Sunday, April 5, 2026
You and Me on Repeat by Mary Shyne - OPTIONAL
Three Blue Hearts by Lynne Kelly - ADVISABLE
Saturday, April 4, 2026
Vanished: Seven Women Magicians who Simply Disappeared by Anna Hays - ADVISABLE
Coming Home (adapted for YA) by Brittney Griner with Michelle Burford - ADVISABLE
Coming Home (adapted for YA) by Brittney Griner with Michelle Burford, 309 pages. NON FICTION BIOGRAPHY. Bright Matter Books (Random House), 2026. $20. 9798217027033
Language: PG (4 swears, 0 ‘f'); Mature Content: PG (drug possession, nonsexual nudity; Violence: PG (LGBT slurs), peril, confined in small cage
BUYING ADVISORY: MS, HS - ADVISABLE
APPEALS TO: SEVERAL
Brittney Griner is a decorated WNBA player, three-time Olympic gold medalist, and star player in the EuroLeague. She has been playing for the Ekat team in Russia and was home in the US for a week long break. Disaster strikes when she is searched upon landing in the Russian airport. In a packing rush, she has left a THC vape in her carry on bag. At home she has a medical card to legally use marijuana to manage chronic pain, but it’s not legal in Russia. She must now navigate a corrupt legal system and manage to keep herself safe as a black, queer, 6’9” tall woman in a Russian prison. Brittney and her loved ones are desperate for her return home.
I liked that it showcased the things that kept Brittney going in her hardest times: faith, family, connections with others, and self love. I found the limited dialogue and heavy exposition a bit of a slog to get through in the middle of the book. I really enjoyed her reflections on coming of age, I think students may relate to and find hope in her coming out story. Brittney Griner is a black, gay woman.
Melanie Pew (School Counselor)
Friday, April 3, 2026
Jawbreaker by Christina Wyman - ADVISABLE
The Forbidden Room by Nicki Pau Preto, - ADVISABLE
The Forbidden Room (Last Hope School for Magical Delinquents #2) by Nicki Pau Preto, 327 pages. Viking (Penguin), 2025. $19
Language: G (0 swears, 0 ‘f’); Mature Content: G; Violence: PG (magic fight)
BUYING ADVISORY: MS - ADVISABLE
APPEALS TO: SEVERAL
12yo Vin is happy for school to start again after winter break, but unfortunately the events of the first part of the school year has brought Inspectors from the Worldwide Magical Coalition whose aim really seems to be to find any excuse to shut down the school. A new student, Zach, has joined the school, and Vin is determined to make him feel welcome, just like her friends did for her. As Vin becomes more proficient and comfortable with her Chameleon powers, she doesn’t know that she and her friends are headed for a showdown with someone whose purpose is much more evil than just closing the school.
Vin is SUCH a great character! She does act older than 12 - it would have been great if she had aged up a whole year between books instead of just having winter break. The magical powers of the world are different from others i have read for this age group and if Pau Preto doesn’t continue this series (it does feel like it could be finished), then I hope she continues to realize new characters.
Cindy, Middle School Librarian, MLS
Thursday, April 2, 2026
Ape Escape (funjungle #10) by Stuart Gibbs - ESSENTIAL
Ape Escape (funjungle #10) by Stuart Gibbs, 304 pages. Simon and Schuster, 2026. $18
Language: G (0 swears, 0 ‘f’); Mature Content: G; Violence: PG (animal abuse, some danger)
BUYING ADVISORY: EL, MS - ESSENTIAL
APPEALS TO: MANY
When Teddy’s family gets the news that a good friend, Jadim, of theirs has died in Rwanda, they head to the airport for the funeral. Instead, once they land, they find that he is in hiding because his life was threatened by gorilla poachers. When an orphaned baby gorilla is abducted right from the sanctuary, the family and Jadim head off across Africa in pursuit.
Gibbs does such a great job with his funjunge books - keeping a heightened sense of danger and adventure, while also including factually based information about the ways animals, in this any African animal, might be endangered.
Cindy, Middle School Librarian, MLS
Fooled by Susan Haas with Lexi Haas - ADVISABLE
Fooled by Susan Haas with Lexi Haas, 269 pages. Little Brown, 2025. $18
Language: G (0 swears, 0 ‘f’); Mature Content: G; Violence: G (mild bullying)
BUYING ADVISORY: EL, MS - ADVISABLE
APPEALS TO: SEVERAL
11yo Lil and her friends in her EC (Exceptional Children) class at Willow Street Middle School love magic, but their situations and their unabashed love of magic also makes them targets for a couple of bullies at school. Plus, the vice principal at their school has the school board’s approval for a new Safety First initiative, which seems to be aimed at keeping the ECs in their classroom where they can’t be seen by everyone else. One day, however, the football team asks Lil for a charm to help them win their game -- and it works! Now they are busily making charms for some many others - which makes them even more of a target.
I so loved reading about Lil and her friends. They are fully realized human beings - not caricatures of their abilities and challenges. Fully able to stand beside Wonder or Insignificant Events in the Life of a Cactus in terms of heart and representation.
Cindy, Middle School Librarian, MLS
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
The Nature of Play by Delfina Aguilar, Clare Aitken, and Sabrina Arnault - ESSENTIAL
Get Creative
The Nature of Play: A Handbook of Nature-Based Activities for all Seasons by Delfina Aguilar and Clare Aitken, illustrated by Sabrina Arnault. 180 pages. NON FICTION. Greystone Books, 2026. $23 Content: G
BUYING ADVISORY: ADULTS - ESSENTIAL
APPEALS TO: SOME
Thoughtfully organized by the four seasons, Aguilar and Aitken show that nature is full of fun and adventure. This isn't about supervising play; it’s about facilitating it. The activities range from the artistic (making natural dyes or leaf prints) to the practical (building shelters and identifying tracks). With stunning photography and a clean layout, it avoids the over-stimulating clutter often found in children’s activity books.
Aguilar makes nature feel accessible. You don’t need to live in a forest to use this book; many activities are perfectly suited for a small urban park or even a backyard. I love that it encourages taking time to play, where you aren't rushing to a scheduled practice, but instead sitting on the ground, noticing the way a beetle moves. This is the perfect gift for a new parent.
S. Lewis
Glass by Kathryn Lasky - ADVISABLE
Glass by Kathryn Lasky, 213 pages. Harper, 2024. $20.
Language: G (0 swears, 0 ‘f’); Mature Content: G; Violence: PG (some bullying, deaths)
BUYING ADVISORY: EL - ADVISABLE, MS - OPTIONAL
APPEALS TO: SEVERAL
14yo Bess feels like the outsider in her family of glassblowers. When she discovers the horrible secret behind the most wondrous of their creations, she flees to the forest. Unfortunately, a poor cousin has to take refuge with the Wickham’s and she may be the next victim in their scheme for money and prestige.
The subtitle calls this a Cinderella story, and while I might say it is Cinderella adjacent, I would have never minded not knowing about the subtext. By itself, it is an interesting fairy tale that I enjoyed reading. Bess is 14yo at the beginning and is in the woods for at least a couple of years, but the story itself will attract a 5,6,7th grade audience.
Cindy, Middle School Librarian, MLS
Monday, March 30, 2026
Most Likely to Murder by Lish McBride - OPTIONAL
Language: R (122 swears, 24 “f”); Mature Content: PG13 (drug and alcohol use/underage drinking, kissing, illegal activity, scary elements, partial nudity, innuendo, and mentions of condoms and sex); Violence: PG13 (assault, gun use, corpses, blood and gore, mentions of suicide, and murder)
BUYING ADVISORY: HS - OPTIONAL
AUDIENCE APPEAL: SEVERAL
When the high school yearbooks come out with ways students and faculty are going to die rather than the usual superlatives, everyone assumes Rick and Martina are behind the prank. Until someone on the list is found dead. The remaining students put their heads together, trying to figure out what they all have in common before it can kill them, too.
McBride switches through points of view, sometimes giving readers a front row seat to what happened just before a death, which brilliantly puts readers on edge every time this happens, not knowing whether or not the character is about to be murdered. I enjoyed that this story doesn’t make the desperate teenagers into better detectives than the adult professionals, and it was refreshing to see them make smart choices, like sharing their locations with each other just in case. These details make the story feel more realistic, even if some silly stereotypes are still included. Martina is implied Hispanic, and Martina, Camryn, and Zeke are queer.
Reviewer: Carolina Johnson
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Coming Out Perfect written and illustrated by Richard Mercado - OPTIONAL
Language: R (11 swears, 3 ‘f’); Mature Content: PG-13 (repeated underage drinking, once to blackout drunkenness); Violence: G.
BUYING ADVISORY: MS, HS - OPTIONAL
AUDIENCE APPEAL: AVERAGE
Kevin is a gay, high school Filipino boy who is tired of being overlooked at home and invisible at school. He gets a taste of the popular life thanks to the school’s perfect gay boy, Raymond. However when acting “perfect” becomes too difficult to bear, Kevin has to reconsider what he actually wants from life, something real, or fake?
I enjoyed this classic coming-out/coming-of-age story, layered with the author’s lived experience. Even though it was technically set in the Philippines, I think readers will still find plenty of commonalities between Kevin’s high school experience and US schools. The premise was a little superficial, along the veins of the movie She’s All That. I don’t know how much a simple makeover would actually do for someone’s popularity, but high school students would eat it up with a spoon.
Reviewer: Kiera Beddes, ELA teacher, #bookswithbeddes
Nature Poems to See By art by Julian Peters - ADVISABLE
Nature Poems to See By art by Julian Peters, 141 pages. GRAPHIC NOVEL, POETRY. Plough Publishing, 2026. $30.
Language: G (0 swears, 0 “f”); Mature Content: PG (kissing and partial nudity); Violence: PG (corpses, blood and gore, death, and mentions of guns and murder)
BUYING ADVISORY: MS, HS - ADVISABLE
AUDIENCE APPEAL: SOME
From Dickinson, Frost, and Shakespeare to lesser known poets, Peters brings words and stanzas to life with his illustrations. The collection of poems is grouped by season, inviting readers to see and feel the ups, downs, and arounds of life.
Peters’s creative pictures are individualized for each poem—not only in size and in positive versus negative illustrations, but even in medium and style. No two poems are the same or evoke the same images, and Peters assists readers in celebrating their similarities and differences.
Reviewer: Carolina Johnson
Saturday, March 28, 2026
Speak Up, Santiago! by Julio Anta and Gabi Mendez - ADVISABLE
Speak Up, Santiago!(Hillside Valley #1) by Julio Anta and Gabi Mendez. 244 pages.GRAPHIC NOVEL. Random House, 2025. $13
Content: G
BUYING ADVISORY: EL, MS - ADVISABLE
APPEALS TO: SEVERAL
12yo Santiago is headed to Hillside Valley to spend a month with his Abuela, and he is terrified! Abuela Emma mostly speaks Spanish, and while his mother and father tried raising him in a bilingual home, speaking was difficult for Santi. In HIllside Valley he meets some local kids who invite him to join their secret soccer club and play in the local tournament at the end of the month. Things are starting to look up for Santi until he overhears Abuela Emma and her friends laughing about his broken accent. As his embarrassment turns to anger, Santi starts taking his feelings out on everyone around him. After a particularly aggressive soccer practice, Santi even finds himself kicked off the team. Not only is he upset, but he returns home to find Abuela Emma has fallen and suffered a hairline fracture. Amidst the chaos of the hospital and doctor visits, Santiago learns to speak up and offers to care for his Abuela.
You don’t have to be learning a new language to empathize with Santiago. His experiences with embarrassment, fear, and betrayal are common emotions many of us feel when breaking out of our comfort zones or learning to speak up. The illustration style is brightly colored and the bilingual text is handled in a way that makes the reader feel as if they are learning Spanish along with Santiago. The Spanish word bubbles at the beginning of the novel have blacked out words, indicating Santi is only picking up half a conversation. As his Spanish improves, English translations begin popping up next to the Spanish word bubbles.There is a special author and illustrator note in the back that talks about their personal insecurities about being a second-generation Latino or learning Spanish.
Santiago’s father is Colombian and his mother is Irish/French.
E. Powell - Junior High Librarian
Friday, March 27, 2026
Wanted: Your House by Monique Polak - OPTIONAL
Wanted: Your House by Monique Polak, 263 pages. Kids Can Press, MAY 2026. $20.
Language: PG (4 swears, 0 ‘f’); Mature Content: G; Violence: G
BUYING ADVISORY: EL - OPTIONAL
APPEALS TO: SOME
12yo Cyril’s mom is always dragging him to open houses. She dreams of owning their own home - even on her meager teacher’s salary. Cyril decided to help - his brilliant plan - offer himself and his mother as companions and caretakers for an elderly person - as long as the person deeds their house over to Cyril’s mom once they pass away. Crazy- right? But curmudgeonly Mr. Hartt takes Cyril up on the idea. They all agree to a one month trial. Cyril is not sure they will last that long.
I wanted to like this so much more, but I was not satisfied with the end, and I was not fond of Mr. Hartt at all. Great premise - middling execution.
Cindy, Middle School Librarian, MLS
The Mean Girl Mission by Rosaria Munda - OPTIONAL
The Mean Girl Mission (Confessions of a Junior Spy #2) by Rosaria Munda, 189 pages. Feiwel and Friends (Macmillan), 2026. $9 (pb)
Content: G (mild danger)
BUYING ADVISORY: EL - OPTIONAL
APPEALS TO: SOME
Bea has heard from her best friend Chantal that there may be a spy problem at Chantal’s new private school, so Bea jumps to the rescue, with Tommy playing back-up. Bea is determined to save Chantal from a possible Arctic assassin plot, even if it means she may have to do homework.
I was surprised that I did not like #2 as much as I enjoyed #1. I know why, though. 1 - I don’t spy novels that set-up one person, or group, as “the enemy”; I want variety in my villains. 2 - a mean girl problem at a local middle school is frankly boring if you are determined to become an international spy.
Cindy, Middle School Librarian, MLS
Thursday, March 26, 2026
Some of Us are Brave by Saadia Faruqi - ADVISABLE
Language: PG (4 swears, 0 ‘f’); Mature Content: G; Violence: PG (bullying by parent)
BUYING ADVISORY: EL - ADVISABLE
APPEALS TO: SOME
12yo Mona has to care for her little brother while their parents are away on yet another conference trip. 12yo Yasir doesn’t have money to go to soccer camp this year, but if he coaches the littles, he can attend camp as payment - even if that means playing with 12yo Cody, who bullies Yasir. Cody, meanwhile, goes through life with a huge chip on his shoulder because his father bullies him and is constantly telling him to “man up”. When Hurricane Harvey hits land and causes major flooding in Houston, all four kids are caught and must figure out how to work together to survive. And maybe learn some great lessons about what being a friend means and how to speak up for themselves.
Hurricane Harvey hit Houston in 2017, but this isn’t about the history of the hurricane - it is definitely a vehicle for a diverse trio of kids to learn about each other and that they can be friends. Both Cody and Mona’s lives make the biggest changes - Mona learning to find her voice with her parents who have given a young girl way too much responsibility, and Cody recognizes that his father’s viewpoints are based on hateful opinions, not facts and that Cody does not have to act the same way.
Yasir and Mona are from the Middle East.
Cindy, Middle School Librarian, MLS
Barbed Wire Between Us by Mia WenJen and Violeta Encarnacion. - ADVISABLE
Barbed Wire Between Us by Mia WenJen and Violeta Encarnacion. PICTURE BOOK. Red Comet Press, 2026. $20. 9781636551920
BUYING ADVISORY: EL - OPTIONAL; MS, HS - ADVISABLE
APPEALS TO: SOME
The stories of two little girls separated by decades, both of whom are incarcerated by barbed wire.
WenJen and Encarnacion share the story of Fort Sill, Oklahoma - site of Japanese imprisonment during WWII and immigrant child imprisonment in 2014 - using reverso poetry and a stark color palette. In communities affected by recent detainments, the book could be helpful for children still processing. I see the most value in secondary schools as a way to foster conversation about immigration - especially as the backmatter talks about the Japanese experience and the lies told by the US government.
Cindy, Middle School Librarian, MLS
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Griffin Speaker by Jan M. Flynn - ESSENTIAL
Griffin Speaker by Jan M. Flynn, 384 pages. Disney, MAY 2026. $ 18.
Content: PG (one death by dropping, other mild danger)
BUYING ADVISORY: MS - ESSENTIAL
APPEALS TO: MANY
12yo Rain lives with her aunt in a Harvester, or grub, village, just dreading the day when she turns 13 and will be forced to work in the Root mines, harvesting the Roots, which are essential to the realm’s economy. Her aunt, who is an Outlier (outcast) who runs an illegal magical animal menagerie, has a secret hidden in the barn and Rain is sure that it is a griffin - flying animals reserved for only the top ranks of Griffin Land society. When Rain can no longer resist, she bonds with the griffin, starting her down a path to defying all social conventions and expectations.
Rain’s story is thrilling! I read almost straight through (had to get some sleep and do some work). She has a couple of great friends to help her and all of the action hangs together and makes sense as well as being interesting to read. The only thing I don't like is that the illustrations make her feel more like 10, instead of 12.
Cindy, Middle School Librarian, MLS
True Life in Uncanny Valley by Deb Caletti - OPTIONAL
Language: R (100+ swears, 17 ‘f'); Mature Content: R (Drinking, passionate kissing and arousal, sexual discussion, nudity); Violence: G
BUYING ADVISORY: HS - OPTIONAL
APPEALS TO: SOME
Eleanor Diamond, a junior, feels like the odd one out in her family. After all, her mom and older sister Rosalind seem so alike and spend a lot of time together. Eleanor has a hope though: perhaps she is meant to fit in with her father, the rich app inventor Hugo Harrison. The only issue is that he has had nothing to do with her family since the affair with Eleanor’s mother. When Hugo’s wife Aurora advertises for a babysitter, Eleanor takes strength from her favorite comic hero Miss Fury who has an alter-ego, and after a chance encounter, lands the job under a fake last name.
The novel's fourth wall breaks feel awkward, and some integral parts of the plot line, such as the fact that Eleanor’s mother never tries to call the family that she is going to be staying with all summer, are difficult to believe. But the book has a lot of heart with some fun friendships and a budding romance. It also includes discussions on AI art, body positivity, sexual boundaries, and racism, sexism, and homophobia in early comics. Plus, the novel's references to an actual comic and the inclusion of a square from that comic at the start of each chapter is fun. If readers stick with it through some moments of slower pacing, they will find a modern novel exploring human connections and relationships.
Main characters read white.
Megan, HS Librarian



















