Welcome to this week’s New Release Spotlight for September 16, 2025!
Children’s and YA readers are in for a real treat this week! Today’s list is one of those rare weeks when nearly every title feels like a must-read.
We’ve got new titles from some of the most beloved names in children’s and YA lit, including Daniel Nayeri, Sophie Blackall, Julie Berry, Margaret Peterson Haddix, Ryan LaSala, Rebecca Stead, Laurel Snyder, Sherri L. Smith, Guojing, and Eugene Yelchin.
Several of these authors are award-winners already, and in my opinion, two of this week’s middle grade titles could be strong Newbery contenders for 2026.
That said, the YA releases are my favorites this week! I’ve tagged two YA titles as 2026 Printz Award contenders. Normally I highlight a handful of top picks, but this week I simply can’t choose. My TBR pile grew a mile higher with these new releases!
The three Canva presentations for the September Spotlight will release via email on Tuesday, September 30. You can join my email list here.
Author: Jasmine Mendez
Genre: novel in verse, realistic fiction
Setting: Texas, USA
Themes: racism, prejudice, theater, activism, anger, book censorship, acting
Protagonist: female teen, Black, Latinx, Dominican
Recommended for: Grades 7-12
Starred Reviews: Booklist and Kirkus
Notes: Told in multiple formats, such as a play script, text messages, and verse. Printz 2026 contender?
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Yulieta Lopez is angry. Angry at her racist drama teacher who refuses to cast Black students in lead roles. Angry at the school board threatening her favorite teacher for teaching works of literature that they deem “controversial.” Angry that she has to keep quiet until she can head to college and leave Texas forever.
Yuli is accustomed to playing various roles: the diligent daughter, the honorable hija, the good girl who serves everyone else before serving herself. But as the fire of Yuli’s rage spreads and lights her up, she can no longer be silent. Determined to find a way to fight back, Yuli and her friends start a guerilla theatre club which stirs things up and gets people talking, and finally, Yuli steps into the role she was always meant to play.
Author: Julie Berry
Genre: historical fiction, thriller, horror, mythology
Setting: New York City, USA, 1888
Themes: Jack the Ripper, Medusa, feminism, friendship, Greek mythology, vengeance, true crime, murder, alternating perspectives, sexual assault
Protagonist: perspectives alternate between two females, age 18, white and Jack the Ripper
Recommended for: Grades 7-12
Starred Reviews: Hornbook
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
It’s autumn 1888, and Jack the Ripper is on the run. As London police close in, he flees England for New York City seeking new victims. But a primal force of female vengeance has had enough. With serpents for hair and a fearsome gaze, an awakened Medusa is hunting for one thing: Jack.
And other dangers lurk in Manhattan’s Bowery. Salvation Army volunteers Tabitha and Pearl discover that a girl they once helped has been forced to work in a local brothel. Tabitha’s an upstate city girl with a wry humor and a thirst for adventure, while farmgirl Pearl takes everything with stone-cold seriousness.
Their brittle partnership is tested as they team up with an aspiring girl reporter and a handsome Irish bartender to mount a rescue effort, only to find their fates entwine with Medusa’s and Jack’s.
Author and Illustrator: Eugene Yelchin
Genre: graphic memoir
Setting: Siberia, Soviet Union, early 1980s
Themes: KGB, police states, Cold War, art, oppression, Russia-occupied Afghanistan, 1980 Olympics, torture, military draft, Iron Curtain, world history
Protagonist: author Eugene Yelchin as a young adult, Russian, Jewish
Recommended for: Grades 9-12
Starred Reviews: Booklist, BCCB, Kirkus, and Hornbook
Notes: Stand-alone sequel to The Genius Under the Table; 2026 Printz contender? Or maybe 2026 Sibert?
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Standalone sequel to: The Genius Under the Table.
No longer the creative little boy under his grandmother’s table, Yevgeny is now a young adult, pursuing his artistic dreams under the constant threat of the KGB’s stranglehold on Russia’s creative scene.
When a chance encounter with an American woman opens him up to a world of romance and possibility, Yevgeny believes he has found his path to the future—and freedom overseas. But the threat of being drafted into the military and sent to fight in Afghanistan changes everything in a terrible instant, and he takes drastic measures to decide his fate, leading to unthinkable consequences in a mental hospital.
Author: Sonora Reyes
Genre: realistic fiction
Setting: contemporary USA
Themes: mental illness, bipolar disorder, family, friendship, self-acceptance, bisexuality, LGBT+, coming out, Catholicism, absent father
Protagonist: male, age 17, Latin American, bipolar
Recommended for: Grades 8-12
Starred Reviews: Kirkus and Booklist
Notes: Stand-alone companion to: The Lesbiana’s Guide to Catholic School (2022)
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Seventeen-year-old Cesar Flores is finally ready to win back his ex-boyfriend. Since breaking up with Jamal in a last-ditch effort to stay in the closet, he’s come out to Mami, his sister, Yami, and their friends, taken his meds faithfully, and gotten his therapist’s blessing to reunite with Jamal.
Everything would be perfect if it weren’t for The Thoughts—the ones that won’t let all his Catholic guilt and internalizations stay buried where he wants them. The louder they become, the more Cesar is once again convinced that he doesn’t deserve someone like Jamal—or anyone really.
Cesar can hide a fair amount of shame behind jokes and his “gifted” reputation, but when a manic episode makes his inner turmoil impossible to hide, he’s faced with a stark choice: burn every bridge he has left or, worse—ask for help. But is the mortifying vulnerability of being loved by the people he’s hurt the most a risk he’s willing to take?
Author: Ryan La Sala
Genre: thriller, horror, suspense, mystery
Setting: Anchor’s Mercy, an island off the coast of Maine, USA
Themes: survival, apocalypse, unethical experimentation, corruption, LGBT+, cancer epidemic in a community
Protagonist: male, age 17, white
Recommended for: Grades 8-12
Starred Reviews: SLJ, Publishers Weekly, and Booklist
Notes: Includes interview transcripts and scientific documents.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Two Days Before
Ollie Veltman is finally coming home to the quaint island of Anchor’s Mercy after a year away while his mom battled cancer. It should be a celebration — his mom is cancer free, and she’s determined to have the best summer ever — but Ollie’s (now ex) best friends think he abandoned them, and he’s returning with a lot of questions. Because for a place that’s perfect on the surface, a secret rots below the waves. A secret that could explain his mom’s illness, and the illness of so many other locals.
Ollie’s desperate search for the truth turns life-or-death when a storm descends upon the island. In its wake, a long-sunken horror rises…
Three Weeks After
Ollie is being held in isolation aboard a military hospital ship in the harbor. They say he’s a survivor, but they only know half the story. The truth is more monstrous than Ollie ever believed, and he suspects his saviors aren’t here to save anyone. Only Ollie can stop what’s coming, but that means getting back to Anchor’s Mercy before it vanishes, taking with it everyone he has ever loved.
Author: Tara O'Connor
Genre: graphic fiction, adventure, folk horror
Setting: remote area of Ireland
Themes: ghosts, living with extended family, generational trauma, school suspension, Irish folklore, unavailable mothers, time travel, LGBT+, blood sacrifice, anger, destiny
Protagonist: teen female, white, Irish
Recommended for: Grades 8-12
Starred Reviews: SLJ and Kirkus
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Nobody understands Nell.
Strongheaded, fiercely independent, and constantly furious, Nell just wants to be free to carve out her own path in life. And she doesn’t care whether her mom or anyone else approves of her choices.
But what Nell doesn’t know is that her destiny was etched in stone generations ago.
After getting suspended from school, Nell is forced to go live with an aunt and uncle whom she’s never met before. Her sense of unease quickly evolves into terror when Nell discovers that she’s been chosen as the latest victim in a perilous plot that spans centuries and has left countless bodies in its wake.
Author: Daniel Nayeri
Genre: historical fiction, adventure, survival
Setting: Zagros Mountains, Iran, 1941
Themes: WWII, refugees, siblings, orphans, survival, spies, teachers, nomadic tribes, Jewish persecution, cross-cultural understanding, war
Protagonist: brother (age 13) and sister (age 8), Iranian
Recommended for: Grades 3-7
Starred Reviews: Kirkus and SLJ
Notes: Newbery 2026 contender?
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
1941. The German armies are storming across Europe. Iran is a neutral country occupied by British forces on one side, Soviet forces on another. Soldiers fill the teahouses of Isfahan. Nazi spies roam the alleyways.
Babak and his little sister have just lost their father. Now orphans, fearing they will be separated, the two devise a plan. Babak will take up his father’s old job as a teacher to the nomads. With a chalkboard strapped to Babak’s back, and a satchel full of textbooks, the siblings set off to find the nomad tribes as they make their yearly trek across the mountains.
On the treacherous journey they meet a Jewish boy, hiding from a Nazi spy. And suddenly, they are all in a race for survival.
Against the backdrop of World War II comes an epic adventure in the faraway places. Through the cacophony of soldiers, tanks, and planes, can young hearts of different creeds and nations learn to find a common language?
Author: Sherri L. Smith
Genre: magical realism, science fiction, speculative fiction, adventure
Setting: Chicago, Illinois, USA; 1948, 1988, and today
Themes: quantum physics, wormholes, time travel, intergenerational friendship, friendship troubles, female mentors, STEM, Chicago history, Underground Railroad
Protagonist: female, age 13, Black , 8th grader
Recommended for: Grades 5-8
Starred Reviews: SLJ
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
What if your locker was a wormhole to the past?
On the first day of eighth grade, Candace Wells opens her locker and is astonished when an unusual bird flies out. Soon after, a notebook mysteriously appears on the top shelf, labeled Tracey Auburn, 1988. Stranger still, as Candace reads the notebook, new messages start to appear.
Professor Tracey Auburn only vaguely remembers a bird flying into her locker in eighth grade, way back in 1988, and losing a notebook she could have sworn she put on the top shelf. Until Candace shows up at her office with the missing notebook forty years later.
Quantum physicist Loretta Spencer will never forget the bird flying out of her locker in eighth grade in 1948. Her life’s work has been to study the portal and others like it, and now she needs Tracey’s and Candace’s help to complete her research.
So begins an unlikely friendship and a hunt around Chicago and the state of Illinois to uncover the secrets of the locker, the universe, and everything. One thing’s for sure: Eighth grade will never be the same again.
Author: Rebecca Stead
Genre: science fiction
Setting: New York City, New York, USA
Themes: aliens, extra-terrestrials, experiments, identity, keeping secrets, missing children, challenges immigrants face in the USA, assimilation, exploitation
Protagonist: multiple narrators, but primarily about a boy, age 11, who is really an extra-terrestrial
Recommended for: Grades 3-8
Starred Reviews: SLJ
Notes: Short chapters will appeal to reluctant readers.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Nathan never understood what was “fun” about secrets, probably because he’s always had to keep a very big one.
Although he appears to be a typical sixth-grader (with parents, homework and a best friend, Victor), Nathan learned at an early age that his family is from another planet. Now, their time on Earth may be coming to an end.
Nathan, his parents and nine other families are part of an experiment that suddenly seems to be going wrong. Some of the experimenters, including Nathan’s first crush, Izzy, are disappearing without a word. After his family is called back to the mothership, Nathan begins to question everything he’s been taught to believe about who he is and why he’s on Earth.
Author: Margaret Peterson Haddix
Genre: adventure, magical realism
Setting: moving from Ohio to Maryland, USA
Themes: getting a cell phone, time travel, spies, moving away, siblings, babysitting, parentification of eldest daughter, elderly relatives, riddles, saving the world, altering history
Protagonist: female, age 12, white
Recommended for: Grades 3-8
Starred Reviews: no starred reviews
Notes: Book one of a planned duology.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
When Maisie’s mom gives her an old phone, Maisie can’t believe her luck—finally, she can keep up with everyone at school! Unfortunately, her mom also tells her that the whole family will be moving to spend the summer taking care of Maisie’s great-aunt Hazel. Maisie’s only getting a phone because she’ll be responsible for her younger siblings during the entire trip. With that, Maisie is ready to give the phone back.
Then the first puzzling text comes in.
Between the mystery texts and a not-completely-blank book from Great-Aunt Hazel, Maisie finds herself thrown into the world of moonleapers. Will she be able to learn more about the secretive group, and—gulp—help them accomplish their crucial mission in time?
Author: Karina Yan Glaser
Genre: historical fiction
Setting: timelines alternate between Chang'An, China, Year 731 AD (Tang Dynasty) and Chinatown, New York City, USA in 1931
Themes: Chinese history, Tang Dynasty, plague, dual timelines, alternating timelines, Great Depression, constant threat of homelessness, poverty, Chinese culture
Protagonist: alternates between: tween male, Chinese, living in 731 China and tween female, Chinese American, living in 1931 New York City
Recommended for: Grades 3-7
Starred Reviews: Booklist, Kirkus, and Publishers Weekly
Notes: Contains occasional black-and-white drawings. Newbery 2026 contender?
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
In ancient Chang’An, Han Yu sells steamed buns in a bustling market full of whispers about his ability to summon tigers.
In New York’s Depression-era Chinatown, Luli gazes out from the roof of her parents’ restaurant, dreaming of dim sum and Chinese art.
Familiar rhythms rule the contained-but-contented lives of Han Yu and Luli. But when plague strikes Chang’An and financial crisis threatens Luli’s family, Han Yu and Luli must each venture out into the larger world—and into danger-filled adventure—to save what they love most. Filled with wondrous caves and conniving thieves, desert storms and magical lakes, Karina Yan Glaser’s epic and rewarding novel is a testament to the bravery required to face the unknown and the power of art to connect us through the ages.
Author: Laurel Snyder
Genre: picture book, poetry
Setting: Hanukkah
Themes: Hanukkah, holidays and celebrations, Jewish holidays
Protagonist: Jewish family, white
Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3
Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
In a dark, dark room,
one thin candle
wakes, bursts to life
Thus begins the first night of Hanukkah in one child’s home. But what does the light from the candle mean? What are the words everyone is singing? What will each of these eight nights hold? Family and friends, takeout dinners and flat tires, traditions new and old—it’s all part of this year’s timeless, timely holiday celebration.
Author: Guojing
Genre: wordless picture book
Setting: small house on a cliff by the sea
Themes: climate change, conservation, storms, rising sea levels, relocation, family, community
Protagonist: family with pale skin and dark hair
Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3
Starred Reviews: Booklist, Hornbook, BCCB, SLJ, and Kirkus
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
A family makes their home on a cliff overlooking the sea. They live peacefully, spending their days exploring the ocean and filling their home with warmth and laughter. But as seasons pass, the waters rise, bringing the tides closer to the clifftop and the house. When a powerful storm rages and giant waves engulf the cliff, the family must leave—but not without their beloved home.
Inspired by true stories of communities relocating houses, award-winning artist Guojing evokes a family’s ingenuity and determination to save their home in a moving portrait of empathy, love and strength. Through dreamy ocean scenes and vibrant tones of red, pinks and blues, this striking narrative offers an adventure story with a dramatic and glorious ending.
Author: Erin McGuire
Genre: picture book biography, picture book for older readers
Setting: Nazi-occupied Paris, France during WWII (1939-1945)
Themes: world history, WWII, Nazis, spies, museums, courage, stolen art, theft, French Resistance
Protagonist: female, French, museum curator
Recommended for: Grades 1-3
Starred Reviews: Kirkus and SLJ
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Rose Valland loved art. When the Nazis invaded Paris during World War II and took over her beloved museum, Rose could have fled. But who would save the artwork?
So, Rose remained and saw how she was underestimated by the soldiers for being a quiet, unassuming woman. She knew it was the time to act. And Rose had a secret weapon: she could speak German. She listened, kept track of all the stolen art, and saved what she could. Rose became a spy. And in the end, she saved thousands of works of art.
Author and Illustrator: Sophie Blackall
Genre: picture book, humor
Setting: child’s birthday party
Themes: dogs, birthdays, imagination, play, pretend
Protagonist: two young children
Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3
Starred Reviews: Kirkus and SLJ
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
If we were dogs, what kind would we be?
I’d be a big dog! And you’d be little dog.
Woof!
Join two friends as they bark and growl, woof and howl – and maybe even quack – in a romp that makes room for everybody’s ideas.
Author: Tess Thomas
Genre: picture book
Themes: cats, animals, expressing emotions, bottling up emotions
Protagonist: fluffy black cat
Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3
Starred Reviews: Kirkus, BCCB, and Publishers Weekly
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Shibu the cat has a lot of feelings and thankfully his fluffy tail helps him express them all!
But one day, Shibu realizes that all the other cats are keeping their feelings (and their tails) tucked away. Maybe it would be better to try and fit in?



