Wednesday, October 08, 2025
Skipshock, by Caroline O'Donoghue
Sunday, October 05, 2025
Gay the Pray Away, by Natalie Naudus
Thursday, October 02, 2025
The Otherwhere Post, by Emily J Taylor
To find the author of the letter and the evidence that could exculpate her father, she must find a way into the school where scriptomancers are trained. At great risk, she poses as an apprentice under a stolen identity and uncovers a series of mysteries that not only tell the truth of what actually happened seven years ago, but also point to a way of rebuilding the lost world of Inverly. Within a richly drawn world of magic and steeped with intrigue, Maeve and her young cohorts must force secrets into the open to rehabilitate her family name.
There's lots of creativity behind the world that Taylor has created for this story and Maeve makes a compelling protagonist. For the most part, this is an immersive and addictive read. Unfortunately, the story gets severely compressed at the end with a series of convenient losses of consciousness and subsequent digested recaps. Whether this is because Taylor struggles with writing climactic scenes or she simply ran out of pages, it steals a lot of the dramatic build up of the story to cram several months' worth of developments into a ten page summary.
Thursday, September 25, 2025
The Complex Art of Being Maisie Clark, by Sabrina Kleckner
Thursday, September 18, 2025
This Book Might Be About Zinnia, by Brittney Morris
Sunday, September 14, 2025
Top Heavy, by Rhonda DeChambeau
Wednesday, September 10, 2025
A Field Guide to Broken Promises, by Leah Stecher
Sunday, September 07, 2025
Nav's Foolproof Guide to Falling In Love, by Jessica Lewis
Tuesday, September 02, 2025
Nothing Bad Happens Here, by Rachel Ekstrom Courage
Thursday, August 28, 2025
Summer Girls, by Jennifer Dugan
Sunday, August 24, 2025
Love Points to You, by Alice Lin
Thursday, August 21, 2025
Eliza, from Scratch, by Sophia Lee
Thursday, August 14, 2025
What Comes After, by Katie Bayerl
Thursday, August 07, 2025
The Uncertainty Principle, by Joshua Davis and Kal Kini-Davis
Friday, August 01, 2025
Old School, by Gordon Korman
He hasn't socialized with anyone like that in ages and his first days of middle school are rough. He is singled out and bullied for his old-people clothes and his old-fashioned way of speaking. But slowly he reveals his own particular contributions and makes friends. Then, an unfortunate incident leads to his suspension and suddenly he and his classmates realize just how much Dexter actually does belong in school.
A cute story that suffers from the author's peculiar perception that the residents of The Pines are a lot older than would be normally plausible. He hasn't populated it with a twelve year-old's grandparents but with the author's own grandparents. Sorry, but old people don't listen to Benny Goodman and talk about the Great War anymore. They listen to Jefferson Airplane and talk about Vietnam. They are not the Greatest Generation, they are Baby Boomers. It's cute having the old people teaching the kids to play bingo and shuffleboard, but its a dated stereotype.
Sunday, July 27, 2025
Spoon, by Stephanie Peters
Friday, July 25, 2025
Camila Núñez's Year of Disasters, by Miriam Zoila Perez
But while the story is excellent, the writing itself feels clunky. Written like it was Camila's diary, much of the prose is broken sentences and awkward tenses. That gives the story telling some authenticity but it isn't an engaging presentation. Her life as a gender queer Cuban American is well-depicted but pedantic and distracting. The strengths of the novel are more traditional features: an interesting protagonist who experiences growth and learns life's lessons.
Sunday, July 20, 2025
Bye Forever, I Guess, by Jodi Meadows
Then one day she receives one of her own. The sender is charming and she starts chatting with him. When she learns that he likes to do on-line roleplaying, she invites him to join her game. Soon enough, they are falling for each other.
What they don't initially realize (although he figures it out before she does) is that they are actually classmates. And so a series of set ups occur where the two of them have near misses. In the end of course all is revealed and a number of other loose ends including vanquishing a bully ensue.
It's cute and fast-paced, but it's hard to accept that Ingrid could overlook all of the clues regarding her online friend's identity. There is also a mismatch between the characters' ages and the way they behave. While there's a token effort to portray Ingrid's adolescent insecurity, she does a remarkable job of dispatching her tormenting ex-friend. Her feelings for the mystery boy are strikingly level-headed (and his reciprocal feelings are equally grown up). They simply don't sound like middle schoolers.