Waking Romeo by Kathryn Barker
/A YA novel in which time travel hastens the end of the world.
Read MoreAn Arts & Literature Review
A YA novel in which time travel hastens the end of the world.
Read MoreReading gems for children and young adults from 2020.
Read MoreIn Watt Key’s new novel, a young boy goes on a very personal quest to find a cryptic monster in the Florida swamps
Read MoreYA superstar Sarah J. Maas has written an 800-page new fantasy novel full of the supernatural action and long-odds love her legion of fans have come to expect. But will those fans get carded at the door?
Read MoreThe teenage sons of two Mars-mission astronauts are worried about their parents - and discovering a new world together.
Read MoreIsabel Ibañez’s debut YA fantasy novel draws on the riches of Bolivian culture to tell its story royal intrigue and revenge.
Read MoreA raw, often brutal book told in a taut prose-line and is copiously illustrated by comics legend Frank Miller.
Read MoreInfectiously page-turning, despite being laughably silly (a familiar to Patterson fans).
Read MoreThe Alex Rider books have always required a rather hefty suspension of disbelief, and they’ve always rewarded it.
Read MoreWhite Stag is thrilling and sharply complex throughout, exactly the kind of fiction debut that makes a reader eager for more.
Read MoreA baldly honest YA novel that is refreshingly complex and significantly rewarding.
Read MoreA finely-drawn fictional Viking world, full of characters who all share in common their harsh awareness that they could die tomorrow.
Read MoreEach story reveals the author's ability to mesmerize the reader with fascinating characters and compelling language.
Read MoreIn the great hierarchy of book genres, the media tie-in novel occupies a tier decidedly close to the bottom: higher than coloring books or street maps, but lower than, say, Jesus, Life Coach.
Read MoreIn the back of our ninth grade class, you may or may not recall, there sat a silent, studious boy whom everyone ignored. He wasn’t chubby enough to bully. He didn’t have the acne to scatter female cliques. Even the teacher, busy with students who achieved things or had problems, left him be. Such invisibility worked in his favor. Devoted to fictitious worlds, he wrote and drew continuously. Socials and first kisses, trivialities compared with the act of creating, only wrinkled his nose. His imagination, however, intensified, as he learned to focus it through the noisy social web of the surrounding classroom.
Read MoreAn arts and literature review.
Steve Donoghue
Sam Sacks
Britta Böhler
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Eric Karl Anderson
Olive Fellows
Jack Hanson
Jennifer Helinek
Justin Hickey
Hannah Joyner
Zach Rabiroff
Jessica Tvordi