New Release Spotlight: September 9, 2025

Lots of whopper new releases this week! As usual, September is shaping up to be a great month for new books. Picture books and middle grades look strongest to me this week.

My top picks this week are:

  • Pocket Bear by Katherine Applegate (MG fantasy)
  • Let’s Get Together by Brandy Colbert (MG realistic fiction)
  • all the picture books – seriously, just look at those picture books!

Be sure to have a second look at last week’s Spotlight – I just added three new picture books.

The three Canva presentations for the September Spotlight will release via email on Tuesday, September 30. You can join my email list here.

YA Magical Realism
Split the Sky

Author: Marie Arnold

Genre: magical realism, realistic fiction

Setting: Davey, Texas, USA

Themes: murder, clairvoyance, hate crimes, vandalism, racism, sundown towns, interracial dating, colorism, Black history

Protagonist: female, age 15, African American

Recommended for: Grades 7-12

Starred Reviews: Booklist and Publishers Weekly

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Fifteen-year-old Lala Russell is doing a bad job at being a Black girl. She has social justice fatigue, and she doesn’t want to join the Black Alliance Club at her school (even though she agrees with them). A gifted cellist, she’s focused on leaving her small town and accomplishing her goals and dreams. But Lala has also inherited another gift, her grandmother Sadie’s gift of foresight. She has visions of the future—and they always come true.                             
 
In Davey, the Texas sundown town she lives in, there is growing tension, as a Black organization attempts to diversify the nearly all-white part of town. Amidst violent protests, Lala has a vision. In it, a Black teenage boy is shot in the chest by a white homeowner. Now Lala has a mission: find the boy and save him.
 
But Grandma Sadie has a vision too. After the boy’s murder, a wave of protests breaks out. And the outrage over the casual and frequent slaying of unarmed Black children will result in unprecedented change. Change that won’t happen if the vision is altered. Lala is faced with an existential question—can she allow herself to sacrifice one life to, in turn, save many? And if so, whose life will she choose?

YA Supernatural
The House of Quiet

Author: Kiersten White

Genre: supernatural, gothic

Setting: gothic mansion surrounded by a peat bog; gaslight-era, gothic-inspired fantasy world

Themes: teens with dangerous powers, teens with jobs, maids, supernatural abilities, conspiracies, alternating perspectives, propaganda, privilege

Protagonist: female, age 17, white

Recommended for: Grades 7-12

Starred Reviews: no starred reviews

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

In the middle of a deadly bog sits the House of Quiet. It’s a place for children whose Procedure triggered powers too terrible to be lived with—their last hope for treatment. No one knows how they’re healed or where they go afterward.

Birdie has begged, bargained, and blackmailed her way inside as a maid, determined to find her missing sister, Magpie. But what she discovers is more mysteries. Instead of the destitute children who undergo the Procedure in hopes of social advancement, the house brims with aristocratic teens wielding strange powers they never should have been burdened with.

Though Birdie wants to ignore them, she can’t help being drawn to stoic and silent Forest, charmed by clever River, and concerned for the youngest residents. And with fellow maid Minnow keeping tabs on everything Birdie does, danger is everywhere.

In her desperate search for Magpie, Birdie unearths terrifying threats and devastating truths, forcing her to confront just how much she’s willing to sacrifice to save her own sister. Because in the House of Quiet, if you find what’s lurking beneath . . . you lose everything.

YA Romantasy
Grave Flowers

Title: Grave Flowers

Author: Autumn Krause

Genre: dark fantasy, gothic literature, historical fiction, romantasy

Setting: 17th Century England

Themes: death, sisters, purgatory, royal court, betrayal, Anne Boleyn, Tudor monarchs, Shakespeare, carnivorous flowers, court intrigue

Protagonist: two female princesses, twins, biracial

Recommended for: Grades 9-12

Starred Reviews: Booklist

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Princess Madalina and her twin sister, Inessa, were born attached at the hand and separated right after. That’s the only time the sisters ever held hands. The girls’ personalities have been shaped in the Sinet family’s drive to make their kingdom more than what it is: unrespectable and loathsome, a damp place where deceit fills the palace walls like mold.

Madalina is different from her family. She’s considered the weak one and only finds peace in the garden, tending her magical flowers, which are pejoratively called grave flowers because they are ideal for torture and torment. Secretly, she dreams of escape and a new life.

Then Inessa, who was betrothed to the heir of a wealthy kingdom—Prince Aeric—gets trapped in Bide, a terrifying purgatory, and begs Madalina to set her free. Now, not only must Madalina take her sister’s place as Aeric’s bride-to-be, but she also must finish Inessa’s secret mission: Inessa wasn’t just sent to marry Prince Aeric, but to kill him, too, and solidify a profitable pact with his traitorous uncle.

On behalf of her family, Madalina will need to resist the infuriatingly clever prince—as well as her own heart—if she’s to free her sister and finish the job.

YA Realistic Fiction
Reasons to Hate Me

Author: Susan Metallo

Genre: realistic fiction

Setting: high school

Themes: theater, autism, bullying, cyberbullying, blog posts, scripts, friendship drama, self-awareness

Protagonist: female, age 17, white, neurodiverse

Recommended for: Grades 8-12

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

There are countless good reasons to hate seventeen-year-old Jess Lanza, Stone Bridge High’s premier autistic theater nerd and Champion of Questionable Life Choices. Unfortunately, the cyberbullies that hounded her all summer are stuck on last year’s life-ruining mistake, the one that earned Jess the title “Boyfriend Stealing Slutbag.”

To relieve the bullies of their stale content, Jess vows to dazzle them with online posts about her own ridiculous fails and embarrassing character traits. But somehow, all of Jess’s posts circle back to her friendship with Chloe—the friendship her alleged sluttiness pulverized—and the gaping hole she left in Jess’s life.

As Jess chases Chloe’s forgiveness, she must confront some of her darkest weaknesses—and darker still, the truth of what happened with Chloe’s boyfriend, a story neither of them wants to hear.

Told through a series of blog posts and short scripts, this cleverly staged and structured debut novel crackles with spot-on dialogue, features a range of fully developed neurodiverse characters, and sharply evokes high school in all its hilarious and agonizing complexity.

YA Horror
How to Survive a Horror Movie

Author: Scarlett Dunmore

Genre: horror, thriller, dark humor

Setting: Harrogate School for Girls, a 13th-century monastery turned boarding academy; located on an island in the South Irish Sea

Themes: ghosts, serial killers, starting a new school, horror movies, horror tropes, ghosts, boarding schools, violence, gore, dark academia, proving innocence

Protagonist: teen female, white, queer

Recommended for: Grades 9-12

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Horror movie buff Charley Ryan isn’t expecting much when she’s enrolled at a girls’ boarding school on a remote island. That is, until someone starts killing off the senior class. From elaborate scare tactics to severed heads in fridges, these gruesome murders are straight out of Charley’s favorite films. To top it off, she’s also seeing the ghosts of her former classmates.

No one’s surprised when Charley’s taste in movies makes her the prime suspect. Determined to clear her name, she sets out to find the killer before her campus becomes more graveyard than school. She’s equipped only with her encyclopedic knowledge of horror cinema and the help of her trusty cinephile best friend, Olive—oh, and those pesky ghosts, if they can shut up long enough to lend a helping hand.

MG Fantasy
Pocket Bear

Author: Katherine Applegate

Genre: fantasy, adventure, mystery

Setting: small apartment in Europe

Themes: toys, WWI, history of Teddy bears, refugees, war in Ukraine, cats

Protagonist: small stuffed bear and a cat

Recommended for: Grades 3-7

Starred Reviews: Booklist, Kirkus, and Publishers Weekly

Notes: Includes black and white illustrations.

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Thimble-born from tip to toe, Pocket Bear remembers every moment of his becoming: the glimmering needle, the silken thread, the tender hands as each careful stitch brought him closer to himself. Born during the throes of WWI, he was designed to fit into the pocket of a soldier’s jacket, eyes sewn a bit higher than normal so that he always gazed upward. That way, glancing at his pocket, a soldier would see an endearing token of love from someone back home, and, hopefully, a good luck charm.

Now, over a century later, Pocket serves as unofficial mayor of Second Chances Home for the Tossed and Treasured, where stuffed toy animals are refurbished and given a fresh opportunity to be loved. He and his best feline friend Zephyrina, known far and wide as “The Cat Burglar,” have seen it all, and then some.

MG Humor
Let s Get Together

Author: Brandy Colbert

Genre: realistic fiction, humor

Setting: Pasadena, California, USA

Themes: long-lost twins, friendship, sisters, foster care, The Parent Trap, new kid at school, matchmaking schemes

Protagonist: female twins, age 11, African American

Recommended for: Grades 3-7

Starred Reviews: Kirkus and Publishers Weekly

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Kenya Norwood likes things just the way they are. She’s lived all her life in Pasadena with her dad and grandmother, she’s attended the same school with the same friends since pre-K, and she’s always the center of attention. Even as she’s about to start middle school, she knows one thing for sure: none of that is going to change.

For Liberty Perry, change is all she’s ever known. Her mother disappeared when she was a toddler, and ever since, she’s never stayed in one place for very long. But things seem different with her new foster mother, Joey. Maybe in this home, in this school, change won’t come so quickly.

Except everything changes the day Liberty and Kenya meet—and discover they are identical.

Neither of them is ready to find out she has a twin sister (in fact, they’re unsure if they even want one), and when the girls learn the truth of how they were separated, it’s clear that no one else in their lives was ready for this, either. But the connection they share might be even stronger than the things that kept them apart—and teaming up might be the only way to set everything right.

MG Narrative Nonfiction
A World Without Summer

Author: Nicholas Day

Illustrator: Yas Imamura

Genre: narrative nonfiction

Setting: 1815 eruption of Indonesia’s Mount Tambora

Themes: natural disasters, nature’s power, volcanoes, lesser-known historical events, extreme weather, climate change, Frankenstein, world history

Recommended for: Grades 4-8

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly

Notes: Includes government documents, newspaper articles, black and white illustrations, short chapters. Sibert 2026 contender?

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

The world was upside-down. The wind was fire. The sky was ash. The rain was rock.

A couple of hundred years ago, on a quiet Indonesian island, a volcano called Tambora erupted with a force and violence that changed history.

It tore apart the island, and in the months and years that followed, its fallout tore apart the world. The sun refused to shine; the rain refused to stop. Everything that everyone assumed would always be there—a world that made sense, a climate that made sense—was suddenly gone.

From this riot of thunder and lightning, a young woman named Mary Shelley conceived of a scientist and his cursed creature. From the nightmare of Tambora, she wrote a nightmare of a book: Frankenstein—a terrifying reminder of how much damage we humans might do, without even realizing it.

This is the story of a volcano that changed the world and a creature that changed us.

Once upon a time, everything was different. And no one knew if it would ever be the same.

MG Graphic Fiction
Dear Jackie

Author: Jessixa Bagley

Illustrator: Aaron Bagley

Genre: graphic fiction, realistic fiction

Setting: middle school

Themes: friendship, middle school, secret admirers, honesty, telling lies, puberty, body image, toxic masculinity, gender expression, popularity

Protagonist: two middle schoolers - a Black girl and an East Asian boy

Recommended for: Grades 3-7

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Jackie and Milo have been best friends since they were born. Whether they’re reading comic books in their tree house hideout, playing video games, or spying on their neighbors using walkie talkies and code names, it’s always been the two of them versus the world.

But in middle school, things are changing. Milo joins the soccer team and starts hanging out with a new crew. Jackie gets taken under the wing of Adelle, who wants to give her a total makeover and find her a crush. Suddenly, it seems like there are certain acceptable ways to be a girl or a boy, and Jackie starts to feel like everything about her is wrong.

In an effort to get Adelle and her new friends off her back, Jackie sends herself an anonymous love letter. But her plan backfires, and soon Jackie’s secret admirer is all anybody at school can talk about. Now she’s wondering: Dear Jackie, how are you going to get out of this?

Holiday Picture Book
The 13th Day of Christmas

Author: Adam Rex

Genre: picture book, holidays and seasonal, humor

Setting: Christmas season

Themes: Twelve Days of Christmas, iconic holiday songs, Christmas gifts, marriage proposals, online shopping, mix-ups, true meaning of Christmas, Christmas carols

Protagonist: white male

Recommended for: PreS-Grade 5

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

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Our hero is having a lonesome Christmas away from his true love. So when she sends him a gift, of course he loves it—even if a partridge in a pear tree wasn’t exactly on his wishlist.

Twelve days later, his home is crowded with more birds, milkmaids, pipers, and other guests than he can possibly make sense of. Why would his true love think he’d like this?!

His search for answers transforms the disaster into a source of joy for the whole town—complete with a parade, a circus, and a fundraiser for the school library. By the time his true love gets home, the man finally understands what she’s given him: the true meaning of Christmas.

But she has no idea what he’s talking about— the whole thing was a wacky online shopping mixup. All she’d meant to buy was a pair of gold engagement rings. She meant to propose!

Informational Picture Book
I Am We: How Crows Come Together to Survive

Author: Leslie Barnard Booth

Illustrator: Alexandra Finkeldey

Genre: informational picture book

Setting: where crows live

Themes: crows, animals, survival, animal intelligence, animal communities, animal defenses, personification, poetry

Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3

Starred Reviews: Booklist, Kirkus, and Publishers Weekly

Notes: Sibert 2026 contender? Caldecott 2026 contender?

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Caw‑Caaaaw! Crows are fascinating and resilient birds. What is the secret to their abundance and survival, especially throughout fall and winter seasons, when temperatures drop and crow-eating creatures lurk in the dark? I Am We unpacks these mysteries, exploring how and why crows roost together by the thousands and their reliance on cooperation and community.

Sharing a home in our urbanized ecosystem, crows are the ideal subject for learning about how animals interact with the environment and with each other. With dazzling color illustrations and irresistibly engaging and educational text, this beautiful, bewitching book will delight readers throughout the spooky season and all year round.

Picture Book
Make New Friends: A Picture Book

Author: Joshua David Stein

Illustrator: Mariachiara Di Giorgio

Genre: picture book

Setting: elementary school

Themes: loneliness, making new friends, art, doodling, fathers and sons, starting a new school, school stories

Protagonist: young boy, white; classmates are diverse

Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3

Starred Reviews: Booklist, Kirkus, and Publishers Weekly

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Tomasso doesn’t know anyone at his new school and has no one to play with at recess. So, knowing his dad will ask, he resolves to make a few new friends.

Each day his crew grows; there’s Roland (a foam ball), Coco (a milk carton), and Karen (a very pink eraser). But when his dad insists on having his friends over for pizza, Tomasso knows that soon his secret will be out. Will his dad welcome his new friends, even if they’re not who he expects?