsidingly moving Emma Full of Wonders, Elisha Cooper (Train) offers a picture-book tour through a dog's experience of pregnancy and puppy birth, although the fact that Emma is expecting may come as a big, beautiful surprise to readers.

An omniscient narrator introduces Emma, "a large dog/ with many small dreams." These "dreams" take the form of a clutch of fantasy puppies who float above Emma's head in apparitional gray tones. While Emma Full of Wonders doesn't mention its protagonist's pregnancy, Cooper speckles the story with hints. "Some days Emma woke from her naps and still felt tired," the narrator says at one point. Why is she so tired? And wait: Is her belly getting bigger? Toward the end of the book, which features understated ink-and-watercolor art throughout, the narrator relays that Emma's "whole body felt strange," after which a series of wordless spreads show her delivering and tending to her newborns. Cooper captures the miracle in illustrations so tastefully straightforward that words are unnecessary. --Nell Beram, freelance writer and YA author

Roaring Brook Press, $18.99, hardcover, 40p., ages 3-6, 9781250884763

We Are Definitely Human

by X. Fang

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We Are Definitely Human is a fabulously illustrated, rib-tickling, and affecting picture book--a Kids' Indie Next List pick--in which Mr. Li and his neighbors demonstrate the potential of kindness and cooperative spirit.

It's midnight when something crashes outside Mr. and Mrs. Li's house. Mr. Li investigates, and finds three strangers with "very big" eyes, "very blue" skin, and body shapes that are "very hard to describe." But Mr. Li doesn't worry because these strangers "are DEFINITELY human."

X. Fang (Dim Sum Palace) has made an out-of-this-world picture book that features hilariously deadpan aliens and charming, though (maybe?) clueless, human protagonists (plus one wisely skeptical dog). Outrageously giggle-inducing dialogue from the aliens is characterized by non sequiturs and garbled syntax, and Fang revels in the disconnect between human expectations and alien quirks. Mixed-media illustrations in strong purples, yellows, blues, and greens are a delight. This book's wonderful message of offering help where help is needed is wisely and gracefully delivered. --Lynn Becker, reviewer, blogger, and children's book author

Tundra Books, $18.99, hardcover, 48p., ages 4-8, 9781774882023

Everywhere Beauty Is Harlem: The Vision of Photographer Roy DeCarava

by Gary Golio, illus. by E.B. Lewis

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Author Gary Golio and Caldecott Honor and Coretta Scott King Award-winning illustrator E.B. Lewis collaborate again (Dark Was the Night) for Everywhere Beauty Is Harlem, an artful picture book that provides a loving snapshot of photographer Roy DeCarava (1919-2009), who saw Harlem in an "old crumpled soda can," the spray of a fire hydrant, and mirrored in the eyes of the people "passing each other on the street."

Golio has penned an elegant ode to a notable photographer, filling his narrative with sensory details and enriching it with quotations from DeCarava himself. Lewis's stunning watercolor art showcases the people and the neighborhood, offering a variety of perspectives to reflect DeCarava's vision and work. Backmatter gives more details about the extraordinary man who worked many different jobs, but made use of "his free time... to record the beauty of what he saw around him." --Lynn Becker, reviewer, blogger, and children's book author

Calkins Creek, $18.99, hardcover, 48p., ages 7-10, 9781662680557

Sashiko's Stitches

by Sanae Ishida

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Author, artist, and designer Sanae Ishida melds her literary talents (Little Kunoichi) with her sewing prowess (Sewing Love) to create the exquisitely empowering picture book Sashiko's Stitches.

Sashiko is overwhelmed by "so many feelings" that sometimes all she can do is cry. Her mother embraces the girl, then reminds her about the origins of her name. Sashiko goes back "many, many hundreds of years" to when families of hardworking Japanese fishermen mended their damaged clothing using "tiny little stitches." Repeated repairs resembled beautiful patterns, so the menders began purposefully creating distinct designs, calling the stitches "sashiko," meaning "little pierces."

Ishida is a masterful storyteller, symbiotically pairing words and images. She writes of Sashiko's feelings as "big heavy clouds, weighing her down into the ground"; Ishida's inviting, saturated watercolor illustrations ingeniously underscore Sashiko's emotional overload by engulfing her in darkened swirls, her sunken legs trapped by burrowing animals and tangled roots. The story is appended with further information about sashiko, including common patterns. "One stitch at a time," Ishida skillfully ushers Sashiko's journey toward calming recovery. --Terry Hong

WorthyKids/Hachette, $18.99, hardcover, 40p., ages 4-7, 9781546005339

Guts for Glory: The Story of Civil War Soldier Rosetta Wakeman

by JoAnna Lapati

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In a stunning debut 12 years in the making, JoAnna Lapati's intricately illustrated picture book biography of Rosetta Wakeman, Guts for Glory, presents a singular account of secretive military history through arresting artwork and the subject's own words.

Lapati uses scratchboard, evocative of 19th-century wood engravings, and digitally tints the period-authentic drawings in crisp military blues and atmospheric sepias. The detail Lapati achieves in this notoriously demanding medium is gasp-inducing; each line of Rosetta's hands is etched with the utmost precision. The endpapers alone justify this purchase, but backmatter notably reveals that Rosetta "is the only female soldier whose letters represent a woman's point of view during the Civil War." Lyons's handwriting peppers the artwork with her missives excerpted in text. Extensive backmatter includes research bolstered by Lapati's participation in Civil War reenactment groups.

This title, amplifying women's role within Civil War military history, is a natural precursor to Erica Armstrong Dunbar's 2023 Susie King Taylor and a technically staggering artistic debut. --Kit Ballenger, youth librarian, Help Your Shelf

Eerdmans, $19.99, hardcover, 56p., ages 7-12, 9780802854643

Millie Fleur's Poison Garden

by Christy Mandin

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The dare-to-be-different picture book blends beautifully with the kids-to-the-rescue story in Millie Fleur's Poison Garden by Christy Mandin (Lucky; The Storytellers Rule), a Kids' Indie Next List pick.

"Garden Glen was a place of sameness," begins the book's omniscient narrator. Identical houses line the streets--with one exception: a quasi-haunted-looking house on a hill has "no one to love it" until Millie Fleur and her mom move in. Unfortunately, Garden Glen's Rosebud Club is not down with avid gardener Millie Fleur's unusual and wildly blooming buds. Millie Fleur's Poison Garden succeeds as a spirited swipe at lazy-brained conformity and leaves readers with much to think about: they may wonder why Millie Fleur and her mom moved to town and whether their paranormal interests--moving boxes are labeled "spell books" and "potions"--indicate that they're witches. Working digitally with a palette that features both earthy and queasy greens, Mandin inserts exquisite visual winks, including Millie Fleur's Venus flytrap paper doll chain and her pet frog's Broadway-big facial expressions, which hilariously mimic the girl's own. --Nell Beram, freelance writer and YA author

Orchard Books, $18.99, hardcover, 40p., ages 4-8, 9781339023274

The Juneteenth Cookbook: Recipes and Activities for Kids and Families to Celebrate

by Alliah L. Agostini and Taffy Elrod, illus. by Sawyer Cloud

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Black U.S. history is dynamically showcased through food, drink, crafts, games, and music playlists in The Juneteenth Cookbook, author Alliah L. Agostini and illustrator Sawyer Cloud's thematic sequel to their picture book The Juneteenth Story. Co-author and recipe developer chef Taffy Elrod brings 20 years of experience in the food industry to this celebratory and accessible cookbook for children.

Each section--Drinks, Appetizers, Mains, Sides, and Desserts--features three or four recipes based on "historically relevant foods," as well as an activity that encourages kids to find ways to celebrate. Agostini and Elrod include recipes that "are linked to Juneteenth and broader African American and Black culinary and cultural traditions" and provide "some often overlooked but fascinating context" for many of the items. Cloud uses an abundance of hues to focus young readers' attention on her vivacious art, which features soft lines that portray an array of inclusive skin tones, hairstyles, and facial features. Agostini and Elrod's text mixed with Cloud's illustrations make for an empowering cookbook that encourages intergenerational celebration, storytelling, and fellowship. --Rachel Werner, author and teaching artist at Hugo House, Lighthouse Writers Workshop and The Loft Literary Center

becker&mayer! kids, $19.99, hardcover, 72p., ages 8-12, 9780760385791

Amil and the After

by Veera Hiranandani, illus. by Prashant Miranda

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In Veera Hiranandani's Amil and the After, a tender companion to her 2019 Newbery Honor-winning The Night Diary, Amil, the fraternal twin of the first book's narrator, Nisha, takes center stage.

The family, nominally Hindu, is living in Bombay after Partition (the 1947 separation of India and Pakistan). Although Papa, 12-year-olds Nisha (a writer) and Amil (an artist), and their paternal grandmother, Dadi, are settled in a small apartment, their beloved Muslim cook, Kazi, must hide his identity. The immediate family, too, has a potentially dangerous secret: Papa was Hindu and Mama, who died during childbirth, was Muslim.

Readers of The Night Diary will likely find their appreciation for the first book enhanced by Amil's memories, though the boy's story stands sturdily alone. Amil's artistic skills grow throughout the novel, as shown by the naïve-style black-and-white line drawings by Prashant Miranda, who offers more details in each consecutive illustration. An extensive glossary and author's note provide background that may be essential in helping young readers understand the historical period in which this compelling novel takes place. --Melinda Greenblatt, freelance book reviewer

Kokila, $17.99, hardcover, 272p., ages 10-13, 9780525555063

The First State of Being

by Erin Entrada Kelly

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Newbery Medalist Erin Entrada Kelly introduces a tender-hearted tween boy with anxiety who learns to live mindfully from a time traveler in this buoyant and entertaining middle-grade novel (a finalist for the National Book Award for Young People's Literature and a Kids' Indie Next List title).

In 1999, 12-year-old Michael worries about him and his single mom surviving Y2K, believing the theory that computers will glitch when systems switch to 2000 and shut down the world. But it isn't Y2K that threatens the universe first--it's a 16-year-old visitor named Ridge, half Filipino like Michael, who has traveled back from 2199.

Kelly (Hello, Universe) has written a kind boy who thinks first of others yet is weighed down by his uneasy mind and wavering self-worth. Ridge reassures Michael with precepts from the future, like the idea that staying in "the first state of being" (the here and now) matters more than obsessing over what-ifs. This helps steer Michael toward accepting that "not knowing is part of life." The First State of Being is tremendously touching--a fantastic and upliftingly fun read. --Samantha Zaboski, freelance editor and reviewer

Greenwillow Books, $19.99, hardcover, 272p., ages 8-12, 9780063337312

Wildful

by Kengo Kurimoto

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U.K.-based creator Kengo Kurimoto's graphic novel debut, Wildful, is visual storytelling perfection. The plot is simple: a girl and her dog meet a new friend on their daily walks. Close attention to Kurimoto's exquisitely detailed art, however, reveals multiple layers of delightful transformation.

Wildful is divided into seven chapters, each beginning with a similar scene of a girl walking her dog. She's utterly distracted in the first chapter, headphones on, eyes glued to her phone. But when the dog sees a fox and barrels through the opening of a dilapidated fence, Poppy chases Pepper. A wool-capped boy wrangles Pepper and returns the pup to Poppy. As chapter two commences, Poppy and Pepper head straight for the fence; Poppy and the boy reunite for a wondrous adventure.

Kurimoto uses pen and ink to produce his meticulous sepia-toned illustrations. He's an indisputable master of perspective, giving readers beautiful views. His insightful precision depicts Poppy's closed-eye appreciation of birdsong and the intricacies of a blooming wildflower. Kurimoto brilliantly manages to thread exploration, memory, renewal, and gratitude throughout his exact, ruler-straight panels. Wildful is a breathtaking, wildly welcoming achievement. --Terry Hong

Groundwood Books, $22.99, hardcover, 216p., ages 9-12, 9781773068626

Impossible Creatures

by Katherine Rundell, illus. by Ashley Mackenzie

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The much-lauded British title Impossible Creatures, first in a new fantasy series by Katherine Rundell (Cartwheeling in Thunderstorms), arrived in the United States as a number one Kids' Indie Next List choice and an immediate bestseller.

Animals have always been drawn to Christopher Forrester. The boy is spending a reluctant holiday with his grandfather at his remote lakeside cabin in Scotland, when an injured baby griffin appears beside the lake. Christopher's grandfather has no choice but to reveal the family secret: they are the guardians of the passageway to the Archipelago, a "riotous, glorious place" where humans live alongside mythological creatures.

Impossible Creatures is a bold and unforgettable start to a captivating series. Rundell creatively uses the hallmarks of British children's literature to develop a standout fantasy--the dangers are real, the narrative voice sophisticated, and the array of creatures dizzying. Black-and-white spot art and full-page illustrations by Ashley Mackenzie (The 66th Rebirth of Frankie Caridi) ground the story in a reality that features cozy kitchens as well as flying coats. Impossible Creatures places itself in a class all its own. --Kyla Paterno, freelance reviewer

Knopf Books for Young Readers, $19.99, hardcover, 368p., ages 10-up, 9780593809860

The Things We Miss

by Leah Stecher

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The Things We Miss, a Kid's Indie Next List pick, is an evocative, affecting time-travel novel that vividly confronts the struggles of grief.

J.P. is a "generally oversized" girl who is grieving her father's death and her grandfather's cancer diagnosis. She wishes she could just "jump ahead to some future when [she] was less awkward and more confident." After a particularly trying first day of seventh grade, J.P. gets that opportunity when she finds a new door in her neighbor's treehouse. She walks through and magically time-jumps "seventy-two-hours-ish" into the future without anybody realizing. It's exciting at first, but when J.P. starts taking a "mental vacation" too frequently, and misses important events, she has to decide whether skipping the pain is worth skipping life.

Leah Stecher effectively uses time travel to insightfully examine depression in her debut middle-grade novel. She shows J.P. battling body dysmorphia, inadequacy, and low self-esteem with escapism and avoidance. This thoughtful, heart-wrenching speculative novel is a poignant reminder that life has "lots of uphills so you can enjoy the downhills afterwards." --Lana Barnes, freelance reviewer and proofreader

Bloomsbury Children's Books, $17.99, hardcover, 288p., ages 9-up, 9781547613021

Flamboyants: The Queer Harlem Renaissance I Wish I'd Known

by George M. Johnson, illus. by Charly Palmer

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"Blackness is inherently queer," writes George M. Johnson (We Are Not Broken; All Boys Aren't Blue) in Flamboyants: The Queer Harlem Renaissance I Wish I'd Known, a triumphant and deeply personal illustrated essay collection that pays homage to 12 LGBTQ+ Black artists and the resounding impact they've made on future generations.

In refreshingly approachable language, Johnson highlights individuals from the prolific 1920s arts movement--including Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, and Ma Rainey--noting that many weren't public about their sexuality but expressed it through their art, "leaving us a road map for the future." Each person from the queer Harlem Renaissance is captured in a stunning, brilliantly colored double-page illustration by Charly Palmer (The New Brownies' Book). Palmer's telltale bold brushstrokes and vivid hues depict the artists in close-up, with meaningful collaged items surrounding them. The images, much like the queer icons they depict, beg to be studied and proudly displayed. Flamboyants, through Johnson's dedicated research and devotion to their subjects, successfully demonstrates how "what was once done in silence and in the dark has moved toward the light." --Kieran Slattery, freelance reviewer, teacher, co-creator of Gender Inclusive Classrooms

Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $18.99, hardcover, 144p., ages 13-up, 9780374391249

Pick the Lock

by A.S. King

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Three-time Michael L. Printz Award-winner A.S. King employs her signature surrealism to portray the emotional reality of domestic abuse through an unflinching feminist gaze in Pick the Lock, which follows 16-year-old Jane, who has rarely left her family's estate since March 2020. Her father used the Covid-19 pandemic as a pretext to keep Jane and her younger brother confined to their Victorian mansion, where he has locked her mother into the System, a network of human-sized pneumatic tubes that run throughout the house. When Jane finds a cache of footage from hidden cameras around the house, she finally begins to understand "the truth about everything."

Pick the Lock is King at her most accessible, in large part due to how quickly and firmly she anchors readers in Jane's corner. Readers whose lives have been impacted by abuse will want to take care when they engage with King's virtuoso depiction of how it can become normalized within families. Crucially, King also never allows readers to lose sight of the "tender, sweet love" that ultimately empowers Jane to free herself and her family. --Stephanie Appell, freelance book reviewer

Dutton Books for Young Readers, $19.99, hardcover, 400p., ages 13-up, 9780593353974

The Art Thieves

by Andrea L. Rogers

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In The Art Thieves, Walter Award-winner and citizen of the Cherokee Nation Andrea L. Rogers (Man Made Monsters) returns with a stirring story about choosing to create a new future when disaster seems inevitable.

The world is ending; or at least, that's what it seems like to Stevie who, along with the rest of the planet, is experiencing "a cycle of drought and super-storms." Stevie, a Cherokee teenager living in Texas, works at an art museum. At the museum, Stevie meets artist intern Adam, a Costa Rican woodcarver who admits to her that he is from "seven generations in the future." He "was raised with one purpose," he says: "To make the future better."

Rogers's sophomore YA novel skillfully discusses the current affairs, pop culture, and climate change-related extreme weather events of the future, powerfully relating them to historical and contemporary legacies of racism and oppression. This provocative and insightful work of Cherokee futurism projects and imagines the kinds of decisions and personal sacrifices people might need to make to improve the world. --Michelle Anya Anjirbag, freelance reviewer

Levine Querido, $19.99, hardcover, 400p., ages 12-up, 9781646143788

Ash's Cabin

by Jen Wang

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Jen Wang (Stargazing) shows just how creative and versatile an artist she is in Ash's Cabin, her Kids' Indie Next List title featuring a teen who seeks self, ancestry, and home in the California wilderness.

Fifteen-year-old Ash had a special relationship with Grandpa Edwin, who lived on a rural ranch. Edwin was "resourceful but odd" and spoke of "building a secret cabin where no one could find him." Now, the family is selling the property. Ash, who feels trapped and diminished by a world that has difficulty accepting their gender identity, receives permission to spend August at the ranch. But Ash doesn't mean to stay--Ash is planning to go solo into the wild to find Edwin's secret cabin.

Wang uses a consistently earth-toned palette and skillful formatting, creating something that is a mix between a graphic and illustrated novel. Ash's Cabin is a wilderness tale that features the great unknown both within and without, as Ash struggles to survive the elements and their own loneliness. Readers of graphic novels, queer fiction, nonfiction, and wilderness stories should find something to adore here. --Siân Gaetano, children's/YA editor, Shelf Awareness

First Second, $17.99, paperback, 320p., ages 12-up, 9781250754066

Compound Fracture

by Andrew Joseph White

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Andrew Joseph White opens Compound Fracture, his third YA novel (a Kids' Indie Next List pick), with an unapologetically grisly account of a riot and a murder. What follows is a volatile, compelling mystery about an autistic transmasculine teen in a poor town in West Virginia who fights to reclaim his family's radical legacy.

Sixteen-year-old Miles Abernathy's world shatters when he obtains photos proving that Sheriff Davies intentionally caused the car wreck that traumatized Miles's father and killed a friend. The Abernathys have been fighting for justice for decades. Miles's great-great-grandfather led a coal miners' labor riot and was murdered by a member of the Davies clan. When Davies's son and his cronies discover Miles has the photos, they beat Miles and leave him for dead. After Miles is released from the hospital, he accidentally kills one of the boys who hurt him and reignites the generations-old war.

White (The Spirit Bares Its Teeth) makes Miles a convincing product of his upbringing through candid, often gruesome, first-person narration punctuated by text exchanges. White explores the violent realities of capitalism and transphobia while celebrating the resilience and collective strength of the working class. This book will almost certainly leave readers battered, bruised, and inspired. --Kieran Slattery, freelance reviewer, teacher, co-creator of Gender Inclusive Classrooms

Peachtree Teen, $19.99, hardcover, 384p., ages 14-up, 9781682636121

Lunar New Year Love Story

by Gene Luen Yang, illus. by LeUyen Pham

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This touching YA graphic novel (a Kids' Indie Next List pick) follows an endearing Vietnamese American teen who desperately seeks true love despite her family's history of tragic romances.

High school junior Valentina Trãn once adored Valentine's Day--so much so that she imagined a cherubic cupid "Saint V" was her guide. When Val learns that her mother didn't die years ago, as her father claimed, but left him, Val disavows the holiday all together. Saint V transforms into the specter of the man he really was, and the girl decides to give him her heart in a year if she fails to find true love. Val's journey to find love parallels a careful nurturing of frayed familial ties with her father and her previously estranged grandma.

Lunar New Year Love Story is a buoying tale about being open to the pain of love from Eisner- and Printz Award-winner Gene Luen Yang (American Born Chinese). Caldecott Honoree LeUyen Pham (Outside, Inside) brings remarkable depth to Yang's heartfelt story through her digital illustrations. Charming and sweet. --Samantha Zaboski, freelance editor and reviewer

First Second, $17.99, paperback, 352p., ages 12-up, 9781250908261

Twenty-Four Seconds from Now...: A LOVE Story

by Jason Reynolds

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Multi-award-winning author and 2020-2022 National Ambassador for Young People's Literature Jason Reynolds enters the world of YA romance with the hilariously sweet, candid, and guileless Twenty-Four Seconds from Now...: A LOVE Story.

Seventeen-year-old Neon and his girlfriend, Aria, have been dating for two years and have decided that they are both ready to have sex. This Kids' Indie Next List title features Reynolds's distinct, direct, and informal style in Neon's intimate first-person narration. Reynolds (Long Way Down; Track Series) tenderly covers the big topics he's taken on--love, sex, bodily autonomy, and consent--through mindful and attentive advice from Neon's older sister, parents, and grandparents. Neon receives nothing but sex-positivity from his loved ones, including his Dad's refrain: "don't bring no babies in here unless they know how to count money."

Not only is this the perfect book for sex-curious youths, Reynolds's messages on how to approach sex, how to be gentle, and how to respect each other give readers profuse, healthy versions of Black love and community. --Natasha Harris, freelance reviewer 

Caitlyn Dlouhy/Atheneum, $19.99, hardcover, 256p., ages 12-up, 9781665961271

Kids' & YA Gift Ideas

Did you miss our Kids' & YA Gift Issue? This issue features incredible picture books, novels, and works of nonfiction: including Kate McKinnon's merrily peculiar debut, The Millicent Quibb School of Etiquette for Young Ladies of Mad Science; African Icons, about 10 mostly unknown ancient African leaders; The Kids' Tarot deck and guidebook; Our Galaxy, a board book that can turn into a freestanding globe; How to Be a Manga Artist; and many more!

Book Candy

Book Candy

Video: "Sci-fi writer Arthur C. Clarke predicts the rise of Artificial Intelligence & wonders what will happen to humanity (1978)." (via Open Culture)

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Cringeworthy and toe-curling, for example. The Cambridge Dictionary looked up "the language of embarrassment."

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" 'Tis the season for love: new holiday romances to warm up with," courtesy of the New York Public Library.

Kids in the Kitchen

Check out Shelf Awareness's delicious round-up of cookbooks for young people. We have books for every food-fascinated kid, whether they're still learning that "E" is for "egg" or making ravioli from scratch. Here you'll find food journalist and restaurant critic Priya Krishna's children's cookbook debut, Priya's Kitchen Adventures, as well as a delicious abecedary, piquant Rebel Girl recipes, a flavorful history of seasoning and spices, and more treats.

enter to win sashiko's stitches

Sashiko is a young girl with very big feelings. Sometimes they feel like big heavy clouds weighing her down. Sometimes they feel like tiny cacti, sending prickles up and down her skin. Most of the time, they feel like a tangled ball of string wrapped around her heart. When her mother teaches her about her namesake--the traditional Japanese practice of mending through embroidery that dates back to the 1600s--Sashiko begins to explore the transformative power of creative expression. One stitch at a time, she finds threads of peace in her newfound craft. One stitch. Two stitches. Three… and the dark clouds around her lighten, until her big fears begin to feel less scary. As she heals tears in the fabric, she begins to find a sense of calm and hope.

Join Sashiko on a journey through this beautiful artistic tradition, and discover for yourself the great potential creative practices have to help us cope with difficult emotions.

"Author, artist, and designer Sanae Ishida melds her literary talents with her sewing prowess to create the exquisitely empowering picture book." --Shelf Awareness Review

Click here to enter to win one of 50 copies of Sashiko’s Stitches, a Shelf Awareness book of the year by “masterful storyteller” and illustrator Sanae Ishida.

Worthy Kids: Sashiko's Stitches by Sanae Ishida

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