New Release Spotlight: December 2, 2025

Today’s Spotlight is going to be for the entire month of December. There just aren’t that many amazing new book releases this month, so as I do every December, I have consolidated the December Spotlights into one.

Since this week’s Spotlight is so small, I’ve added some “Second Chance” titles from earlier in 2025. These are books that I either missed when they were released, or that did not meet my Spotlight criteria in the week they released. I require all Spotlight titles to have at least two positive professional reviews, and I favor books that have one or more starred reviews.

I will continue the “Second Chance” list as next week’s Spotlight. I have not done this in the past, but I have found so many great titles that deserve recognition. I also plan to do a Caldecott predictions post in the next couple of weeks, so there is still a lot going on in the weeks leading up to the holidays.

Today’s Spotlight and Second Chance titles are #4973 – #4983 on The Ginormous Booklist.

YA Rom-Com
There's Always Next Year

Authors: Leah Johnson and George M. Johnson

Genre: romance, rom-com, holidays

Setting: Oakrun, Indiana, USA and New York City; New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day

Themes: starting over, getting one’s life straight, New Year’s Day, cousins, going viral, influencers, journalism, gentrification, social media

Protagonist: two cousins, one male and one female, both Black, both queer

Recommended for: Grade 9-12

Starred Reviews: Booklist

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Andy was supposed to shed her too-serious student journalist persona and reinvent herself on New Year’s Eve. Instead, she puked on her crush, dropped her phone in a fish tank, and managed to get her car stolen.

Now, she only has the first day of the year to stop the gentrification that’s threatening her family’s business, right her wrongs from the night before, and figure out why she feels so drawn to the electric new-girl-next-door. How can Andy find her voice when everything’s being turned upside down?

Dominique is an influencer on the verge of securing a major brand deal that will ensure his future and family legacy. But when he runs into his former best friend, unresolved feelings emerge — and in a small town, there’s nowhere to hide. Not from his cousin, Andy, who has always seen him for his true self, not from his busybody manager, Kim, whose favorite color is money green, and certainly not from himself.

When all the world’s a stage, can Dominique rise to superstardom without leaving behind the ones he loves?

YA Mythology
Persephone's Curse

Author: Katrina Leno

Genre: mythology, fantasy, romance, supernatural

Setting: Manhattan, New York City, USA

Themes: Greek mythology, Persephone, ghosts, magic, sisters, heartbreak, the Underworld, grief

Protagonist: female, age 16, white, said to be a descendant of Greek goddess Persephone, can see ghosts

Recommended for: Grades 7-12

Starred Reviews: Booklist

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Are the four Farthing sisters really descended from Persephone? This is what their aunt has always told them: that the women in their family can trace their lineage right back to the Goddess of the Dead. And maybe she’s right, because the Farthing girls do have a ghost in the attic of their New York City brownstone ―a kind and gentle ghost named Henry, who only they can see.

When one of the sisters falls in love with the ghost, and another banishes him to the Underworld, the sisters are faced with even bigger questions about who they are. If they really are related to Persephone, and they really are a bit magic, then perhaps it’s up to them to save Henry, to save the world, and to save each other.

YA Narrative Nonfiction
Death in the Jungle: Murder, Betrayal, and the Lost Dream of Jonestown

Author: Candace Fleming

Genre: narrative nonfiction

Setting: Indiana, USA and Jonestown, Guyana, South America; 1931-1978

Themes: murder, abuse, religion, mass suicide, US history, mind control, cults, true crime, massacres, world history, manipulation

Protagonist: cult leader Jim Jones (1931-1978), from childhood to death

Recommended for: Grade 7-12

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

Notes: Includes annotated list of key people, photographs, author's note, sources, a bibliography, and an index

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Using riveting first-person accounts, award-winning author Candace Fleming reveals the makings of a monster: from Jones’s humble origins as a child of the Depression… to his founding of a group whose idealistic promises of equality and justice attracted thousands of followers… to his relocation of Temple headquarters from California to an unsettled territory in Guyana, South America, which he dubbed “Jonestown”… to his transformation of Peoples Temple into a nefarious experiment in mind-control.

And Fleming heart-stoppingly depicts Jones’s final act, persuading his followers to swallow fatal doses of cyanide—to “drink the kool-aid,” as it became known—as a test of their ultimate devotion.

Here is a sweeping story that traces, step by step, the ways in which one man slowly indoctrinated, then murdered, 900 innocent, well- meaning people. And how a few members, Jones’ own son included, stood up to him… but not before it was too late.

YA Romance
This Could Be Forever

Author: Ebony LaDelle

Genre: romance

Setting: Washington, D.C., USA and University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, USA

Themes: alternating perspectives, interracial dating, cultural identity, arranged marriage, parental expectations

Protagonist: perspectives alternate between two college freshmen, one female African American, and one male Nepali American

Recommended for: Grade 7-12

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly and Kirkus

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Deja’s got a plan. The first in her large family to go to college, she wants to study chemistry and sell natural skin care products, like the ones she already creates from plants grown on her family’s North Carolina farm. It all starts with the Onward Bound summer program at the University of Maryland, the summer before school officially starts.

Raja’s got a dream. His traditional Nepali parents want him to study engineering and settle down in an arranged marriage, but his passion is art, and he wants to open his own tattoo parlor one day. In the meantime, he’s apprenticing at a tattoo shop in College Park, Maryland.

When Deja walks into the shop where Raja’s working, they both start crushing hard—over the course of the summer, they fall more and more deeply for one another. But the closer they get and the more their lives entwine, the more they find that dating someone who doesn’t match your parents’ expectations is harder than they ever imagined.

Can they bridge the divide between the vision their families have for their futures and the lives—and love—that are starting to feel like destiny?

MG Mystery
The Stolen Songbird

Author: Judith Eagle

Illustrator: Jo Rioux

Genre: historical fiction, adventure, mystery

Setting: London, England; 1959

Themes: art, thieves, missing persons, detectives, pet rabbits, friendship

Protagonist: female, age 12, white, British

Recommended for: Grade 3-8

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly and Kirkus

Notes: Includes occasional full-page illustrations.

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

When Caro Monday’s mother disappears on one of her jaunts across the globe, Caro is forced to stay with her miserable great-aunt all the way across town.

To make matters worse, Caro’s beloved rabbit, His Nibs, isn’t allowed to come with her. Of course, Caro sneaks him into her aunt’s strict household anyway.

Although Caro’s wild behavior exasperates her dour aunt, she never dreamed of the trouble she finds herself in when she discovers a small painting of a thrush hidden in the lining of her suitcase—a stolen masterwork that some dangerous art thieves are desperately searching for!

Catapulted into a caper with more twists and turns than the alleys of London, Caro and her friends, including budding fashion designer Horace, expert knitter Albie, and a wise “gentleman of the road”—not to mention His Nibs himself—must unravel a decades-old mystery and return the purloined picture before the thieves hunt them down.

MG Fantasy
Graciela in the Abyss

Author: Meg Medina

Illustrators: Anna and Elena Balbusso

Genre: fantasy, paranormal

Setting: fishing village of Pesca Grotta; possibly Spain or Portugal

Themes: friendship, magic, ghosts, the ocean, evil spirits, emotional abuse, parental neglect

Protagonist: 100-year old sea spirit who is perpetually age 12, female and a male, age 12, possibly Spanish or Portuguese

Recommended for: Grades 4-9

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

Notes: Includes black and white illustrations.

PUBLISHER’S WEEKLY

In the deepest recesses of the ocean, Graciela—once an ordinary girl—now makes sea glass and assists her friend, Amina, as she welcomes newly awakened sea ghosts from their death sleep. Though Graciela’s spirit is young, she has lived at the bottom of the ocean for more than a hundred years.

Meanwhile, in the mortal world on land, twelve-year-old Jorge Leon works in his family’s forge. He’s heard of the supernatural spirits living beneath the ocean’s waves—tales that do nothing to quell his fear of the water. But when Jorge discovers a hand-wrought harpoon with the power to spear a sea ghost, he knows he must destroy it any way he can.

When the harpoon is accidentally reunited with its vengeful creator, unlikely allies Graciela and Jorge have no choice but to work together to keep evil spirits from wreaking havoc on both the living and the dead. If only the answer to saving what they care about didn’t lie within the depths of the abyss…

MG Graphic Fiction
The Cartoonists Club

Author: Raina Telgemeier and Scott McCloud

Genre: graphic fiction, realistic fiction

Setting: middle school

Themes: writing, cartooning, art, teamwork, bookish, storytelling, school clubs, friendship

Protagonist: four tweens, middle schoolers, two females and two males, diverse skin tones

Recommended for: Grades 3-8

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

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Makayla is bursting with ideas but doesn’t know how to make them into a story.

Howard loves to draw, but he struggles to come up with ideas and his dad thinks comics are a waste of time.

Lynda constantly draws in her sketchbook but keeps focusing on what she feels are mistakes, and Art simply loves being creative and is excited to try something new.

They come together to form The Cartoonists Club, where kids can learn about making comics and use their creativity and imagination for their own storytelling adventures!

Historical Fiction
A Sea of Lemon Trees: The Corrido of Roberto Alvarez

Author: María Dolores Águila

Genre: historical fiction, novel in verse

Setting: Lemon Grove, California, USA, 1930s

Themes: school segregation, civil rights, discrimination, US history, US Supreme Court, landmark litigation, bullying, immigration, Spanish language, based on a true story, anti-Mexican propaganda, Great Depression

Protagonist: Roberto Alvarez (1919-2003), age 12, Mexican American

Recommended for: Grades 3-8

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly, SLJ, and Kirkus

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Twelve-year-old Roberto Alvarez is the youngest of his siblings, born on United States soil. He’s el futuro, their dream for a life away from the fire of the Mexican Revolution.

Moved by anti-immigrant and anti-Mexican propaganda, the Lemon Grove school board and chamber of commerce create a separate “Americanization” school for the Mexican children attending the Lemon Grove Grammar School. But the new Olive Street School is an old barn retrofitted for the children forced to attend a segregated school.

Amid threats of deportation, the Comité de Vecinos risk everything to stand their ground and, with the support of the Mexican Consulate, choose Roberto as the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit against the school board in this vivid and uplifting novel in verse based on true events.

Picture Book
The Snow Theater

Author and Illustrator: Ryoji Arai

Genre: picture book

Setting: remote, snowy town in Japan

Themes: fathers and sons, snow, theater, skiing, damaging someone else’s property, guilt, redemption, cozy winter stories

Protagonist: young boy and his father, both have tan skin

Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3

Starred Reviews: Kirkus

Notes: Originally published in Japan. Translated by David Boyd.

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

After accidentally ripping the pages of his father’s favorite book, a pensive, heavy-hearted boy leaves his cozy, warm house to ski through the snow. There, in the quiet and the cold, he stumbles upon a small stage that’s all lit up—a tiny snow theater, with tiny snow people and tiny ballerinas—that soon transforms into a large snow theater, presided over by the majestic snow queen.

As the boy joins the chorus of snow children, the snow queen lifts up her arms and snow falls and falls and falls, until all the boy can see is white—a snowstorm! And it’s at that precise moment that the boy’s father, who let his son go off alone but never lost track of him, is there to take his hand as they return home together.

Picture Book
Anything

Author: Rebecca Stead

Illustrator: Gracey Zhang

Genre: picture book

Setting: a new apartment on moving day

Themes: moving day, fathers and daughters, wishes, memories, sensory language, social-emotional learning (SEL)

Protagonist: young girl and her father, skin for both is the white of the page

Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3

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

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

What’s more powerful than a secret wish? A wish you say out loud.

Anything paints a tender picture of a father and daughter moving into a new home. Dad brings a birthday cake for the new apartment to celebrate their new beginning and tells his daughter she can wish for anything (or, more precisely, “three Anythings”).

Over the course of the day, she wishes for some of her favorite things, including a rainbow and “the biggest slice of pizza in the whole world.”

But she keeps some of her wishes inside. Because what she really wants is to go back home to their old apartment, with its big blue bathtub and space in the closet for hide-and-seek. When she finally admits this last wish, her dad takes her on a journey, and by the book’s final pages, she is home . . . in every way that matters.

Picture Book
Aggie and the Ghost

Author and Illustrator: Matthew Forsythe

Genre: picture book

Setting: haunted house

Themes: ghosts, tic-tac-toe, haunted houses, setting up house rules, sharing spaces with others, being considerate of others, friendship

Protagonist: young girl, pale-skinned

Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3

Starred Reviews: Booklist, Kirkus, and Publishers Weekly

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Aggie is very excited to live on her own—until she finds out her new house is haunted. But no fear, the situation is nothing that can’t be fixed with a carefully considered list of rules: No haunting after dark. No stealing socks. No eating all the food.

But the ghost doesn’t like playing by the rules and challenges Aggie to an epic game of tic-tac-toe—winner gets the house.