New Release Spotlight: August 26, 2025

LOTS of great new book releases this week for all grades! I really had some tough choices this week of what to include – there were so many worthy titles. Alas, there are only so many hours in a day, and I cannot include every title I want to add.

As this is the last Spotlight for August 2025, I am sending the three Canva presentation links for the August Spotlight out to my email on Monday afternoon (August 25).

If you missed the Canva presentations on August 25, you can subscribe here to get this month’s Canva presentations sent to your inbox today.

YA Realistic Fiction
Dark Dude

Author: Oscar Hijuelos

Genre: realistic fiction

Setting: New York City and Wisconsin, USA, 1960s

Themes: racism, drug abuse, identity, poverty, alcoholic parent (father), writing comic books

Protagonist: male, age 15, Cuban, light skin

Recommended for: Grades 9-12

Starred Reviews: Booklist and Publishers Weekly

Notes: Originally published in 2008.

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Fifteen-year-old Rico Fuentes has had enough of life in Harlem, where his fair complexion—inherited from an Irish grandfather—keeps him caught between two cultures without belonging to either. He pours his outsider feelings into a comic book Dark Dude, with his friend Jimmy illustrating. But when Gilberto, who’s always looked out for Rico, moves to Wisconsin and Jimmy loses himself to an insidious habit, Rico decides enough is enough.

With Jimmy in tow, Rico runs away to the Midwest in search of Gilberto. The heavily white community feels worlds away from Harlem, and for the first time, Rico sees what it’s like to blend in—no longer the “dark dude” or the punching bag for the whole neighborhood. But the less energy Rico needs to put into proving he’s Latino, the less he feels like one. And the more he gets to know the people around him, the more it’s clear that a change in location doesn’t change human nature—and that there’s no such thing as a perfect community.

Faced with the truth that there are things that can’t be cut loose or forgotten, things that keep him from ever having an ordinary white kid’s life, Rico must decide whether he can make a home in the place he ran to…or the one he ran from.

YA Short Stories
Legendary Frybread Drive-In: Intertribal Stories

Editor: Cynthia Leitich Smith

Genre: short stories

Setting: Sandy June’s Legendary Frybread Drive-In, which shows up wherever it is needed

Themes: intertribal communities, healing, hope, rooms of requirement, connection, modern indigenous life, comfort food, traditional cooking, storytelling

Protagonist: various indigenous characters

Recommended for: Grades 8-12

Starred Reviews: Booklist and Kirkus

Notes: Includes 18 interconnected stories and poems. 2026 AIYLA contender?

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

The road to Sandy June’s Legendary Frybread Drive-In slips through every rez and alongside every urban Native hangout. The menu offers a rotating feast, including traditional eats and tasty snacks. But Sandy June’s serves up more than food: it hosts live music, movie nights, unexpected family reunions, love long lost, and love found again.

That big green-and-gold neon sign beckons to teens of every tribal Nation, often when they need it most.

Featuring stories and poems by: Kaua Mahoe Adams, Marcella Bell, Angeline Boulley, K. A. Cobell, A. J. Eversole, Jen Ferguson, Eric Gansworth, Byron Graves, Kate Hart, Christine Hartman Derr, Karina Iceberg, Cheryl Isaacs, Darcie Little Badger, David A. Robertson, Andrea L. Rogers, Cynthia Leitich Smith, and Brian Young.

YA Realistic Fiction
My Perfect Family

Editor: Khadijah VanBrakle

Genre: realistic fiction

Setting: Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA

Themes: family relationships, family problems, single mothers, loneliness, stuck in the middle, estranged family members

Protagonist: female, age 16, Black, some family members are Muslim

Recommended for: Grades 9-12

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly and Kirkus

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

“Lonely Leena” is close with her young single mother. Still, she’s always secretly dreamed of more (and, when she was a kid, asked Santa for it). A huge family to cheer her on at graduation. A gaggle of smiling faces at the holidays. But one call from the hospital, and her mother’s hidden past comes to light: Her grandfather is in the ER, and her aunt is with him in recovery. Sorry—her WHO?

But with family comes family secrets—Leena’s mom’s, and as Leena grows close with her new family behind her mother’s back, her own. Leena’s mom warns that Leena’s grandfather Tariq’s financial generosity doesn’t come without strings attached… like Leena converting to Islam, fighting for a spot at a top university, and adhering to the restrictive rules that she ran from all those years ago. Leena isn’t sure who to trust, yet she’s certain that she adores Tariq and her mom—and that she’s the only one who could heal old hurts. After so many years, is it even possible? And if she can’t, will she have to choose between them?

A big family was the dream, but all this drama isn’t.

YA Horror
Empty Heaven

Author: Freddie Kölsch

Genre: horror

Setting: October 2000, small town of Kesuquosh, Massachusetts, USA

Themes: autumn, harvest festivals, scarecrows, Halloween, occult, religious indoctrination

Protagonist: female teen, white

Recommended for: Grades 9-12

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly and BCCB

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Darian Sabine Arden is haunted by a monster who claims to love her.

Her only respite is the New England village where she spends summers with her three best friends. Kesuquosh is serene and idyllic, and the townsfolk’s odd worship of a godlike scarecrow only adds to the charming local color. But when Darian pays a surprise Halloween visit to her summer crush—a beautiful, unreadable girl named KJ—just in time to see her swept up in a bizarre harvest ritual, she’s forced to admit that Good Arcturus is more than a quaint superstition. He’s terrifyingly real. 

Something ancient and sinister lurks behind the dying sunflower fields and glowing windows of Kesuquosh… and in the hearts of the people who live there. Something that doesn’t take kindly to its paradise being threatened. To save KJ—and themselves—Darian and her friends must question everything they thought they knew about their home. And Darian will have to tell the awful truth about the monster that’s been with her all along. 

YA Supernatural
A Spell to Wake the Dead

Author: Nicole Lesperance

Genre: supernatural, mystery

Setting: Cape Cod, Massachusetts, USA

Themes: murder, detectives, secret societies, spells, witchcraft, magic

Protagonist: two female friends, both age 17, both white, both queer

Recommended for: Grades 9-12

Starred Reviews: BCCB

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

When Mazzy and her best friend Nora sneak down to the beach one moonlit night to cast a spell, they don’t expect to find a dead body. But as the tide rolls in, it carries the remains of a woman who is missing her hands and teeth.

The girls know they should leave the investigation to the police, but they can’t shake the weird, supernatural connection they feel with the dead woman. Using spellwork and divination, they set out to find answers of their own. But after they uncover a rash of local disappearances stretching back years—and both girls start having occult visions and hearing ghostly, whispering voices—Mazzy worries that she and Nora are in danger.

Then, Nora finds a second body. And the whispering voice is telling her where to find more. With everything spiraling, Mazzy needs to figure out who to trust and how to sever this supernatural connection—or she and Nora might be the next bodies to wash up on the beach.

MG Graphic Fiction
Dream On

Author: Shannon Hale

Illustrator: Marcela Cespedes

Genre: graphic fiction, realistic fiction

Setting: family home and elementary school

Themes: friendship, social skills, sweepstakes, family problems, financial insecurity, large families, deceptive marketing

Protagonist: female, 4th grader, white, one of six kids in a family

Recommended for: Grades 3-8

Starred Reviews: Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, and Booklist

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Something is missing from Cassie’s life.

Her parents don’t have much money, she has to share her bedroom (and bed!) with her sisters, and her family never seem to have time for her. To make matters worse, her best friend Vali is always busy with a new friend.

When Cassie gets a letter from a magazine sweepstakes with the words “YOU’RE THE WINNER” stamped on the front, she thinks it’s the answer to all her problems.

She could buy new furniture to replace their shabby old sofa. Or maybe a car so her family doesn’t have to take two trips to go places. Or maybe she can make Vali her best friend forever by taking her on a fabulous vacation. The possibilities are endless, like an all-you-can-eat buffet!

But will prizes really solve Cassie’s problems?

And what will she lose if she doesn’t win anything at all?

MG Historical Fiction
The Dark Times of Nimble Nottingham

Author: Ryan James Black

Genre: historical fiction

Setting: London, England, 1940 -1941 (The Blitz) and 1665-1666 (bubonic plague and Great Fire of London)

Themes: WWII, orphans, the Blitz, bubonic plague, Great Fire of London, British history, world history, gore, found families

Protagonist: male, age 12, white, orphan

Recommended for: Grades 4-8

Starred Reviews: Booklist

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Surviving on the streets of World War II London alone certainly hasn’t been easy, but Nimble Nottingham has perfected the art of going it alone—and that’s just how he likes it. The only friend he needs is his beloved dog, Winnie. To pass the time between rolling blackouts and bombs falling through the air, Nim spends his days fence-climbing, roof-jumping, and gargoyle-perching…that is when he’s not scrounging for food to stave off the ever-present hunger the war has brought to London.

So when opportunity strikes in the form of a bomb falling onto the notoriously creepy Gravenhurst Manor, Nim knows he has to get inside and find whatever spoils he can get his hands on to sell for food. Get in. Get out. Quick as a flash. At least, that was the plan until Mouse—a member of a local street gang called the Dead End Kids—shows up and invites himself along for the heist.

Inside, Mouse and Nim encounter far more than just crumbling walls and shattered windows. Beneath Gravenhurst Manor lies a secret room and inside that room is a locked safe. Nim, inspired by the Hardy Boys adventures he used to read at Waifs and Strays orphanage, knows that something this protected has to be valuable, and so he cracks the safe and unknowingly unleashes a monster.

A shadow creature is now loose on the streets of London, and it’s up to Nim, Mouse, and a band of unattended children to end its reign of terror.

MG Fantasy
The Forest of a Thousand Eyes

Author: Frances Hardinge

Illustrator: Emily Gravett

Genre: fantasy, adventure, dystopia

Setting: communities near an encroaching forest

Themes: ferrets, haunted forests, resilience, community strength, journeys, courage, compassion

Protagonist: young female, pale-skinned

Recommended for: Grades 3-7+

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly, Booklist, Kirkus, and Hornbook

Notes: Originally published in the UK in 2024. Illustrated novel.

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

One thing Feather knows to be true is that given the chance, the Forest will devour her home just like it’s devoured everything else in her world. Her small community lives in a section of the crumbling Wall that runs through and above the trees, doing everything they can to keep the Forest out.

When a stranger tricks Feather and makes off with her people’s precious spyglass, she has no choice but to go after him, coming face-to-face with the Forest’s dangers—and to revelations beyond her wildest imagination.

MG Adventure
The School for Thieves

Author: Peter Burns

Genre: adventure

Setting: Beaufort’s School for Deceptive Arts in London, England; some cues that this is an alternate 19th Century/Victorian world

Themes: homelessness, poverty, thieves, pick-pockets, boarding schools, secrets, found families

Protagonist: male, age 13, British, possibly with a North African mother, orphan

Recommended for: Grades 5-8

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Tom Morgan’s life on the streets of London consists of shining shoes, picking pockets, and keeping his group of street kids out of the hands of snatchers. When he fails at the last and their home is raided, Tom is the only one not carted off to the workhouse. He’s determined to rescue his friends, but breaking into the workhouse is a nearly impossible task, let alone breaking back out.

Tom is at a loss until he’s approached by a mysterious figure claiming to be an accomplished thief and Tom’s ticket to the best training in the clandestine arts in the world: an elite international boarding school that would teach him all the skills necessary to help his friends. Without any better ideas—and his curiosity piqued—Tom accepts the invitation.

Whisked away to the snowy Alps, Tom enters a thrilling world of intrigue and heists. But the deeper he gets into the Shadow League, the harder it becomes to leave. Tom has to learn fast and uncover the nefarious secrets within the league to have any chance of saving himself, his friends—and maybe even the world.

MG Humor
Schooled

Author: Jamie Sumner

Genre: realistic fiction, humor

Setting: Copernican School, an inaugural school on a college campus in Tennessee; the school is for children of college professors

Themes: single fathers, death of a parent (mother), grief, college campuses, unique schools, friendship

Protagonist: male, age 11, white, sixth grader

Recommended for: Grades 5-8

Starred Reviews: no starred reviews

Notes: At only 224 pages, this short, humorous novel is much-needed in middle schools.

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Eleven-year-old Lenny Syms is about to start college—sort of. As part of a brand-new experimental school, Lenny and four other students are starting sixth grade on a university campus, where they’ll be taught by the most brilliant professors and given every resource imaginable. This new school is pretty weird, though. Instead of hunkering down behind a desk to study math, science, and history, Lenny finds himself meditating, participating in discussions where you don’t even have to raise your hand, and spying on the campus population in the name of anthropology.

But Lenny just lost his mom, and his Latin professor dad is better with dead languages than actual human beings. Lenny doesn’t want to be part of some learning experiment. He just wants to be left alone. Yet if Lenny is going to make it as a middle schooler on a college campus, he’s going to need help. Is a group of misfit sixth graders and one particularly quirky professor enough to pull him out of his sadness and back into the world?

Picture Book
The Everything Trail

Author: Meg Fleming

Illustrator: Chuck Geoenink

Genre: picture book

Setting: Pacific Northwest forest

Themes: nature, forests, friendship, play, redwood trees, wildlife, exploration, adventure

Protagonist: multiple racially-diverse children

Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3

Starred Reviews: Booklist and Publishers Weekly

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

The wind waves its hand.
The trees take a bow.
Everything’s big.
And everything’s small…

From giant redwoods to tiny saplings, steep canyons to shallow creeks, and soaring eagles to crawling critters, there are endless wonders to discover along a trail through the forest. This sweeping story of a day spent in nature will inspire young readers to soak in all the marvels, big and small, that surround them.

Picture Book
The Invisible Parade

Authors: Leigh Bardugo and John Picacio

Illustrator: John Picacio

Genre: picture book, holidays

Setting: Día de los Muertos

Themes: holidays and celebrations, death, Día de los Muertos, grief, grandfathers, Latin traditions, ofrendas, four horsemen, culture, family

Protagonist: young girl, tan-skinned

Recommended for: K-5

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly, Booklist, and Kirkus

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Everyone in the neighborhood was getting ready for the party.
Everyone knew somebody on the guest list . . .
This was the day the dead returned.

There’s a party tonight, but Cala doesn’t want to go. While her family prepares for the celebration, Cala grieves her grandfather and tries to pretend she’s not afraid.

But when she is separated from her family at the cemetery, Cala encounters four mysterious riders who will show her she is actually quite brave after all.

Brimming with magic and humor, The Invisible Parade is the first picture-book collaboration between award-winner John Picacio and New York Times bestselling Leigh Bardugo. Set on the night of Día de Muertos, Cala’s story is one of love, loss, and the courage that can be found in unexpected places.

Early Chapter Book
Witchycakes #1: Sweet Magic

Author: Kara LaReau

Illustrator: Ariane Moreira

Genre: chapter book, fantasy

Setting: seaside community of Shelville

Themes: magic, baking, witches, community, cozy reads, recipes, resilience

Protagonist: female witch in training, peach skin and blue hair

Recommended for: Grades 1-4

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly

Notes: Book 1 of the Witchycakes series.

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

In a magical bakery called Witchycakes there’s a young witch-to-be named Blue. Blue’s Mama bakes with magic and Blue makes the deliveries! They ride their bike all over town with their basket filled with magical scones, tartes, and pies to deliver. There’s always something going on in Shelville and Blue loves to help their neighbors — especially if helping them means they get to use a little bit of magic.

Cook up some love with Blue as they use magic and problem-solving to be the best helper they can be in their whimsical little town. And there’s a special magical recipe at the end of the book!

Picture Book
The Library in the Woods

Author: Calvin Alexander Ramsey

Illustrator: R. Gregory Christie

Genre: picture book

Setting: 1959, Roxboro, North Carolina, USA

Themes: US history, discrimination, Negro libraries, bookish, fathers and sons, Civil Rights Era, Jim Crow laws, based on a true story

Protagonist: young boy, Black

Recommended for: Grades 1-6

Starred Reviews: Booklist

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

After a storm devastates the farm his parents have been renting, Junior moves with his family to Roxboro, North Carolina. The year is 1959, and the nine-year-old boy has to navigate the realities of the segregated South while adjusting to life in town. Instead of farming, his father works at the lumberyard, and his mother takes in laundry from the white people in town. Junior meets new friends who have a TV―and their own books! These new friends offer to take Junior to the library, and he’s surprised to discover that in a clearing in the forest, there’s a log cabin that houses a library for Black residents.

The library in the woods feels magical, giving Junior a sense of possibility and community. The books he checks out also help him uncover a secret he never knew about his father.

This fictional account is based on a real-life library author Calvin Alexander Ramsey frequented as a child. Ramsey’s heartfelt text, accompanied by illustrations from award-winning artist R. Gregory Christie, celebrates family, libraries, and the resourcefulness of the Black community.

Picture Book Biography
Worthy: The Brave and Capable Life of Joseph Pierce

Author: Andrea Wang

Illustrator: Youa Vang

Genre: picture book biography

Setting: Canton (now Guangdong), China and Connecticut, USA, mid-1800s

Themes: discrimination, prejudice, Chinese Exclusion Act, US history, slavery, US Civil War, Asian Americans

Protagonist: Joseph Pierce as a young boy and adult, Chinese American

Recommended for: K-Grade 7

Starred Reviews: Booklist

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Written by the author of the Caldecott and Newbery honor-winning picture book Watercress, and marking the impressive debut of illustrator Youa Vang, here is the true story of a man of indomitable spirit. In the mid-nineteenth century, an impoverished father from Canton, China, sold his young son to an American sea captain, Amos Peck.

The boy, dubbed “Joe,” worked on the ship for months, not knowing if his fate was to do so forever. Or would he be sold again? When the ship returned to America, Captain Peck brought the young boy to his family, who raised him with the other children. Joe Pierce grew, gave distinguished service in the Union Army, married, had children and ultimately became an American citizen–all at a time when anti-Chinese prejudice was rampant.