This week’s Spotlight is one of those huge ones where I cannot possibly add every book I wanted to include on my list. All titles on this list received one or more starred professional reviews.
We have new releases from popular authors like Randy Ribay, Ellen Hopkins, Laura Taylor Namey, Gary D. Schmidt, Gayle Forman, Frances Hardinge, Kyle Lukoff, and Kate Messner.
My top picks:
- Everything We Never Had by Randy Ribay (YA)
- Jupiter Rising by Gary D. Schmidt (middle school)
- I’m Sorry You Got Mad by Kyle Lukoff (picture book)
PRESENTATION LINKS:
All three presentations are free downloads that are editable in Canva! Just click below, then go to File-Make a Copy in your Canva account. If you do not have a Canva account, you can get a free educator account here (must be verified).
The Canva presentations for August 2024 are now complete! I do not plan to add any more titles to this month’s Canva presentations.
YA Presentation Link – Grades 7+
Middle Grades Presentation Link – Grades 3-8
Picture Book Presentation Link – PreS-Grade 5+
This week’s Spotlight titles are #4262 – #4279 on The Ginormous Booklist.
Author: Freeman Ng
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): novel in verse, historical fiction
Recommended for: Grades 9-12
Setting: Angel Island, California, USA; 1924
Themes: immigration, discrimination, Chinese Exclusion Act, Angel Island, poetry, writing, US history, white imperialism, racism
Protagonist: male, age 17, Chinese immigrant to the US
Starred reviews: Publishers Weekly
Pages: 368
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Tai Go and his family have crossed an ocean wider than a thousand rivers, joining countless other Chinese immigrants in search of a better life in the United States.
Instead, they’re met with hostility and racism.
Empowered by the Chinese Exclusion Act, the government detains the immigrants on Angel Island in the San Francisco Bay while evaluating their claims.
Held there indefinitely, Tai Go experiences the prison-like conditions, humiliating medical exams, and interrogations designed to trick detainees into failure.
Yet amid the anger and sorrow, Tai Go also finds hope—in the poems carved into the walls of the barracks by others who have been detained there, in the actions of a group of fellow detainees who are ready to fight for their rights, in the friends he makes, and in a perceived enemy whose otherness he must come to terms with.
Unhappy at first with his father’s decision to come to the United States, Tai Go must overcome the racism he discovers in both others and himself and forge his own version of the American Dream.
Author: Natalie C. Parker
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): horror, thriller, supernatural
Recommended for: Grades 9-12
Setting: Port Promise, a small town in Puget Sound, near Seattle, Washington, USA
Themes: LGBT+, coming out, secrets, hiding, missing persons, ghosts, lost memories, hauntings, homophobia, transphobia, gender identity
Protagonist: two females, both HS seniors, both white, both queer
Starred reviews: Booklist
Pages: 336
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
It’s never been safe for Fern, Jaq, or Mallory to come out to their families. As kids their emerging identities drove them into friendship but also forced them into the woods to hide in an old, abandoned house when they needed safety.
But one night when the girls sought refuge, Mallory never made it back home. Fern and Jaq did, but neither survivor remembered what happened or the secrets they were so desperate to keep.
Five years later, Fern and Jaq are seniors on the verge of graduation, seemingly happy in their straight, cisgender lives—until a spirit who looks like Mallory begins to appear, seeking revenge for her death, and the part Fern and Jaq played in it. As they’re haunted, something begins to shift inside them.
They remember who they are.
Who they want to love.
And the truth about the vicious secrets hiding in their woods.
Author: Randy Ribay
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): historical fiction, realistic fiction
Recommended for: Grades 7-12
Setting: Watsonville, California, USA, 1930; Stockton, California, USA, 1965; Denver, Colorado, 1983; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 2020
Themes: racism, discrimination, racial violence, labor rights, generational trauma, family, COVID-19, coming of age, fathers and sons, grandfathers
Protagonist: 4 generations of Filipino American men
Starred reviews: Booklist, Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, SLJ
Pages: 288
Ooh, I do love this author! I read and really loved Patron Saints of Nothing, and I plan to read this one, too. You can read my review of Patron Saints of Nothing here.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Watsonville, 1930. Francisco Maghabol barely ekes out a living in the fields of California. As he spends what little money he earns at dance halls and faces increasing violence from white men in town, Francisco wonders if he should’ve never left the Philippines.
Stockton, 1965. Between school days full of prejudice from white students and teachers and night shifts working at his aunt’s restaurant, Emil refuses to follow in the footsteps of his labor organizer father, Francisco. He’s going to make it in this country no matter what or who he has to leave behind.
Denver, 1983. Chris is determined to prove that his overbearing father, Emil, can’t control him. However, when a missed assignment on “ancestral history” sends Chris off the football team and into the library, he discovers a desire to know more about Filipino history―even if his father dismisses his interest as unamerican and unimportant.
Philadelphia, 2020. Enzo struggles to keep his anxiety in check as a global pandemic breaks out and his abrasive grandfather moves in. While tensions are high between his dad and his lolo, Enzo’s daily walks with Lolo Emil have him wondering if maybe he can help bridge their decades-long rift.
Told in multiple perspectives, Everything We Never Had unfolds like a beautifully crafted nesting doll, where each Maghabol boy forges his own path amid heavy family and societal expectations, passing down his flaws, values, and virtues to the next generation, until it’s up to Enzo to see how he can braid all these strands and men together.
Author: Bessie Flores Zaldivar
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): realistic fiction
Recommended for: Grades 9-12
Setting: Tegucigalpa, Honduras, 2017
Themes: poetry, world history, corruption, LGBT+, contentious presidential elections, coming of age, police violence
Protagonist: female, high school senior, Honduran
Starred reviews: Kirkus and Publishers Weekly
Pages: 432
Notes: Includes Spanish words and phrases.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
As the contentious 2017 presidential election looms and protests rage across every corner of the city, life in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, churns louder and faster.
For her part, high school senior Libertad (Libi) Morazán takes heart in writing political poetry for her anonymous Instagram account and a budding romance with someone new.
But things come to a head when Mami sees texts on her phone mentioning a kiss with a girl and Libi discovers her beloved older brother, Maynor, playing a major role in the protests.
As Libertad faces the political and social corruption around her, stifling homophobia at home and school, and ramped up threats to her poetry online, she begins dreaming of a future in which she doesn’t have to hide who she is or worry about someone she loves losing their life just for speaking up.
Then the ultimate tragedy strikes, and leaving her family and friends—plus the only home she’s ever known—might be her only option.
Author: Wendy Wunder
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): supernatural, magical realism, romance
Recommended for: Grades 9-12
Themes: special abilities, psychiatric facilities, mental health, starting a new school, telepathic abilities, suicide, anxiety, generational gap, bobcats, animal rights
Protagonist: female, age 17, white, can read people's minds
Starred reviews: Publishers Weekly
Pages: 336
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Seventeen-year-old Maya knows everything. When she looks at someone, she instantly knows their history, their private thoughts, their secret desires, their most tragic failures. Combine these private miseries with the general state of the world, and it’s easy to see why Maya’s power starts to get her down…
Which is why she was sent to the Whispering Pines Psychiatric Facility, and also why starting at a new school is going to be such a challenge. Now, faced with Tyler, a cute guy she actually wants to know everything about, Maya realizes that maybe her power isn’t so horrible after all. Maybe she can use it for good. Maybe she can even get the guy. Or maybe there really is such a thing as knowing too much.
Author: Jade Adia
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): realistic fiction, romance
Recommended for: Grades 7-12
Setting: Los Angeles, California, USA
Themes: mental health, depression, family trauma, Doomsday preppers, wilderness groups, pessimism, teen conflict with parents
Protagonist: female, age 16, African American
Starred reviews: Publishers Weekly
Pages: 416
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Survival Tip #1: The world is going to shit. Whatever you do, don’t fall in love.
Sixteen-year old Niarah Holloway’s only goal in life is to get through it unnoticed. That, and to spend her first summer in LA building a doomsday bunker in her backyard. Because if the past few years have taught Niarah anything, it’s that the ocean levels are rising, minimum wage is a scam, and the people who are supposed to protect you will hurt you. Now the only thing that helps Niarah stay afloat amidst the constant waves of anxiety and dread that threaten to drag her under is her new mantra: Be prepared.
But Niarah wasn’t prepared for Mac Torres. Not for his disarmingly cute face, or for his surfer lifestyle, or for the way his smile resuscitates her heart. Mac is a bomb that blows Niarah’s world to pieces, but instead of disaster, he fills it with sunset bonfires, breakfast burritos, and new friends.
For years, Niarah’s life has revolved around ignoring the demons of her past, avoiding the problems of her present, and preparing for the catastrophes of the future. Now Mac—with his sunshine laugh and infectious optimism— is determined to show her another way to be. But in a world where the worst feels inevitable, can one summer be enough to light the way to a hopeful future? Can one summer be enough to fall in love?
Author: Ellen Hopkins
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): realistic fiction, epistolary novel
Recommended for: Grades 9-12
Setting: California, USA
Themes: twins, siblings, abuse, foster care, sexual assault, LGBT+, homelessness, teen incarceration, juvenile detention centers
Protagonist: perspectives alternate between 2 twin siblings, one male and one female, both age 17, white
Starred reviews: SLJ
Pages: 448
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Seventeen-year-old twins Storm and Lake have always been in perfect sync. They faced the worst a parent could do and survived it together. In the wake of their mother’s rejection, they’ve spent the last five years moving from foster home to foster home—sometimes placed together, sometimes apart.
After being separated from his sister once again, Storm is devastated. He’s the older brother and promised to always take care of Lake. But after a stint in juvie, his newest placement has him feeling almost hopeful. His foster dad is kind, and his girlfriend, Jaidyn, is the first person other than Lake he feels he can trust.
But when Jaidyn is sexually assaulted by a violent ex, it pushes Storm over the edge. He retaliates and lands back in lockup—and he fears this time it will be for good. He wishes he could talk to Lake, but he doesn’t know where she is, and he’ s now feeling more alone and out of sync than ever before.
Lake, like Storm, has found her own happiness in a relationship with someone new—her fellow foster, Parker. Life with Parker is never boring, but Parker has her own scars. She can be withdrawn and unpredictable, and that can be dangerous, especially after Parker convinces Lake to run away from their Bible-thumping fosters after they are caught in a compromising position.
With no money, shelter, or ID, they’re living on the streets. Lake thinks of Storm and his promise to take care of her, and wonders where he could be now.
Author: Laura Taylor Namey
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): romance
Recommended for: Grades 7-12
Setting: Los Angeles, California, USA
Themes: gentrification, Cuban culture, teens with jobs, half-siblings, finding out you have a half-sibling, community, social activism, grandparents
Protagonist: female, age 17, Cuban American
Starred reviews: Publishers Weekly
Pages: 320
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Seventeen-year-old Clary is set to inherit her family’s florist shop, La Rosa Blanca—one of the last remnants of the Cuban business district that once thrived in Los Angeles’s Echo Park neighborhood. Clary knows Echo Park is where she’ll leave a legacy, and nothing is more important to her than keeping the area’s unique history alive.
Besides Clary’s florist shop, there’s only one other business left founded by Cuban immigrants fleeing Castro’s regime in the sixties and seventies. And Emilio, who’s supposed to take over Avalos Bicycle Works one day, is more flight risk than dependable successor. While others might find Emilio appealing, Clary can see him itching to leave now that he’s graduated, and she’ll never be charmed by a guy who doesn’t care if one more Echo Park business fades away.
But then Clary is caught off guard when an unexpected visitor delivers a shocking message from someone she thought she’d left behind. Meanwhile, Emilio realizes leaving home won’t be so easy—and Clary, who has always been next door, is who he confides in. As the summer days unfold, they find there’s something stronger than local history tying them together.
Author: Gayle Forman
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): realistic fiction
Recommended for: Grades 5-8
Setting: retirement home
Themes: mental health, community service, volunteer work, children who commit violent acts, missing parent (mother), intergenerational friendship, centenarians, concentration camps, WWII, Nazis, Holocaust survivors, rising above past mistakes, antisemitism, death
Protagonist: male, age 12, white
Starred reviews: Booklist, Kirkus, Publishers Weekly
Pages: 288
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Alex is twelve, and he did something very, very bad. A judge sentences him to spend his summer volunteering at a retirement home where he’s bossed around by an annoying and self-important do-gooder named Maya-Jade. He hasn’t seen his mom in a year, his aunt and uncle don’t want him, and Shady Glen’s geriatric residents seem like zombies to him.
Josey is 107 and ready for his life to be over. He has evaded death many times, having survived ghettos, dragnets, and a concentration camp—all thanks to the heroism of a woman named Olka and his own ability to sew. But now he spends his days in room 206 at Shady Glen, refusing to speak and waiting (and waiting and waiting) to die. Until Alex knocks on Josey’s door…and Josey begins to tell Alex his story.
As Alex comes back again and again to hear more, an unlikely bond grows between them. Soon a new possibility opens up for Alex: Can he rise to the occasion of his life, even if it means confronting the worst thing that he’s ever done?
Author: Gary D. Schmidt
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): realistic fiction
Recommended for: Grades 6-11
Themes: foster care, adoption, siblings, grief, bullying, child custody cases, coaches, tear-jerkers, dealing with emotions, positive male role-models
Protagonist: male, 8th grader, white
Starred reviews: Booklist
Pages: 288
Notes: Companion to: Orbiting Jupiter.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
When Jack’s P.E. coach pairs him up with Jay Perkins for the cross-country team, neither of them is happy about it. Jack is grieving the loss of Joseph, his foster brother, and adjusting to his role as big brother to Jupiter, Joseph’s orphaned daughter. Dealing with Jay Perkins—who’d once ganged up with his buddies to jump Joseph in the locker room—is the last thing he wants to do.
But then Jack realizes that Jay is grieving too—the loss of his cousin Maddie, Jupiter’s mom.
As Jack’s relationships with both Jay and Jupiter grow and his running improves, he starts to feel more like himself than he has since Joseph died. He’s finding his stride . . . until Maddie’s parents, who have never shown interest in their granddaughter before, decide to claim Jupiter as their own, blocking Jack’s family from adopting her.
And suddenly Jack’s past and present smash together, threatening to dissolve both his newfound confidence and his friendships.
This poignant, powerful companion to Orbiting Jupiter is Gary D. Schmidt at his best. He is the author of the Printz Honor and Newbery Honor Book Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy; Okay for Now, a National Book Award finalist; and The Wednesday Wars, a Newbery Honor Book, among many acclaimed novels for young readers.
Author: Violet Duncan
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): realistic fiction
Recommended for: Grades 5-8
Setting: summer at the Cree reservation in northern Alberta, Canada
Themes: residential schools, Native Americans, generational trauma, prejudice, colonialism, grandfathers, government abuse, Indigenous history, resilience, dreams
Protagonist: female, age 12, Cree and Apache
Starred reviews: SLJ
Pages: 128
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Summer and her family always spend relaxed summers in Alberta, Canada, on the reservation where her mom’s family lives. But this year is turning out to be an eye-opening one.
First, Summer has begun to have vivid dreams in which she’s running away from one of the many real-life residential schools that tore Native children from their families and tried to erase their Native identities.
Not long after that, she learns that unmarked children’s graves have been discovered at the school her grandpa attended as a child.
Now more folks are speaking up about their harrowing experiences at these places, including her grandfather.
Summer cherishes her heritage and is heartbroken about all her grandfather was forced to give up and miss out on. When the town holds a rally, she’s proud to take part to acknowledge the painful past and speak of her hopes for the future, and anxious to find someone who can fill her in on the source of her unsettling dreams.
Author: Preston Norton
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): supernatural, scary stories
Recommended for: Grades 5-8
Setting: small town in Massachusetts
Themes: ghosts, LGBT+, unsolved murders, bullying, being outed by someone else, teen writers, homophobia
Protagonist: male, age 13, white
Starred reviews: Booklist
Pages: 336
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
When Aidan Cross yeeted his very secret journal into the house on Yeet Street, he also intended to yeet his feelings for his best friend, Kai, as far away as possible.
To Aidan’s horror, his friends plan a sleepover at the haunted house the very next night. Terrance, Zephyr, and Kai are dead set on exploring local legend Farah Yeet’s creepy mansion. Aidan just wants to survive the night and retrieve his mortifying love story before his friends find it.
When Aidan discovers an actual ghost in the house (who happens to be a huge fan of his fiction), he makes it his mission to solve the mystery of Gabby’s death and free her from the house. But when Aidan’s journal falls into the wrong hands, secrets come to light that threaten the boys’ friendship. Can Aidan embrace the part of himself that’s longing to break free…or will he become the next victim to be trapped in the haunted house forever?
Author: Frances Hardinge
Illustrator: Emily Gravett
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): supernatural, thriller
Recommended for: Grades 2-7
Setting: island of Merlack
Themes: spirits, afterlife, ferrymen, death of a parent (father), grief, death, magic
Protagonist: young male, skin is the white of the page
Starred reviews: Kirkus, Hornbook, Publishers Weekly
Pages: 120
Notes: Illustrated in black, white, and blue.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
A remarkable and ultimately heartwarming story of grief, family, kindness, and being true to yourself.
On the misty island of Merlack, the lingering dead can cause unspeakable harm if they’re not safely carried to the island of the Broken Tower, where they can move on.
Milo’s father always told him that he wasn’t suited for dealing with the dead and could never become the Ferryman of the Dead—but one day, he’s unexpectedly thrust into the role. And his father is his first passenger…
Soon after, the teenage daughter of the Lord of Merlock passes. But the Lord of Merlock isn’t prepared to give her up, and he follows Milo’s boat in pursuit, in a boat filled with armed men and two sinister magicians at his command.
It’s a race to the island as Milo must face swarms of sinister moths, strange headless birds, and chillingly shrouded figures to carry his ghostly passengers across the secret seas.
Author and Illustrator: Freya Blackwood
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): wordless picture book
Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3
Setting: loud, bustling city
Themes: loneliness, quiet, sadness, destruction of nature, imagination
Protagonist: lonely boy, white; background characters have diverse skin tones
Starred reviews: Booklist and Publishers Weekly
Pages: 40
Notes: Australian title originally published in 2021.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
The boy lives in a city, where everything is fast and loud. But amidst the bustle and the noise, the boy has a secret …
In the overgrown lot next to his apartment building, deep within the green, he has a friend.
But one day progress arrives, bringing with it plans for something new, and the boy must find a way to save his friend before it’s too late …
Author: Kyle Lukoff
Illustrator: Julie Kwon
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): picture book, epistolary
Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3
Setting: elementary school classroom
Themes: apologizing, guilt, school stories, problems at school, social emotional learning, anger, teachers, how to apologize
Protagonist: young boy, brown skin, dark hair; classmates in background are diverse; teacher cues white
Starred reviews: Publishers Weekly, Kirkus, SLJ, BCCB
Pages: 32
Notes: Told in various drafts of an apology letter.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Jack wants to apologize for hurting Zoe’s feelings. He just can’t seem to find the right words.
Turns out there’s more to an apology than just saying “I’m sorry.”
Elevated by equally charming illustrations and text, I’m Sorry You Got Mad is a journey in learning the importance of an apology that goes deeper than just words.
Author: Aracelis Girmay
Illustrator: Diana Ejaita
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): picture book
Recommended for: Grades K-4
Setting: the moon
Themes: culture, traditions, separation, starting a new life, the moon, perseverance
Protagonist: young boy and his grandmother, both Black and African
Starred reviews: Booklist
Pages: 60
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
One day, young Kamau and his grandmother ZuZu wake up to find themselves on the moon. Kamau doesn’t remember Back Home, but Grandma ZuZu does, and she misses it terribly.
Together, through cloth scraps and dance, letters and song, Kamau and ZuZu find a way to make a new life for themselves in this strange land: a new life which is not only rooted in the stories, memories, and traditions that ZuZu always carries with her, but which also lovingly reaches out across the vast expanse of space to connect and communicate with the family from which they’ve been separated.
Author: Kate Messner
Illustrator: Julia Kuo
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): informational picture book
Recommended for: PreS-Grade 7
Themes: makerspaces, STEM, scientists, tinkering, experimenting, importance of play, childhood interests and adult careers, STEM careers
Protagonist: features 35 diverse scientists in history; includes males and females and diverse ethnicities
Starred reviews: SLJ
Pages: 60
Notes: Companion to: The Next President (2020)
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Before the world’s great scientists were scientists, they were, in fact, doing all the things kids do:
Taking things apart,
putting things together,
gazing up at the night sky,
drawing, imagining, building, and exploring.
Things that scientists do, too.
This book of unexpected beginnings powerfully shows that the great scientists of the future could be practically anyone…including you.
Author: Sarah Albee
Illustrator: Stacy Innerst
Publication date: August 27, 2024
Genre(s): picture book biography, picture books for older readers, humor
Recommended for: Grades 2-5
Setting: 1796. 18th Century
Themes: art, painting, George Washington, US presidents, US history, US currency, history behind famous paintings, famous portraits
Protagonist: 18th Century artist Gilbert Stuart and President George Washington
Starred reviews: Kirkus and Booklist
Pages: 40
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
George Washington and artist Gilbert Stuart didn’t always see eye-to-eye, but both men knew the importance of legacy and the power of art.
Though George disliked having his portrait painted—which took days and days to complete—he knew his place in history would require people to know his face.
Fortunately, Gilbert Stuart’s unique way of painting didn’t compel his subjects to sit for hours on end—in fact, he encouraged them to move around and even bring friends to chat with.
Capturing the soul of each subject, his portraits were unlike any other artists’. And Gilbert Stuart’s one-of-a-kind portrait of Washington stands the test of time—it’s the one that’s used on the one-dollar bill.
PREVIOUS NEW RELEASE SPOTLIGHTS
ABOUT THE SPOTLIGHT
The New Release Spotlight began in May 2016 as a way to help librarians keep up with the many new children’s and YA books that are released each week.
Each week, school librarian Leigh Collazo compiles the New Release Spotlight using a combination of Follett’s Titlewave, Amazon, Goodreads, and Barnes and Noble. Recommended grade levels represent the range of grade levels recommended by professional book reviewers. See the full selection criteria here.
Inevitably, there are far more books that meet my criteria than can make it on the Spotlight. When I have to make the tough decisions on what to include, I just use my “librarian judgment.” Would I buy this book for my own library? Would my students want to read this book? Is the cover appealing? Does it fill a need?