This second week of November brings a lot of different genres and themes! Picture books look strongest this week. Once again, I didn’t find much that I loved for middle grades this week. If you are looking to order lots of new middle grade titles, check out the October Spotlights – all feature lots of excellent titles for upper-elementary and middle school!
This week’s top picks:
- My Roommate from Hell by Cale Dietrich (YA romance)
- Great Escapes by David Long (MG short stories of survival)
- Vida: The Mouse, the Cat, and the Alebrije by Duncan Tonatiuh (picture book)
This week’s titles are #4945-4956 on The Ginormous Book List. We are getting close to 5000 titles on the list!
Author: Sara Holland
Genre: fantasy, romance
Setting: Kirkrell, a coastal city surrounded by treacherous northern waters where pirate-like sailors hunt magic whales
Themes: curses, mermaids, whaling, finding a cure, magic, monsters, sexism, betrayal, heartbreak, fae
Protagonist: female, age 18, white
Recommended for: Grades 8-12
Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly
Notes: Book 1 of a planned duology.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
In the treacherous waters surrounding Kirkrell, sailors hunting magic whales live in fear of the finfolk–bloodthirsty sea fae who sink ships and curse bloodlines. Nineteen-year-old Annie, as heir to the city’s preeminent whaling company, is determined to carry on her parents’ life’s work. But she keeps a secret from everyone: she’s cursed to transform into a monster, with scales spreading up her arms and claws growing from her fingertips.
Her fiancé August offers comfort, but their love falls apart when Annie discovers his plan to take over the company. Desperate, Annie makes a deal with Silas Price, a young captain rumored to be half-finfolk. He says he knows how to break the curse – but only if Annie promises to stop the practice of whaling forever.
As Annie, August and Silas sail north, Annie wrestling with her family’s legacy, the threat of the finfolk and August’s ambitions increasingly force her to put her trust in Silas. Yet Silas has secrets of his own, and they might be the most dangerous of all.
Author: Cale Dietrich
Genre: romance, supernatural, rom-com
Setting: fictional Point University
Themes: college life, college roommates, LGBT+, demons, fake dating, royalty, exchange programs, multiple dimensions, Hell, first year of college
Protagonist: male, college freshman, white
Recommended for: Grades 9-12
Starred Reviews: SLJ
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Owen is not going to college to have fun. Nothing is going to stop him from achieving his goals: study hard, get a good job, and set himself up for the rest of his life. The last thing he needs is to have a loud, obnoxious, and infuriatingly hot roommate. Especially since said roommate just so happens to be the prince of hell.
Prince Zarmenus has come to Point University for the first-ever Earth/hell exchange program, and he’s determined to make the most of it. Which may or may not include wild parties, bringing in random boys to his and Owen’s room, and accidentally setting Owen’s furniture on fire.
Sparks fly (literally) as Owen and Zar clash, but Zar’s actions threaten to not only ruin Owen’s peaceful college life, but demon-human relations as well. To clean up his image, he asks Owen to be his fake boyfriend and teach him how to be a better human in exchange for an internship that will secure Owen’s future. That, and Zar will consider being a better roommate.
A deal is struck, and the two start pretending to be in a relationship where they each have agendas of their own. Only Owen has a secret―dating his mortal enemy, even if it’s fake, is the most fun he’s ever had.
Author and Illustrator: Jessica Walker
Genre: illustrated novel, epistolary, realistic fiction, mystery
Setting: 2016, Green Bank, Pocahontas County, Appalachia, West Virginia, USA
Themes: letters, detectives, high school, death of a parent (mother), grief, secret pen pals, multimedia formats, school libraries, books, new kid at school, family history, crop circles, astrology, alternating perspectives
Protagonist: perspectives alternate between a nonbinary teen and a female teen, both HS seniors, both white
Recommended for: Grades 7+
Starred Reviews: Kirkus
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
When a recent transfer student starts keeping her diary in the oldest textbook at the Green Bank High School library, the last thing she expects is to receive a response. Thus begins a sweeping tale of unlikely friendship and long-buried secrets between two secret pen pals at a rural West Virginia high school.
Copernicus is adrift and searching for answers after the sudden death of her mother, and leaving her cosmopolitan life in San Francisco behind. Kepler is a small-town girl with straight A’s and big plans to be the first person in her family to go to college, despite her family’s modest means. The two girls are so different from one another but united in their goal to solve a mystery that has riddled Green Bank for decades.
Author: Ludwig Volbeda; translated by Lucy Scott
Genre: coming of age, realistic fiction, epistolary
Setting: high school in The Netherlands
Themes: art, artists, art class, LGBT+, self-portraits, gender identity, transgender, creativity, introspective journeys, epistolary format
Protagonist: transgender teen, gender is deliberately unspecified, HS senior, Dutch
Recommended for: Grades 7+
Starred Reviews: SLJ and Kirkus
Notes: Translated from Dutch.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Jip has an assignment from school for spring break: draw a self-portrait. That should be easy for someone who can draw so well. Yet Jip’s thoughts keep wandering. To the new boy in class, to beetles and fireflies, to twilight dreaming, to the party next Friday, and especially to the boy who changed Jip’s world once and for all.
Ludwig Volbeda writes as he draws: sensitively, intimately, and with striking observations and metaphors that gradually give the reader insight into Jip’s innermost thoughts. What results is a magnificent self-portrait in words (and line art) and one of the more exquisite queer coming-of-age stories in years.
Author: Marcia Argueta Mickelson
Genre: realistic fiction
Setting: New York City, New York, USA
Themes: anti-immigrant politics, fathers and daughters, perseverance, identity, immigration, family problems, freelance writing, writing as power, kicked out of the house, teen homelessness, privilege, racism, divorced parents, controlling fathers
Protagonist: female, age 18, Guatemalan American
Recommended for: Grades 8-12
Starred Reviews: no starred reviews
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Immediately after high school graduation, eighteen-year-old Maya is kicked out of her wealthy dad’s NYC home; he prides himself on forcing his kids to “make their own way in the world.” Maya’s mom lives in Guatemala, so Maya crashes with friends while working and trying to land freelance writing gigs.
Maya struggles to find her footing until she gets access to a “writing room,” a shared workspace where she can focus—and get to know the intriguing neighbor, Jake, who’s often there.
When she discovers her dad is bankrolling a virulently anti-immigrant candidate for governor, Maya―the daughter of an immigrant―realizes she can’t continue quietly accepting his choices. She’ll have to take a stand, using the voice she’s found in the writing room.
Author: Yxavel Magno Diño
Genre: fantasy, mythology
Setting: Philippines-inspired empire
Themes: Philippine mythology, thieves, insects, crickets, undead bugs, sorcerer s, luck, fate, magic, underdogs
Protagonist: female, age 12, cricket whisperer
Recommended for: Grades 3-7
Starred Reviews: no starred reviews
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
In the empire, magic determines your fate. But Yumi is tired of being a failed Cricket. Their magic is lousy and boring. She dreams instead of the sparkling magic of Fireflies, whose powers rival the sun. If only she could harness her talents like other magicians…
For now, Yumi is ignored by even the crickets who are supposed to follow her spells.
Then, Yumi gets a chance to prove herself sooner than expected when all sorcerers are summoned for the princess’s coronation. But everything falls apart when the Firefly Crown is stolen, leaving the empire defenseless against the Ghost Swarm, a horde of undead bugs.
Worse, Yumi is blamed. Suddenly this lowly Cricket is the empire’s most wanted. To clear her name and protect her loved ones, Yumi must find the real thief. But can a Cricket really save the day?
Author: David Long
Illustrator: Jamie Coe
Genre: short stories, narrative nonfiction, adventure
Setting: various worldwide locations over the past 165 years
Themes: survival, danger, slavery, prisoners of war, prison, escape, world history
Protagonist: various real people throughout world history
Recommended for: Grades 3-7
Starred Reviews: no starred reviews
Notes: Includes 32 short stories illustrated in full-color. A great pick for reluctant readers.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Over thirty tales of adventure, inspiration and derring do. As well as famous stories like the Great Escape and Harriet Tubman’s epic 500-mile trek to freedom, this fascinating book includes lesser-known escapes like Yoshie Shiratori, a Japanese fisherman who escaped jail four times, Nadia Murad, who was inspired by her escape to win the Nobel Peace Prize, and Henry ‘Box’ Brown, a slave who posted himself to freedom in a wooden crate.
Stunningly illustrated in full color by comic book artist, Jamie Coe.
Author: Ryan Bani Tahmaseb
Illustrator: Reza Dalvand
Genre: mythology, folklore
Setting: ancient Persia (modern-day Iran)
Themes: Persian gods and goddesses, Persian mythology
Protagonist: Persian gods and goddesses
Recommended for: Grades 3-7
Starred Reviews: no starred reviews
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
You’ve heard of mythological characters like Theseus, Medusa, and Thor, but have you heard about Anahita, Jamshid, and Rostam? In this engrossing anthology of twenty stories, middle grade readers will be introduced to the strongest heroes, most legendary creatures, and most vicious demons of Persian mythology.
From Atar, the god of fire, going head-to-head with the three-headed demon-dragon Azhi Dahaka, to Anahita, the goddess of war and water, rescuing mortals from monstrous divs, Persian Mythology retells some of the most intense sagas that served as the foundation of early Persian religion, passed down from one generation to the next in the form of oral traditions. Persia is the area in West Asia known today as modern Iran. Author Ryan Bani Tahmaseb and award-winning illustrator Reza Dalvand celebrate the rich history and incredible tradition of Persian storytelling in this epic collection.
Author: Carole Boston Weatherford and Rob Sanders
Illustrator: Lamont O’Neal
Genre: picture book biography
Setting: rural North Carolina, 20th Century
Themes: Jim Crow laws, LBBT+, fashion, overcoming adversity, racism, prejudice, discrimination, bullying, sexual abuse (called “unwanted touching”), journalism
Protagonist: African American journalist and Vogue editor André Leon Talley (1948-2022) as a child and adult
Recommended for: K-Grade 7
Starred Reviews: Booklist and BCCB
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
Growing up in the Jim Crow South wasn’t easy for young André. He escaped into the glimmering worlds he discovered inside magazines like Ebony and Vogue. He fell in love with all things French, and honed his taste for elegance and style in spite of those who judged and bullied him.
Standing tall against all odds, André spun his hardships into a fashion fairytale of his own making.
Author: Tanya Rosie
Illustrator: Chuck Groenink
Genre: picture book
Setting: nighttime in a garden
Themes: nature, quiet, hedgehogs, fathers and daughters, wonder, nocturnal animals
Protagonist: a young girl and her father
Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3
Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly and SLJ
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
A father wakes his little girl, and together they tiptoe barefoot outside, stepping quietly into the cool nighttime garden. They wait to see it—their snuffling, shuffling nocturnal visitor.
And what a treat to behold not just one hedgehog, but a mama and her three adorable, prickly babies, all coming over for a little sip of water before moseying straight into the “hedgehog highway” their human patrons created for them.
Based on the author’s childhood memories, The Night of the Hedgehog is as tender and sweet a father-daughter book as they come, and a story sure to inspire a new generation of hedgehog spotters.
Author and Illustrator: Duncan Tonatiuh
Genre: picture book, folklore
Setting: vibrant city of Mousetepec
Themes: mice, cats, animal stories, Spanish language, alebrijes (folk art sculptures), fear, Mexican folk art, Mexican history
Protagonist: two young mouse siblings
Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3
Starred Reviews: SLJ and Kirkus
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
The city of Mousetepec is a lively place filled with color, music, and alegría (joy). But everything changes one night when the shadow of un gato appears, growing larger and larger until it looms over the whole city. Fiestas are cancelled and the mercado empties as the cat terrorizes the townsfolk.
To save their town, two little mouse siblings—Vida and her brother, Máximo—make a brave plan to scare away the cat after a bright, fantastical creature called an alebrije appears to them in a dream.
Author: Joyce Grant
Illustrator: Jan Dolby
Genre: informational picture book
Themes: information literacy, algorithms, bias, online content, online choices, interactive books
Recommended for: Grades 3-6
Starred Reviews: SLJ
Notes: Includes glossary, index, and bibliography.
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY
We are all in information bubbles, whether we realize it or not. The content that fills our bubble is the product of all the likes, clicks, and shares we make online. While we may enjoy what the algorithm pushes to us, we can gradually lose sight of perspectives and points of view that are different from our own.
In seven chapters, readers will learn what algorithms are, why they are used, and what influences someone’s information bubble both online and in real life. Sidebars offer additional context, and fun activities allow readers to understand concepts in real time.



