A sweet concept that serves as a launching point for Emma's development of faith and personal confidence. With the exception of the premise, we are on familiar and satisfying territory as Emma's hard heart melts and she realizes that she is not only capable of love but she is eager to have that happy ending her pen pal from the future promises. Along the way, she also develops a more mature understanding of her parents and the decisions that they made. Finally, a little twist at the end provides just the right amount of uncertainty for a satisfying conclusion.
Saturday, March 07, 2026
Love Me Tomorrow, by Emiko Jean
After watching her parents separate, Emma has grown cynical about romance and love. But she is forced to reconsider her hard heartedness when she starts receiving letters from someone who claims to be the love of her life in the future. Naturally skeptical, she becomes convinced that this is for real when the letter writer starts describing personal secrets she has never (yet) shared with anyone else. Now convinced, she begins to look for clues of the writer's identity comparing things he's let slip with things she learns about her friends. Each new lead makes her question her decisions, wondering if this person or that person is the future letter writer and love of her life, and questioning every choice she makes. In the end, she realizes that regardless of who this person is, she does indeed believe in love after all.
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Wake the Wild Creatures, by Nova Ren Soma
Raised in a abandoned and abandoned vacation resort in the Catskills, Talia spent the first thirteen years of her life cut off from the world. Her mother, a fugitive from justice, sheltered them in this place (called the "Neves"), which somehow was invisible to outsiders. With time, other women (and their children) were selected to join them. Each woman, like Talia's mother, fleeing from men -- fathers, brothers, husbands, etc. -- who have hurt them. At the Neves, they can live in a sorority of consensus decision making and peace.
But as the community grows, its tensions grown and its contradictions start to tear it apart. And then one day they are betrayed. Her mother is arrested and the sanctity of the place is violated. Captured and forced to live with an unknown aunt, Talia tries to acclimate into a new life in the outside world. Never fitting in, she bides her time and tries to find a way to reunite with her mother and return to the Neves.
A beautifully-told magical realist novel that combines striking naturalism with Talia's keen and stark perceptions of human behavior. Talia is the star of the show and one of the stronger and more captivating heroines that I've seen in recent YA stories. There's plenty here about the struggles of mothers and daughters, the way women and girls mistreat each other, and a bit about sibling rivalry. What's strikingly absent is any sort of romantic angle. The fact that you won't miss it is testament to a story that has something meaningful to say about girls that doesn't involve angst over boyfriends (or girlfriends). Strikingly original ideas combined with strong lyrical prose makes this an engrossing read. It's one of those deep thinking books that will leave you pondering its meaning and messages long afterwards. Strongly recommended.
Monday, February 23, 2026
Sometimes the Girl, by Jennifer Mason-Black
Maya's dreamed of being a writer, but after a bad mentoring experience, she's given up on her novel. She's focused now solely on following her ex-girlfriend on a trip to New Zealand to do farming for a few months. To earn the money to make the trip, Maya agrees to take a job helping Elsie McAllister clear out her attic.
Elsie is the author of one of the greatest novels of the previous century. Maya and just about every other schoolchild has read the book. Notably, Elsie never wrote a follow-up but instead faded into obscurity about the novel's publication. Maya wonders why, of course, but Elsie isn't volunteering any answers. Instead, Elsie issues terse instructions for how to dispose of her possessions.
Maya can't help but be curious about the old woman and as she retrieves box after box of mementos and paraphernalia of Elsie's life, inventorying the contents for her boss, she sift through them for clues. Meanwhile, Elsie's grown children, suspicious that there may be an unpublished manuscript hiding upstairs, apply pressure to Maya to set aside anything of significant literary value. And Elsie makes Maya promise to do no such thing.
Filled with a variety of stories, the most compelling sections have to do with the revelations about Elsie than Maya uncovers. There's an effort to portray Maya's own life (and her struggles) as relevant or parallel, but Maya's story simply isn't as interesting. For example, somewhere in all of this is a story about Maya's older brother committing suicide, but it barely captured my attention. The story of Elsie's lost love and the horrid circumstances that led to her death, on the other hand, are burned into my mind. In that context, Maya brings just the right amount of grit and fortitude to make her relationship with the bitter and grumpy Elsie compelling and revealing.
This is a mature book, misclassified as YA simply because of its focus on coming of age, but actually not really focused at all on adolescence. Part gay history and part speculation about real writers (like Harper Lee) who had only one great novel in them.
Friday, February 20, 2026
The Judgement of Yoyo Gold, by Isaac Blum
Yoyo has always been an exemplary Jewish girl, serving as a model in the way that being the rabbi's daughter seems to require. Taking care of her younger brothers and sisters, doing well in school, and mediating for her peers is exhausting but she relishes the way it makes her feel. In her Orthodox community, she feels at home and just hopes that she is a credit to her family. It's hard these days because she had a close friend who had a falling out and was sent away. The absence leaves her feeling lonely and even more committed to doing good and to counter the judging eyes of the community that she feels upon her.
She's also a teenager in contemporary society. From a non-Orthodox acquaintance, she learns about TikTok videos. Her own phone is filtered and social media are definitely forbidden, but she gets excited by the technology and, following a rumor, finds a boy name Shua in her community who can hack her phone. She's surprised to find out from him that many other kids have used his help to overcome the phone filters. It would seem that the community is not quite as virtuous and pious as she grew up thinking.
These revelations keep coming. And when she spies on a particularly self-righteous girl from her community eating unkosher food, she's scandalized and she hatches a plan. Following the example of others, she creates her own anonymous TikTok video in which she complains about the girl's behavior. The post goes viral and, while Yoyo's role in it remains secret, she is enthralled by the attention it receives. Soon, she is posting other exposes about her community.
Meanwhile, she's also finding herself tempted in other ways, especially by Shua, for whom she discovers a forbidden attraction.
A well-nuanced study of the life of a modern Orthodox girl -- a complex mix of modernism with traditional faith. Her mature reasoning skills, tempered by her adolescent impetuousness, made for an interesting character study. And her pride and the sense of self that she develops by the end was immensely gratifying.
I was disappointed by her descent into cyber-bullying and her lack of genuine repentance, but justice is dealt out and lessons learned. And I was actually surprised at the amount of freedom she had as a young woman, but much of that leeway may have been because of her responsible reputation.
Sunday, February 08, 2026
Just Harriet, by Elana K Arnold
Harriet likes things to stay the way they are, but with her mother expecting a baby that doesn't seem too likely. And when Mom gets prescribed bed rest, Harriet finds herself and her kitty sent to grandma's for the summer. Grandma runs a bed and breakfast on an island, a place Harriet has loved visiting in the past, but not like this!
Unhappy with being away from home, unhappy that Mom and Dad are not available to her, and unhappy that everything is changing, Harriet mopes and says mean things she doesn't mean.
Nothing makes her happy until she discovers a mysterious key. No matter where she looks, she can't figure out what it unlocks! She searches all over the bed and breakfast and across the island. When she does find is mate, a lot more than she expected will be unlocked.
Falling into the trope that the most appealing early reader protagonists are bratty, Harriet is a bit much to take. And the fact that her meanness is endlessly forgiven and indulged lessens my interest in her otherwise amusing character. The more fatal flaw of the book, though, is its lack of a substantive story. The mystery of the key ought to have some sort of adventure connected with it, but what happens is resolved too quickly to provide a meaningful payoff. The artwork is cute and Harriet's naughtiness may appeal to young readers, but mostly the book seems designed for easy lessons about what mistakes Harriet makes.
Wednesday, February 04, 2026
Call It What You Want, by Brigid Kemmerer
Last year, Maegan got caught cheating during an SAT exam. As a result, all of the tests in the room were invalidated and she became a social pariah. To make matters worse, Maegan's sister has come home from college pregnant and Maegan is unable to talk about any of it with anyone outside of family.
No one wants to work with a cheater, which is why when Maegan's Calculus class starts a project that requires a partner, there's a lack of volunteers to work with her. The only person left is Rob and no one wants to work with Rob either. It was Rob's father, a financial advisor, who was arrested last year for embezzling everyone's savings. Unable to live with the shame of what he had done and how it destroyed his family, Rob's father tried to shoot himself...and missed. Now, Rob and his mother live in a house stripped of all of their possessions (seized by the court) and tend a vegetative man.
So, Bob and Maegen are at the bottom of the social hierarchy. Placed together to work through their project, Rob and Maegan find comfort in their shared woes and open up to each other. Any romantic feelings are deeply complicated by the judgements of their parents and peers.
While obviously addressing issues of familial guilt and forgiveness, the novel also spends considerable time on class and race, observing the strain between richer and poorer students. The story is compelling and, while wrapped up all too neatly in the end, fairly rewarding.
Thursday, January 29, 2026
Not Your Average Jo, by Grace K. Shim
Riley Jo is tired of being one of the very few Asian students in Bentonville, Arkansas. She's fed up with well-meaning people coming up to her and saying horribly insensitive things. She dreams of going to a more diverse urban environment where she won't stand out. And most of all, she wants to pursue her muse as a pop music guitarist. But her parents don't have a lot of money and her mother, who teaches at a local university can get Riley free tuition if she stays here.
Riley is convinced that she'll bloom elsewhere and finding a school where she can study music will be the ticket to making it as a pop singer and never having to settle down in small-town Arkansas. But as she is searching for a college that she could afford she discovers a private boarding high school for the arts that offers a contemporary music program. And when she applies, she is accepted. It's only for her senior year and, after she graduates, she'll have to come back home for college, but Riley hopes that within that year she'll be able to break through.
Things at school don't go as she would hope. She discovers that prejudice and microaggressions are just as common in the big city and that the music industry is riven with racism. She may have an opportunity to become famous, but it will cost her her self-respect. Is it worth it?
The story is outlandish and implausible, but told in an entertaining fashion. Riley is interesting, but she gets pretty prickly towards the end and the love interest is surprisingly played down. Where the novel really focuses is upon prejudice (external and internal, outwardly-directed and inwardly-directed). There's not a lot of revelations and occasionally things grow a bit preachy, but it's well-formulated. I preferred to simply enjoy the fantasy of the storyline in which kids can just become pop stars by writing a few songs.
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