This week’s Spotlight is as hot as the August sun in Texas!
Unfortunately, I did not add any new middle grade titles to this week’s list, but I did go back and add some new ones to the August 5th Spotlight. I write the Spotlights in the week before the books release, and sometimes, the book won’t meet my Spotlight criteria (particularly when it comes to positive professional reviews) until just after the release day.
The Canva presentations for the August Spotlight were released via email on August 25, 2025. If you missed the Canva presentations on August 25 (or would like to receive them now), you can subscribe here to get this month’s Canva presentations sent to your inbox today.
Author: Ann Bausum
Genre: narrative nonfiction
Setting: USA primarily during and after the US Civil War (1861-1865)
Themes: US history, propaganda, slavery, racism, war, US Civil War, Reconstruction Era, white supremacy, Confederate statues, Confederate States of America
Recommended for: Grades 7-12
Starred Reviews: Booklist, SLJ, Publishers Weekly, Hornbook, BCCB, and Kirkus
Notes: Includes extensive research notes and backmatter. Sibert 2026 contender?
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Warning: This is not your average U.S. history book.
After the Civil War, the Confederates may have laid down their arms, but they were far from accepting defeat. By warping the narrative around what really happened during and after the Civil War, they created an alternate history now known as the Lost Cause. These lies still manifest today through criticism of Critical Race Theory, book banning, unequal funding for education, and more.
This book sets the record straight and explains the true history of the Civil War, and its complex and far-reaching aftermath. Written by historian and award-winning author Ann Bausum, WHITE LIES is an impeccably researched chronicle filled with photos, robust back matter, additional resources, and more that fans of Howard Zinn’s A Young People’s History of the United States will enjoy.
Author: SJ Sindu
Illustrator: Dion MBD
Genre: historical fiction, survival, graphic fiction
Setting: war-torn Sri Lanka before and after Indian Ocean Tsunami, 2004
Themes: war, family, fathers and daughters, tsunamis, absent parent (mother), strong use of color in illustrations, resilience, resistance, found family
Protagonist: female, age 16, Tamil (southern India and Sri Lanka indigenous group)
Recommended for: Grades 8-12
Starred Reviews: Booklist
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Ever since she turned sixteen, Nimmi has wanted to see her mother. Though she has a loving but overprotective father and a budding relationship, she yearns to travel to Sri Lanka to confront the mother who refused to leave the island during a war, not even for Nimmi’s sake. Her father is going back for the first time as a reporter on assignment, but he refuses to take her, deeming Sri Lanka too dangerous.
But then Nimmi’s mother appears to her in a dream, asking her to come find her, and Nimmi knows she must go. Her father is livid when he sees her at baggage claim, but by then it’s too late, and he reluctantly agrees to help Nimmi make contact with her mother. In Sri Lanka, Nimmi tags along with her father and his guide, past checkpoints and armed soldiers and increasing hints of the war that rages there.
However, the day after Christmas, disaster strikes and a tsunami ravages the island. Stranded amid the devastation and destruction, can Nimmi reunite with her mother? Through her journey, Nimmi might just learn that the person she most needed to find was herself.
Author: Joel A. Sutherland
Genre: horror, supernatural, mystery, thriller
Setting: basement apartment in a creepy mansion; small town Vermont
Themes: ghosts, mansions, psychic abilities, hallucinations, gore
Protagonist: female, age 17, white
Recommended for: Grades 9-12
Starred Reviews: SLJ
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Joana and her younger brother Peter aren’t used to setting down roots. Ever since the violent murder of their mother, their father can’t stay in one place for long, haunted by the literal ghosts of the past. He has what he calls “the Whisperings,” and will do anything to protect his children from the horrors that torment him.
When the family moves to Burlington, Vermont, Joana thinks they’ve finally found a place to call home. They rent the lower half of a creepy yet comfortable mansion downtown, and Joana actually begins to fit in at school, thanks in part to Willem, a handsome (and single) classmate.
But a near-death experience awakens the Whisperings in Joana, and she soon realizes her family isn’t the only family living in the house. She meets the Keils — ghosts forced to relive their own gruesome murders every night. As they say, misery loves company…and suddenly, Joana is forced to protect the ones closest to her from a supernatural threat, in this horrifying haunted house story for teen readers.
Author: Gwendolyn Wallace
Illustrator: Tonya Engel
Genre: picture book
Setting: rural area
Themes: water shortages, water divining, climate change, grandfathers, creativity, resistance
Protagonist: nonbinary child and their grandfather, both African American
Recommended for: PreS-Grade 4
Starred Reviews: SLJ
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
As soon as Kit’s old enough to ride in Grandpa’s truck, they begin joining him to dig wells for their community. Grandpa is magic. He can feel the weather in his bones, and he’s able to dance with water. With just a tree branch in his hand, Grandpa sways and spins over the land until he finds a spot to dig a hole into the waiting earth. When the water springs up, Grandpa and Kit jump for joy.
As new hotels and factories pop up across town, clean water becomes harder to find. Sometimes, no water flows at all. Kit is sad for Grandpa—and for Earth. But one day, Grandpa senses that Kit is ready to dance with water too. Grandpa reminds Kit that the energy and strength of their people flows through the water. As they wait and watch for fresh, clear water to flow up from the ground again, Kit recognizes the power shared between themself and Earth.
Author: Mayra Cuevas
Illustrator: Lorena Alvarez Gómez
Genre: picture book
Setting: Abuela‘s kitchen and gardens, Puerto Rico
Themes: family, love, grandmothers, cooking, gardening, magic
Protagonist: young female and her grandmother, both Puerto Rican
Recommended for: PreS-Grade 4
Starred Reviews: SLJ, Booklist, and BCCB
Notes: Publishes simultaneously in Spanish.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
My abuela is a bruja.
There is magic in everything she does.
There is nothing more magical than a grandmother’s love. But one lucky girl suspects her grandmother has actual magic. It’s in the tun-tun-tun of the way she dances salsa, in the warmth of her hugs, and the delicious smell of her cooking. The granddaughter wonders: will I have magic of my own one day?
Author: Shana Keller
Illustrator: Laura Freeman
Genre: picture book for older readers, historical fiction
Setting: large plantation in Maryland, USA; pre-Civil War era of US history
Themes: Underground Railroad, civil rights, slavery, US history, Harriet Tubman, escape, Cinderella, courage, perseverance
Protagonist: female, African American slave
Recommended for: PreS-Grade 5
Starred Reviews: Kirkus, SLJ, and Publishers Weekly
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
CeeCee is a young enslaved girl growing up alongside the two spoiled daughters she must work for on a plantation in Maryland. She takes care of them, catering to their every whim and suffering their casual cruelty. She learns to read by listening to their lessons and stories with the threat of punishment if caught.
CeeCee receives help from the caring cook, Binty, and hope comes in the form of a different kind of escape. CeeCee chances everything for the possibility of a new life.
Author: Alison Goldberg
Illustrator: Selina Alko
Genre: picture book
Setting: Jewish family’s home on the anniversary of their grandfather’s death
Themes: grief, mourning, Jewish traditions, yahrzeit, constellations
Protagonist: Jewish family with varying skin tones
Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3
Starred Reviews: SLJ and Booklist
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
I was sad when Grandpa died. I think about how sad Mom was too.
Mom says she misses Grandpa, but all her memories are like shining lights.
Grandpa died last November. Now, one year later on the anniversary of his death, a boy and his family light a special candle. It’s not a birthday, Hanukkah, or Shabbat candle. It’s a yahrzeit candle in remembrance of him, and it will burn all night and all day tomorrow until sunset. But why does it burn for so long?
The boy and his family spend the next night and day remembering Grandpa and sharing stories with each other. From his stylish hats, to piano duets, and apple squares for dessert, warm memories of Grandpa shine like stars with them while the yahrzeit candle burns – and continue to shine when it goes out.



