Sunday, April 19, 2026
White Lies: How the South Lost the Civil War then rewrote the History by Ann Bausum - ESSENTIAL
Saturday, April 18, 2026
Love, Misha by Askel Aden - ADVISABLE
Friday, April 17, 2026
Super Indian (Volume Three) by Arigon Starr - ADVISABLE
Language: G (0 swears, 0 'f'); Mature Content: G; Violence: PG (Super Powers violence i.e. fireballs, super kicks etc. Also racist language, more inappropriate than offensive)
BUYING ADVISORY: MS, HS - ADVISABLE
APPEALS TO: SOME
Hubert Logan ate some contaminated commodity cheese, tainted with Rezium. Now he has superpowers, and he can transform into Super Indian. He also has a superpowered dog as a sidekick, and other indigenous friends who help fight against an evil overlord, uninformed tourists, and a former rockstar celebrity set on taking the reservation for himself.
Super Indian reads like an old fashioned comic. The bad guys are evil; they are up to some bad stuff, poisoning people, stealing things from the wild, and causing mayhem. I love that most of the action revolves around what's going on in the Bingo Hall on the reservation. It's a 3-book series so far, each containing multiple full-color comic books. The stories are great, I bought all three for my library. The characters are indigenous, from a fictional reservation. They speak Choctaw
Lisa Librarian
Girls of Dark Divine by E.V. Woods - ADVISABLE
Girls of Dark Divine by E.V. Woods, 389 pages. Random House Children's Books, 2025. $20
Language: G (0 swears, 0 ‘f'); Mature Content: PG (alcohol abuse); Violence: PG-13 (child abuse, alcoholic rages, sick torture, revenge plots of murder)
BUYING ADVISORY: MS, HS - ADVISABLE
APPEALS TO: SEVERAL
New Kora is home base to one of the most extraordinary performing dance companies: Malcom's Marionettes. People from around the world attend their awe inspiring performances. How can all the dancers perform so beautifully and with such perfect precision? The secret: each dancer is under a dark curse which literally takes over their bodies every night the curtain raises on the stage. Emberlyn is the lead dancer. Her fellow dance mates are more than part of the performance, they are her "sisters". Emberlyn wants to escape this torturous lifestyle of supposed glitz and glamor, but how can she leave her sisters behind to endure the abuse and alcoholic rages of Malcolm? The curse prevents her from literally being able to voice the torture and abuse to an anyone outside the Marionettes. Perhaps the answer is not to escape, but to actually end the reign of "The Puppet Master", Malcom, and finally put an end to this nightmare.
Although this book contains abuse, torture, alcoholism, etc, the heroine of the book, Emberlyn, teaches us all that selfless love is the highest form of love and in this novel, ultimately conquers evil. I loved the internal struggles Emberlyn finds herself in. I loved her relationship with the other dancers and especially her romance with her hero, Etienne. The message in the end of the novel helped soften the abuse and violence. Rising about our worst nightmares takes a lot of courage, a lot of self reflection, and a lot of support and love from others. The girls seem to be about high school aged.
S. Lewis
Thursday, April 16, 2026
The Dysfunctional Family's Guide to Murder by Kate Emery - ADVISABLE
Dawn of the Axolotl (The Last Immortals #1) by Kit Brooks, illustrated by Brandon Dorman - ADVISABLE
Dawn of the Axolotl (The Last Immortals #1) by Kit Brooks, illustrated by Brandon Dorman, 194 pages. Christy Ottaviano Books, 2026. $9
Language: G (0 swears, 0 ‘f'); Mature Content: G; Violence: PG (One axolotl bites the tail off of another axolotl and eats it.)
BUYING ADVISORY: EL - ADVISABLE; MS - OPTIONAL
APPEALS TO: EL - MANY; MS - SOME
Ace, a fearful axolotl, has just hatched out of his egg with his twin brother, Jasper. Jasper turns on Ace, bites off his tail and eats it. Hurt and alone, Ace struggles to survive. He finds two other axolotls that help Ace understand that axolotls need to work together because they are becoming extinct. Will Ace have to face his brother again?
Dawn of the Axolotl was an interesting combination of fantasy and axolotl facts. Fans of Warrior Cats would probably like this book. I was troubled by the fact that several characters lose limbs or tails in this story. Because axolotls can regenerate, losing a part of their body is seen as a way to become stronger or "immortal" by the characters in this book. Axolotls are a very popular animal with elementary students, and they would probably enjoy learning more about them in this fantasy story. The characters in this book are mostly axolotls.
Tracie, Elementary School Librarian
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
The House No One Sees by Adina King - OPTIONAL
Lovely Recipe written and illustrated by Myra Rose Nino - ADVISABLE
Language: G (2 swears, 0 ‘f’); Mature Content: PG (some kissing on page); Violence: G
BUYING ADVISORY: MS, HS - ADVISABLE
AUDIENCE APPEAL: AVERAGE
Sofia is in her last year of high school and she doesn’t know what she wants to do with her life post-graduation. What she does know is that her workaholic mother has been emotionally absent since her beloved grandmother’s death. If Sofia can learn to recreate some of her grandmother’s cherished recipes, maybe she can reconnect with her mother, and figure out her life plan. So Sofia enlists the help of her serious & studious classmate, Anna Marie, to teach her how to cook better. As the weeks fly by, Sofia and Anna Marie get closer together, but will the looming life changes tear them apart before they have a chance to even get started?
This is a very sweet, relatable YA graphic novel, perfect for anyone who has ever felt 'left behind' while the rest of the world moves on. I thought Sofia's desire to learn how to cook to recapture fond memories of her deceased grandmother helped give the story some necessary emotional depth. I also liked seeing their relationship develop authentically over the months cooking together in Anna Marie's family restaurant. Most readers are going to love the opposites-attract trope, but overall, this is a darling, slow burn sapphic romance, perfect for high school readers. While ethnicity is never explicitly addressed in the book, Sofia looks biracial in the illustrations.
Reviewer: Kiera Beddes, ELA teacher, #bookswithbeddes
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
The Ink Witch by Steph Cherrywell - OPTIONAL
Deathly Fates by Tesia Tsai - ADVISABLE
Language: PG (5 swears, 0 “f”); Mature Content: PG13 (mentions of alcohol, kissing, scary elements, and innuendo); Violence: PG13 (corpses, assault, fantasy violence, blood and gore, mentions of suicide, and murder)
BUYING ADVISORY: HS - ADVISABLE
APPEALS TO: SEVERAL
The Chinese folk practice of necromancy that this story draws inspiration from created a beautiful, simple, and limited magic system based on qi. Amidst the search for qi to keep this not-quite-dead client alive, Siying’s story includes unhappy spirits and exorcisms, intrigue and betrayal, and the relationship of duty and sacrifice with love. The majority of characters, including Siying, are implied Chinese.
Reviewer: Carolina Johnson
Monday, April 13, 2026
Where Wolves Don't Die by Anton Treuer, - ADVISABLE
Everything She Does Is Magic by Bridget Morrissey - ADVISABLE
Language: PG-13 (19 swears, 0 “f”); Mature Content: PG (repeated kissing on page); Violence: PG (intentional life-threatening allergic reaction)
BUYING ADVISORY: MS, HS - ADVISABLE
AUDIENCE APPEAL: HIGH
17 yo Darcy is a realist who wants to experience life outside of Fableview, a small town that is obsessed with Halloween. 17 yo Anya is a real witch-in-training who also wants a normal life. To become a full-fledged witch, Anya needs to ask someone to be a mortal “protector,” so she lies to her family coven, and says Darcy is willing to do it. However, both of their future plans might be derailed by their new feelings in development. Oh, what’s a girl (or two) to do?
I loved reading this book! It is the perfect cozy Halloween read. I loved the opposites-attract trope between Darcy and Anya. I loved the charming town of Fableview and its quirky cast of characters. I thought it was a delightful sapphic romcom perfect for any high school library.
Reviewer: Kiera Beddes, ELA teacher #bookswithbeddes
Sunday, April 12, 2026
Aarzu All Around by Marzieh Abbas - ADVISABLE

Charmed and Dangerous by Shelly Page - ADVISABLE
Language: PG-13 (25 swears, 0 “f”); Mature Content: PG (main character took their shirt off to clean it, the other characters didn’t look; repeated kissing on page); Violence: PG (minor injuries due to magical objects misfiring, one injury due to chasing a fugitive)
BUYING ADVISORY: MS, HS - ADVISABLE
AUDIENCE APPEAL: HIGH
Fair Glen, Illinois is a formerly magical place and the Bureau of Mystical Affairs helps regulate the use of the magical charm dust that is leftover (think of OHSA meets the FBI). Monroe is a Black high school senior, who is interning for the Bureau. She is tasked with hunting down a love charm that has gone rogue in her high school. As a part of her investigation, she gets involved in a fake dating scheme with the Bureau Director‘s daughter Iris. But as they get to know one another more, Monroe has to figure out what is more important to her, her future with the Bureau, or her burgeoning romance with Iris?
This was a very sweet sapphic YA rom-com and I had such a fun time reading it. I felt like it was a cozy alternative to most urban fantasy (which is very similar to film noir, dark and gritty, but with ✨magic✨), whereas this was light, fluffy, and fun, but with ✨magic✨. I thought the worldbuilding was solid, the magic system was easy to understand, and the who-dun-it mystery kept me guessing until the very end. I would easily recommend this for any high school library.
Reviewer: Kiera Beddes, ELA teacher #bookswithbeddes
Saturday, April 11, 2026
A World Without Summer by Nicholas Day - ADVISABLE
Wallflower by Iasmin Omar Ata - OPTIONAL
Language: G (0 swears); Mature Content: G; Violence: PG (one physical altercation/shove)
BUYING ADVISORY: MS, HS – OPTIONAL
AUDIENCE APPEAL: SOME
Marlena is a middle school girl who can see different flowers on people, but no one else can see them. Until one day when a new transfer student, Ashe, who is nonbinary, reveals that they also can see these flowers. Thus, prompting Marlena and Ash to figure out why they both see flowers and what exactly their families are not telling them about their shared past.
This was such a weird read. I thought the premise was interesting, but the execution left much to be desired. The ending felt unresolved as everyone went to therapy (yay!) but didn't actually address the incident that started the whole problem to begin with. In general, the book could be an interesting way to teach how trauma affects individuals and families, but really, I was just confused the whole time. The art style also didn’t really help tell the story as the dark colors actually muddied the plot further.
Kiera, ELA Teacher, #BookswithBeddes
Friday, April 10, 2026
Exile by Shannon Messenger, adapted by Celina Frenn, illustrated by Valeria Tenaga Romanazzi - ESSENTIAL
Stream by Aida Salazar - ADVISABLE
Language: PG (4 swears, 0 “f”); Mature Content: PG-13 (adolescent sexual development - both male & female, body dysmorphia, addiction to online gaming, minor character was catfished online and sexually extorted); Violence: PG (mentions cockfighting, mild peril during a flood)
BUYING ADVISORY: MS - ADVISABLE
AUDIENCE APPEAL: SOME
Written in verse, Stream is a novel in two voices serving as a combined sequel for Elio’s (Ultraviolet) and Celi’s (The Moon Within) stories from prior books. Elio and Celi are disconnected from the real world in different ways: Elio is addicted to online gaming, while Celi is chasing the unattainable status of social media influencer. When an awful catfishing incident happens to a fellow classmate, parents begin to take a closer look at their kids' online habits. As a result, Elio and Celi are both sent to unplug in the tiny off-grid Mexican village of Atoyec during the summer after their 8th grade year.
I had high hopes for Stream after enjoying Ultraviolet, but this one missed the mark for me. The 'social media/technology is bad' theme felt less like a poetic exploration and more like harping on a trend for the duration of the book. While Elio and Celi have some great moments of depth, their relationship felt incredibly hasty by the final chapters. Most importantly, the ending lacked credibility; it’s hard to buy into a plot where eighth graders are single-handedly saving a village from a natural disaster and performing emergency medical rescues. It just didn't feel like an authentic representation of being fourteen.
Kiera, ELA teacher #BookswithBeddes
Thursday, April 9, 2026
One of the Boys by Victoria Zeller - OPTIONAL
Forbidden Mountain by Brandon Mull - ESSENTIAL
Forbidden Mountain (Guardians #1) by Brandon Mull, 528 pages. Labyrinth Road (Penguin Random House), 2026. $23.
Language: G (0 swears, 0 “f”); Mature Content: PG (illegal activity and mentions of alcohol and kissing); Violence: PG13 (assault, blood and gore, battle scenes, mentions of suicide, and murder)
BUYING ADVISORY: MS - ESSENTIAL, HS - ADVISABLE
APPEALS TO: SEVERAL
Everything for Mako (13yo) depends on passing his tests for a good apprenticeship and on who he receives as his guardian in three days. Arden (13yo) might not have abilities like those who live on the forbidden mountain, but her knack for reading people goes beyond average skill. While intending to do good, these teens feel lost after making mistakes and have to decide who they can trust to guide them out of it.
At first, Mako and Arden both seem to be stuck on slippery slopes due to their choices. However, their reactions to their respective consequences contrast greatly, making their similar circumstances diverge even as their stories start to intersect by ending up in the same camp. Both of them want to do good, and their examples invoke questions of whether doing something wrong for the right reasons can still be good. Expect high anticipation for the sequel!
Reviewer: Carolina Johnson


















